Associated Press August 9, 2018
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Sen. Bernie Sanders is skimming over the facts in claiming that his
"Medicare for all" plan will lead to big reductions in what Americans
spend for health care.
In a recent tweet,
the Vermont independent insists the plan will cut $2 trillion from the nation's
health care bill.
But that's based on
a scenario in which hospitals and doctors accept significantly lower payments
for many patients. It's a big asterisk, and one that Sanders fails to disclose.
A look at the
claim:
SANDERS:
"Medicare for All will lead to a $2 TRILLION REDUCTION in national health
expenditures over 10 years." — July 30 tweet.
THE FACTS: Sanders'
vision of El Dorado in his tweet and a YouTube video is being widely echoed by
supporters of a government-run national health system. But Sanders
mischaracterizes a study from a libertarian policy institute that found his
legislation would actually lead to a massive boost in federal spending and
taxation.
The study from the
Mercatus Center at George Mason University in Virginia also concluded that
"Medicare for all" is unlikely to produce a dividend for U.S. society
in the form of lower total health care spending. To get that result would
require paying hospitals and doctors much less than they get now and risk
putting some out of business.
The study found
that if hospitals and doctors were willing to accept Medicare-based payments of
40 percent less for patients who currently have private insurance, then
projected U.S. health care spending would decline by about 3 percent from 2022
to 2031, or $2.05 trillion.
That's the number
Sanders is celebrating.
But the study also
said if medical providers continue to be paid about the same as now, U.S.
health care spending would increase by $3.25 trillion over 10 years under
"Medicare for all." It works out to about 5 percent more.
That's far
different from Sanders' assurance that his plan "will lead" to huge
spending reductions.
The study concludes
it's unlikely.
"More generous
health care insurance would be provided to everyone at the expense of health
care providers," it said. "Whether providers could sustain such
losses and remain in operation, and how those who continue operations would
adapt to such dramatic payment reductions, are critically important
questions."
Find AP Fact Checks
at http://apne.ws/2kbx8bd
Follow @APFactCheck
on Twitter: https://twitter.com/APFactCheck
EDITOR'S NOTE _ A
look at the veracity of claims by political figures
No comments:
Post a Comment