Eleanor Laise, Kiplinger's Personal Finance
May 23, 2018
Medicare Advantage
plans attract seniors with their appealing price tags and promise of
comprehensive health coverage in one convenient package. But are these plans a
disadvantage for people with serious health problems?
That's
the question raised by recent studies. A 2017 review by the U.S. Government
Accountability Office , for example, found that in some
Advantage plans, enrollees in poor health were substantially more likely to
dump the plan than those in good health. A recent study by Brown University
researchers found that Medicare Advantage enrollees are more likely to enter
lower-quality nursing homes compared with people on original Medicare. Earlier
studies have also found that people using high-cost services, such as nursing-home
care, disproportionately switch from Medicare Advantage to original Medicare.
Medicare
Advantage "tends to work for people when they are relatively well,"
says Judith Stein, of the Center for Medicare Advocacy. "But if they
become ill or injured and really need a significant length of care, they're not
as well served."
Yet
seniors flock to Medicare Advantage plans offered by companies that contract
with Medicare. Many of these plans combine basic Medicare coverage with drug,
dental and vision coverage, and the premiums are often cheaper than combining
original Medicare Part B, a Part D prescription-drug plan and a supplemental
"medigap" policy. In 2017, roughly one-third of all Medicare
beneficiaries were enrolled in an Advantage plan, up from 13 percent in 2004.
The
studies questioning Advantage plans' benefits for sicker patients are piling up
at a time when the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is making a push
to drive Advantage enrollment higher.
To be
sure, some studies have found benefits for Medicare Advantage enrollees,
including greater use of preventive care services. But for people in poor
health, the evidence on health care access and quality decidedly favors
original Medicare over Medicare Advantage, according to a Kaiser Family
Foundation review of 40 studies published between 2000 and 2014.
Of
course, many people are in excellent health when they initially sign up for
Medicare -- and the drawbacks of Medicare Advantage may only become apparent
when health declines. Advantage plans have limited networks of providers, and
enrollees going out of network face higher costs.
Patients'
inability to access their preferred doctors or hospitals is a factor driving
sicker enrollees to dump Advantage plans, reports the GAO. Advantage plans'
limited provider networks may also contribute to the gap in nursing-home
quality between Advantage plans and original Medicare, the Brown University
researchers found. (Medicare will cover nursing-home care if you need skilled
nursing after a hospitalization.) The researchers studied all Medicare
beneficiaries newly admitted to a nursing home between 2012 and 2014, finding
those on Medicare Advantage were substantially more likely than those on
original Medicare to enter lower-quality nursing homes.
(Eleanor
Laise is a senior editor at Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine. Send your
questions and comments to moneypower@kiplinger.com. And for more on this
and similar money topics, visit Kiplinger.com.)
(c)
2018 Kiplinger's Personal Finance; Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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