by Cassidy
Morrison | March 12, 2019 05:19 PM
Hospitals warned
Tuesday that their industry would suffer an $800 billion cut if Democrats
succeed in massively expanding Medicare.
The American Hospital
Association and the Federation of American Hospitals published a reportconcluding that allowing the public to buy in to
Medicare plans at cost would not only contribute to massive budget cuts to
hospitals nationwide but would also jeopardize patients’ access to care.
Democrats have several
proposals for extending Medicare. The most aggressive option, the Medicare for
All Act introduced last Congress by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., would enroll
everyone in an expanded government-financed healthcare plan. Another less
ambitious proposal would turn Medicare into a public option, allowing others
beside seniors to buy into it.
The hospitals are
prepared to fight the measures.
“It is not practical
to disrupt coverage provided through employer-sponsored plans that already
cover more than 150 million Americans,” Tom Nickels, AHA executive vice
president, said in a press release. “America’s hospitals and health systems
remain committed to working together with policymakers to help expand coverage
and reduce costs for all Americans. However, a ‘Medicare for All’ approach
would impede, not advance, our shared goals.”
The FAH study
specifically examines the Medicare-X Choice Act, a proposal brought forth by
Sens. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., and Tim Kaine, D-Va. Medicare-X would permit all
Americans to the option of buying a public plan, which would cost less than
private insurance. This plan is less sweeping than a single-payer system as it
fits into existing healthcare system and would not mandate that all Americans
can only select a public plan.
Kaine and Bennet
envisioned Medicare-X being phased in incrementally and gradually so that the
plan could be rolled out smoothly and would not disturb the marketplace as
drastically as a single-payer initiative would. Hospital systems and healthcare
providers disagree that the plan would work without trouble and are prepared to
fight it.
According to the FAH
study, Medicare-X would exacerbate problems that hospitals already face. It
says that public programs, Medicare included, consistently reimburse healthcare
providers at much lower rates than the costs of the health services
administered. A shift of millions to a public option, the report says, would
destabilize insurance markets and compound hospital expenses.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/hospitals-warn-medicare-public-option-would-be-an-800-billion-hit-to-industry
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