Ilene MacDonald,
Editorial Director | July 16, 2020
The report, released by the Better Medicare
Alliance (BMA), a research and advocacy organization that supports Medicare
Advantage (MA), looks at beneficiary demographics, consumer satisfaction,
health outcomes, and projections for the future.
The state of MA in 2020 is strong, according
to a new BMA report, which
includes the organization’s own research as well as data from independent sources.
The analysis notes that MA plans have a more diverse beneficiary population,
lower costs, and better outcomes compared to traditional Medicare. The findings
reflect trends, offerings, and attitudes before the onset of COVID-19 but show
the importance of value-based, integrated care in health financing and care
delivery, said Allyson Y. Schwartz, president and CEO, BMA.
Here are five key findings from the report:
Enrollment trends: MA enrollment has nearly doubled over
the last decade and grown by more than 30 percent since
2017 alone. BMA credits the growth to high consumer satisfaction and strong
enrollment in employer-sponsored retiree plans and special needs plans. There
is no sign of it slowing down any time soon. The Congressional Budget
Office projects MA
to increase to nearly 51 percent of total Medicare enrollment by 2030.
Beneficiary demographics: Fifty percent of MA beneficiaries live
on annual incomes of less than $24,500 a year, compared to 40 percent in
traditional Medicare, according to an analysis of 2017 Medicare Current
Beneficiary Survey Data by ATI Advisory. Twenty-one percent are also eligible
for Medicaid, compared to 16 percent in Traditional Medicare. The report also
notes that 28 percent of MA beneficiaries are racial minorities, compared to 21
percent in traditional Medicare. Beneficiaries are 64 percent more likely to
enroll in Medicare due to disability, have a 57 percent higher rate of serious
mental illness, and have a 16 percent higher rate of alcohol, drug, or
substance abuse.
Access and affordability: In 2020, 99 percent of Medicare beneficiaries
have access to at least one MA plan with, on average, 39
plan choices per county. When comparing average annual out-of-pocket costs, MA
members save $1,598 more than those in traditional Medicare, according to
figures from the Analysis of 2017 Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey (MCBS)
Data by ATI Advisory. The out-of-pocket
costs associated with inpatient facility stays is seven
times higher for beneficiaries in traditional Medicare than those in MA ($126
versus $15).
Supplemental benefits: More than 80 percent of MA plans offer at
least a vision, hearing, wellness, or dental benefit and more than half of
plans offer all four benefits. The most common benefit offered is vision coverage,
with about 94 percent of plans including or offering a vision benefit. This
year, 619 plans offered Special Supplemental Benefits for the Chronically Ill.
Health outcomes: The report also found MA beneficiaries had
lower rates of potentially avoidable hospitalizations than beneficiaries
enrolled in original Medicare. Citing 2018 research
from Avalere that examined care for individuals with
multiple chronic conditions, the BMA report noted that MA beneficiaries
experienced 23 percent fewer inpatient hospital stays and 33 percent fewer
emergency room visits than in traditional Medicare. Another study published
in The American Journal of Managed Care in February 2012, found the
risk-adjusted 30-day readmission rate among MA beneficiaries was 13 percent to
20 percent lower than the rate in traditional Medicare. A 2017 study in
the same publication found value-based contracting in MA led to a 32 percent
lower risk of death.
Consumer satisfaction: A May 2020 survey of
MA beneficiaries conducted by Morning Consult found a 99 percent satisfaction
rate, with 64 percent of the 1,020 seniors polled stating they were “very
satisfied.”
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