By Kelsey Waddill
- HealthPayer Intelligence
The number of Medicare Advantage plans is
increasing, while typically being of higher quality and yielding more
cost-savings as opposed to fee-for-service Medicare, Better Medicare Alliance
argued in its State of Medicare Advantage report.
Medicare Advantage has become almost
ubiquitous in the US, with the number of plans jumping 49 percent since 2017. On
average, there are 39 plans available per county.
This increased volume means that nearly all
Medicare beneficiaries can access at least one Medicare Advantage plan in 2020
(99 percent).
Dig Deeper
In addition to a larger uptake, Medicare
Advantage plans have seen greater cost savings in the past year. With monthly
premiums falling $3.87 and Part D premiums falling $4.70 since 2017, this will
be the third year of decreases.
As a result, Medicare Advantage
beneficiaries saved $1,598 over traditional Medicare beneficiaries in
out-of-pocket healthcare spending and also saved significantly on prescription
drugs. For inpatient stays, beneficiaries in Medicare Advantage payed
one-seventh of what traditional Medicare beneficiaries paid.
Medicare Advantage plans also offer more
diverse benefits, including the 80 percent of plans that offer vision,
dental, or hearing benefits. All of these are benefits that traditional
Medicare cannot offer. Over half of Medicare Advantage plans offer all four.
Vision benefits, which in general have produced high
member satisfaction in 2020, are the most common benefit for Medicare Advantage
plans to offer. Ninety-four percent of plans boast a vision plan.
Additionally, Medicare Advantage plans can
offer non-medical supplemental benefits. Over 600 plans are offering such benefits, including
telehealth which is available to over 14 million Medicare Advantage
beneficiaries.
As an example, Humana’s 2020 Bold Goal showed the impact
that these supplemental options can have. Humana’s Medicare Advantage members
across the Bold Goal program reported more Healthy Days, as defined by the CDC.
This is particularly significant for members with chronic conditions, who also
saw more Healthy Days in 2019 than in 2018.
Andrew Renda, associate vice president of
population health at Humana, told HealthPayerIntelligence that Humana’s success with
chronic conditions was largely dependent on a population health strategy that
sought to meet chronic conditions and social needs at the same time.
Despite these new benefit options, healthcare
spending in Medicare Advantage has not swamped its fee-for-service counterpart.
“Medicare now spends roughly the same per
beneficiary, on average, for Medicare Advantage as it does for Traditional FFS
Medicare, achieving payment parity,” the report stated.
In fact, a separate UnitedHealth Group study
showed Medicare Advantage spending to be 40 percent less than traditional
Medicare.
A conglomeration of studies delineated the
differences between Medicare Advantage beneficiaries spending and behaviors as
opposed to traditional Medicare beneficiaries. For example, Medicare Advantage
beneficiaries were less likely to be hospitalized and less likely to be
readmitted in 30 days.
Some studies even identified ways in which
Medicare Advantage may have diminished costs and improved outcomes for
traditional Medicare beneficiaries.
Medicare Advantage beneficiaries tended to
experience better member outcomes including complex chronically ill
populations, which saw significantly fewer hospital stays and emergency room
visits. Unnecessary and avoidable hospitalizations also were both less common
among Medicare Advantage plans.
Not only were treatments, such as hospital
stays, showing better results but also preventive care was more frequent among
Medicare Advantage seniors, who had a 25 percent higher rate of annual
preventive care access than traditional Medicare seniors.
These positive outcomes lead to high-quality
plans overall, the report argued. This year, over eight in ten beneficiaries
were expected to be in a four star Medicare Advantage prescription drug plan.
That is more than fifty percent higher than the amount of individuals in four
star plans a decade ago.
“Better Medicare Alliance calls on
policymakers to maintain a stable growth environment for Medicare Advantage,
ensuring that innovations in Medicare Advantage can flourish and that the
continuity of the health coverage that millions of Americans depend on today is
protected,” the report concluded.
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