Among other key
findings:
- Nearly
half (45%) of the total reduction in spending would be for
outpatient hospital services, where the price gap between private
insurance and Medicare is relatively large, 27 percent for inpatient
services and 14 percent for physician office visits.
- About
a third of the reduction would come from lower health care spending
for privately insured adults ages 55-64 who tend to use more health
care services than younger Americans.
- On
average, health care spending per person with private insurance
would be an estimated $2,096 less for adults ages 19-64 and $1,033
less per child if Medicare rates were used.
Over the years, federal
and state lawmakers have proposed using Medicare rates to rein in health
care prices. The new KFF analysis does not examine a particular health
reform plan and is not intended to be a forecast, prediction or an
endorsement of the policy. Instead, it illustrates how lower payment
rates could reduce health spending. Those payment changes could be
implemented through a variety of proposals such as Medicare for all, a
public option, lowering the age of Medicare eligibility, or all-payer
rate-setting. Policies that resulted in private insurance payment rates
that were a multiple of Medicare would result in proportionally fewer
savings.
The KFF authors note
that proposals to limit private insurance reimbursement to Medicare rates
could lead to substantial reduction in health care spending, but would
undoubtedly be met with fierce opposition from health care providers,
since the decrease in spending would translate into a significant drop in
their revenues. The analysis does not estimate the likely effects of a
change in service utilization (supply or demand) on spending. It also
does not estimate the indirect effects on government revenues or
spending, or decreases in health-related tax subsidies for employers or
individuals that that would offset savings.
For the full analysis,
as well as other data and analyses related to health spending and health
reform proposals, visit
kff.org.
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