Black Medicare Beneficiaries Are More
Likely Than White Beneficiaries to Have Cost-Related Problems with Their
Health Care, Across both Traditional Medicare and in Medicare Advantage
Plans
Rates of Cost-Related Problems are Higher
Among Beneficiaries in Medicare Advantage Than in Traditional Medicare
with Supplemental Coverage, But Highest Among Beneficiaries in
Traditional Medicare without Supplemental Coverage
Among people with
Medicare, Black beneficiaries are more likely to have cost-related
problems with their health care than White beneficiaries, finds a new KFF
analysis, with the racial disparity persisting among
beneficiaries in both traditional Medicare and Medicare Advantage plans.
While 17 percent of all
Medicare beneficiaries, or about 1 in 6, reported health care
cost-related problems in 2018, the rate among Black beneficiaries was
double that among White beneficiaries (28% vs. 14%), according to the
analysis of data from the 2018 Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey
(MCBS).
Among Medicare Advantage
enrollees, the rate of cost-related problems among Black beneficiaries
was also higher than among White beneficiaries (32% vs. 16%), the
analysis finds.
Among Black beneficiaries specifically, a larger share of those in
Medicare Advantage reported cost-related problems than those in
traditional Medicare (32% vs. 24%). The rate of cost-related problems was
lower still among the subset of Black beneficiaries in traditional
Medicare who had Medicaid or other sources of supplemental insurance
(20%).
Cost-related problems
were defined in the analysis as trouble getting care due to cost, a delay
in care due to cost, or problems paying medical bills.
Across all Medicare
beneficiaries, a somewhat smaller share of those in traditional Medicare
than in Medicare Advantage reported cost-related problems (15% vs. 19%),
with a lower rate among beneficiaries in traditional Medicare with
supplemental coverage (12%). The analysis also shows that, overall and
across racial and ethnic groups, the Medicare beneficiaries who are most
likely to experience cost-related problems are those in traditional
Medicare without supplemental coverage – 30 percent of whom reported
cost-related problems in 2018.
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