Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Bill H (AZ)'s avatar

Merrill:

If there is no problem, I am going to put much of this over at Angry Bear, an economics blog that has been around a long time.

Expand full comment
Andrew Sprung's avatar

Very interesting to pair hospital systems dropping out of MA plans with the STAT exposé on denial-via-algorithm. As to stopping the MA juggernaut, though: I was surprised to read recently, via a study by Lanlan Xiu et al., that MA growth is primarily a result of people switching *into* MA from FFS:

"We found that switching from fee-for-service Medicare to MA more than tripled between 2006 and 2022, whereas switching from MA to fee-for-service Medicare decreased, with the change rates accelerating since 2019. The share of switchers among all new MA enrollees rose from 61 percent in 2011 to 80 percent in 2022."

I fear that the premium difference btwn MA and FFS + Medigap (for those who don't get an employer-sponsored supplement) is just too great for many people to withstand, especially as their resources dwindle. Most MA enrollees pay only the Part B premium, $164/month this year, as opposed to Part B + Part D (say $30-40/month) and Medigap (say $100-200/month). As the STAT indicates, it's all too often "pay now or pay later" (via MA OOP exposure and denied care), but $164 vs. $320/month is a deal that many can't refuse.

Link to the study re MA switching: https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/10.1377/hlthaff.2023.00224#:~:text=We%20found%20that%20switching%20from,to%2080%20percent%20in%202022.

Expand full comment
6 more comments...

No posts