Many lawmakers are behind it. A lot of seniors are behind it.
But there's an important group that's not backing federal proposals
to make Medicare prescription drugs a stand-alone insurance
product: The insurance industry itself.
That's a sign lawmakers should heed as they work on a compromise
Medicare bill to send to President Bush, nationally-renowned health
policy consultant Robert Laszewski told congressional staffers at
an Oct. 6 Capitol Hill briefing.
"Show me the list of insurance companies lining up behind this
drug proposal," Laszewski said at the briefing, sponsored by The
Heritage Foundation. "This program is solely for a political
benefit. No for-profit insurance company would create something
like this."
One reason for the insurance industry's lack of support is what
Laszewski calls the "1,000 lb. gorilla"-chronic underpayment by the
government. It's concerned that Congress will cut Medicare payments
to insurance providers to balance the budget. It has done this in
the past, Laszewski says, to keep Medicare costs down, and there's
no reason why it should change.
Also, without broad insurance industry participation, the attempt
to make prescription drugs an entitlement to all Medicare patients
will resemble the national health-care plans of the Clinton
administration a decade ago. "If you pass this thing and the
private-sector plans don't show up for this, then you will have a
single-payer health plan for drugs," Laszewski said.
For more information or to receive an e-mail version of
"Medicare Maladies," contact [email protected] or call
Heritage Media Services at (202) 675-1761.
Report Health Care Reform
Medicare Malady #58: Lawmakers Say "Yes." But Insurers Say "NoWay."
October 7, 2003 1 min read
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