When President Johnson signed the 1965 law that created
Medicare, he hailed it as the end of Americans being "denied the
healing miracle of modern medicine."
More than 35 years later, the prognosis is a bit more
negative.
The program has failed to keep pace with modern medicine and is
slow to offer access to the latest treatments and therapies. For
instance, Congress did not approve Medicare coverage for annual
mammograms for women over 40 until 1997.
Typically, once the FDA approves a technology, it takes another 15
months to five years for Medicare to cover it. It took Congress
seven years to approve Medicare coverage for state-of-the-art
bone-density screening. This bureaucratic lag is more than a
nuisance-it keeps the program from meeting the needs of our
seniors.
As for the debate in Congress over whether and how to add a
prescription-drug benefit to the Medicare program, virtually
everyone agrees that a program focused on caring for the elderly
should cover such items. But none of the four proposals the Senate
voted down before the August recess would have done what's
necessary to help Medicare adjust for future medical progress or
address its crumbling financial future.
When Congress returns after Labor Day, pressure will resume for
senators to "do something" about prescription drugs. The danger, of
course, becomes that senators driven by election-year concerns-a
third are up for re-election this fall-will try to fashion a bill
from the four bad ideas already rejected. Yet adding an expensive
prescription-drug entitlement without making fundamental structural
improvements to an already rickety program is unwise and puts
future retirees at risk.
In just nine years, the first of the 77 million baby boomers will
retire. Absent major health reform, most will be forced to give up
their current private health plans and enroll in an unsound,
government-run program that fails to provide seniors the care they
deserve and expect. A report issued this year by the Medicare board
of trustees says that in 2022 the program will begin paying out
more in benefits than it takes in through payroll taxes-and that
the trust fund will run out of money completely in 2030.
What Medicare needs is a complete overhaul-structural reforms that
enable the program to adjust to progress and change. As a majority
of the National Bipartisan Commission on the Future of Medicare,
made up of members of Congress and outside experts, recommended in
1999, it should be modeled on the highly successful and extremely
popular Federal Employee Health Benefit Program (FEHBP). The
program provides health-care benefits-including prescription-drug
coverage-to 9 million people, including members of Congress,
retirees, federal employees and their families.
In the FEHBP, a variety of private health plans-at least nine at
every federal workplace-compete for beneficiaries. Customers choose
the plans that best fit their needs and pay extra only if they
choose one with particularly pricey benefits.
In the case of Medicare, retirees would have an assortment of
competing private insurance plans to choose from, and government
would contribute the monthly premium-again, leaving any remaining
premium dollars for the retiree to pay.
This system would ease current regulatory burdens on providers and
administrators and better meet the medical needs of retirees. The
forces of competition would push insurers to design health-care
packages that work for seniors, not shortchange them. The
availability of medical innovations, such as the latest
high-blood-pressure drug and cancer screening, would increase as
insurers looked to gain market share and keep their senior
customers healthy. And employers could work with employees to set
aside funds to further assist with health costs in
retirement.
In the meantime, perhaps Congress should look to the bigger
picture-how to fix Medicare once and for all. And it could start
with the plan that works for members of Congress and their
families-FEHBP. Then, perhaps, it could place the "healing power of
modern medicine" within the reach of all seniors.
Nina
Owcharenko is a policy analyst in health care at The
Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based public policy research
organization.
COMMENTARY Health Care Reform
ed082702b: Restoring Medicare To Good Health
Aug 27, 2002 2 min read
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