17:20 Medicare Actuary: Health Costs Would Rise After Overhaul | |
The Senate's health overhaul plan would cover 33 million more people but fail to curb rising health costs, could threaten some Medicare patients' access to care, and may sink profits for one-fifth of
hospitals and nursing homes, according to news accounts of an HHS
report released Friday afternoon. The Washington Post: The report, by Rick Foster, chief actuary at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, concluded that plans "to reduce payments to hospitals and
other providers, to force them to adopt more efficient practices, could
prove particularly problematic for institutions that serve large
numbers of Medicare patients." Those institutions could stop treating
Medicare patients - in Foster's words - "possibly jeopardizing access
to care for beneficiaries." As many as one in five may no longer be
profitable within 10 years. The Wall Street Journal:
"The report said 33 million more U.S. citizens and legal residents
would be insured under the bill, resulting in 93% of Americans with
health-insurance coverage. But it said the new demand for health care
caused by the bill could prove 'difficult to meet initially' because
doctors and hospitals would charge higher fees in response to the new
demand. The report also said proposed cuts in Medicare spending 'may be
unrealistic'". | |
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