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Our Medicare Misery

By Robert Kuttner, The American Prospect. Posted January 5, 2006.


The new Republican Medicare bill is about to kick in, and what it offers to seniors isn't pretty.

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[Note: This article originally appeared in The American Prospect as "Medicare Misery."]

The New Year brings with it Congressional mid-term elections. Here is an issue that should be a real political gift to the opposition party -- the colossal Medicare drug-benefit mess.

It was clear back in 2003, when the Bush administration rammed this bill through the Republican Congress, that the purpose was not to devise an affordable prescription drug program for seniors. Rather the administration wanted to help two friendly industries, the pharmaceutical companies and the HMO's; and to get bragging rights for the 2004 election that Bush had helped seniors. Few voters would grasp just how bad the law was, since its effective date was deliberately put off until 2006.

Now, as the year of reckoning arrives, the true cynicism of Bush's program is becoming evident to each senior citizen (or adult child of senior citizen) who attempts to fathom what Bush and the industry lobbyists wrought.

For starters, coverage is woefully inadequate. You pay a $250 deductible and then a 25 percent co-pay on the first $2,250 of drug benefits each year, plus roughly another $450 a year in premiums. So if your prescriptions cost $2,250 a year, or about $190 a month, for prescriptions, you pay $1,200 a year all told and the plan pays just $1050.

That's pretty shabby. But then, the truly bizarre feature of the plan kicks in. Coverage simply disappears, until you have spent nearly $3,100 out of pocket. This is the infamous "hole in the donut." Coverage kicks in again only after a total of $5,100 in prescription costs.

A great many seniors will never get the coverage because the plan is a bad bargain, and they just won't sign up. Of if they do sign up, they will run out of the ability to pay enough out of pocket before qualifying for needed benefits. Even with these disgracefully skimpy benefits, the plan is expected to add over half a trillion to the federal budget over the next decade.

Why would anyone have designed such an insane program?

Because the political purpose was never to deliver good benefits. One administration goal, running the program through the private insurance industry, conflicted with the imperative of a clear, cost-effective plan. Seniors must evaluate innumerable competing private plans, each with subtle differences in costs and benefits that make an impenetrable program even less fathomable, and raise total costs because each of these private plans tacks on a profit. This was a case of privatizing something done far more efficiently through a direct government program.

The second administration goal, fattening the drug industry, led to a provision explicitly prohibiting the government from negotiating bulk price discounts from drug companies, as the Veterans hospitals do. As a result, according to a study by Families USA, drug prices obtained by the VA are about 48 percent less on average than those expected to be charged to people enrolled in the Medicare drug program. Among the twenty most widely prescribed drugs for seniors, for instance, a year's supply of Protonix (for ulcers) costs the VA $253, but the seniors in the Bush Medicare program, which prohibits such bulk discounts, pay a sticker price of $1,080. That by itself will give you ulcers! A year of Zocor, the cholesterol-reducing drug, costs the VA $251. Seniors in Bush's drug plan get whacked for $1,323.

It was these inflated costs that necessitated some gimmick to keep down the overall cost to taxpaypers. Hence the notorious donut hole.

If the Democrats have the moxie and the wit, they should propose a straightforward fix, take it to the country in the 2006 elections, and dare Republicans to oppose it:

First, get rid of the costly crazy-quilt of private programs and bring the "Medicare" drug program back into public Medicare.

Second, allow Medicare to negotiate bulk discounts the way the VA does.

Third, get rid of the donut hole, and design a simplified benefit structure with modest co-pays and then 100 percent coverage after a set annual cap on out-of-pocket costs.

Finally, if the savings from the bulk price discounts are not quite sufficient to cover costs of filling in the donut hole, take back a little of Bush's tax cuts to the richest one percent.

This debate will also remind voters of a useful meta-lesson. A party whose mantra is "hate government," and that sees government mainly as a vehicle for rewarding special-interest allies rather than serving ordinary citizens, can never be trusted to run government competently.

A happier New Year to all.

Digg!

Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect. This article is available on The American Prospect's website.

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And people wonder why..
Posted by: navistic50 on Jan 5, 2006 2:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
By far, Bush and company have proven beyond a shadow of a doubt their real intentions. I have never been so disgusted with an administration as criminal as the current one in office. Bush is a regular wrecking crew, and he has done more damage to this country than any terrorist I know of. I refuse to watch him speak, much less listen to what he has to say. As the old saying goes, "If his lips are moving, he is lying" has never suited a president better. Between the O'Reilly's and the Bushies and the rest of the real cowards of 911, all I can say is, "I hope you all wind up in jail before the dust has settled on this administration. I am a disabled citizen and I can see right now that I'll need to start selling pencils to pay for my prescriptions. Once again, Bush strikes at the very heart of America.. please somebody, get this man out of office.

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» RE: And people wonder why.. Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: And people wonder why.. Posted by: Basenjis
What Now?
Posted by: oldgringo on Jan 5, 2006 4:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Kuttner has done HIS job very well with this great piece.
NOW, the rest of us MUST do our part. WE must turn up the heat on Howard Dean and the DNC to get the "old school" "fellow traveling" "belt way concessionist" phoney democrats out of the way: the Clintons, the Kerry Group, and all such have got TO GO!
The new battle cry is really an old one: "LEAD, FOLLOW, OR GET THE HELL OUT OF THE WAY, but there can be no more "doing deals"!

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» RE: What Now? Posted by: Lincoln fan
Health Care is our nation's disgrace
Posted by: lb on Jan 5, 2006 6:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are so many reasons Medicare Part D is a disaster. As a physician, I treat many people on Medicare who can't afford even $10 more a month in health care costs. I have been getting them free drugs from many pharaceutical companies for the past 20 years. In the past month, all these companies have sent letters stating they will discontinue their free drug programs, now that Medicare Part D "covers" these people. I honestly don't know how they think anyone would be stupid enough to see the two programs as the same. And it will be disastrous for the patients.

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» Eternal vigilance Posted by: Lincoln fan
Politics;The art of compromise.
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Jan 5, 2006 6:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Politicians play this game very well. The Republicans get in power. They grab everything they can from the working class as quickly as they can. They get kicked out of office. The Democrats come in and get some of the losses back. Everybody's happy! Repeat the cycle forever.

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can't reach my bootstraps yet but I'm trying
Posted by: liberalibrarian on Jan 5, 2006 7:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm on a disability at the moment. I'm not even going to bother with the rediculous, asinine so-called drug plan. It is beneath contempt. I can't afford the medicine my disability is for. So for my depression and PTSD--I suffer (and meditate). for high cholesterol, I'm eating oatmeal. For fibromyalgia I take over the counter pain pills. For asthma, well I have no choice (I eat a lot of soup and peanut butter to compensate). We live in a world where these medicines actually cost pennies--we are lucky they are there in the first place (thanks to science--but now an endangered species with the Right Wing)
I'm just hoping my Grandmother was right, who lived to be 89 and claimed it was because she never took any medications because she was highly allergic.
Whatever, because I'll never have enough money to cover retirement anyway.
To paraphrase Victor Hugo: National Healthcare is an idea whose time has come. I just do not understand many Americans resistance to it... (by the way, I'm looking for work--to hell with disability--I'll drag myself to work somehow and croak at my cubicle...) Along with the rest of my fellow slaves.

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Time to Clean Houses
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jan 5, 2006 9:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The House of Representatives, The Senate & The White House

As usual, the lobbyists have gotten their way. Congress and the Pres have made sure that the Drug companies will continue to make scandalous profits, the drug retailers theirs and the consumers/taxpayers get shafted.

Two summers ago I was hospitalized with Pneumonia. Three days of IV fluids and antibiotics in a semi-private room, a chest X-Ray and some basic labwork ran over $9,000. At the hospital I work at with my employer provided insurance, my share of the bill was over $2,000.

Guess what was the most expensive part of the bill. If you guessed the antibiotics you would be right. The oral antibiotic (one) prescribed at discharge cost OVER $13/pill WITH a discount Rx card. I asked the Pharmacist what the cost would have been without the card and was told almost $16/pill. For an antibiotic.

This has got to change.

http://www.nofreelunch.org/

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» RE: Time to Clean Houses Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Time to Clean Houses Posted by: Lizka
huh!
Posted by: karyse on Jan 5, 2006 9:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The only bright side to this is perhaps all of us will find out that we not only didn't need many of the chemicals pushed by the so-called pharmactical companies, but we live longer without them. Whenever I see an elderly person with a drug dispenser (you know the little plastic cases that separate the pills by the hourly dosage) I wonder how many of the pills are taken to alleviate the "side effects" of the last little blue pill that they took.

Yes, there are chemicals that are necessary to prolong life, but I'll bet 90 percent of the stuff people ingest is designed (exactly) to prolong NOT cure. If they were cured, well hell, then they wouldn't need the damn drugs, would they?

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» RE: huh! Posted by: audreyvest
» RE: huh! Re: karyse Posted by: Basenjis
Medicare Casino
Posted by: bringbackthe70s on Jan 5, 2006 9:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You forgot to mention the most insidious aspect of the plan, the penalty for late enrollment. You could be healthy and need no drugs for 20 years and decide to forego the plan. If you then find you need an outrageously expensive drug, and try to sign up, your premium will be astonomical. Conversely, you could faithfully pay the premiums for 20 years and receive no benefits, then find that that one expensive drug you need isn't covered by any available plan, so all that money was completely wasted. It's not an insurance program, it's a Medicare Casino.

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C'mon representatives – represent US!
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jan 5, 2006 10:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have a hard time understanding why, with all that the Bush administration has done to screw americans – from killing their sons and daughters in Iraq to taking away constitutionally-guaranteed freedoms to destroying the middle class to picking the pockets of the poor, sick and disabled to laying about virtually every single thing they tell the american people – that there are not a million americans with torches and pitchforks screaming at the White House gate. (Thank goodness we are a nation of laws. . .aren't we?)

We should be screaming at our so-called representatives, Democrats and Republicans alike, flooding their phone lines and e-mails daily, melting down their fax machines daily, with so much correspondence that we cannot be ignored, and all with one message: impeach and/or prosecute the whole bunch of criminals in the administration: Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rove, the whole lot, if you want to keep your cushy jobs in Congress. Until the people rise up and exercise their constitutional right to stop financial and societal "taxation without representation," the lawlessness in Washington will not only continue, it will get worse. If we cannot live under the law – including our own government – then we have nothing, and no future. Freedon in America must mean more than "free to shop at Wal-Mart."

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The Medicare Farce
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Jan 5, 2006 10:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The healthcare system in America is a joke! We put money in all our working lives and get sqwat. How can this be? Well far enough back that most folks under 50 won't remember,they raided Social Security. It used to be in a protected program. There was money for the programs. Soon as we put it 'On Budget' there were more problems than you could shake a stick at. This is far from the Govt's main role of 'Promoting the Genreal Welfare' of the People. This is but further proof that the current sitting govt is out of touch,immoral and illegal. It has ceased to function in the best intrests of the People.
Because of the govt's role in the over polluting of the air,water and growing soils causing the outright poisoning of every person in America, THEY HAVE TO PAY FOR OUR HEALTHCARE. Scrimping on the Elders and the folks who count on medicare is really the system's way of saying
'Please Die, You're taking up otherwise valuable,productive space.'. Think I'm kidding,go to a nursing home sometime.
The People deserve better that this from the govt. This govt is too corrupted to make the change. That means we have to do it for ourselves. For Grandma and Grandpa and for the
Greatgrandchildren we will never know. I support the P.O.T. Party Platform. Sure some folks have said 'it's a wagon load of hopes and dreams' but I feel better about supporting that then the same old bucket of shit the other two sides keep pushing. P.O.T.= FREE

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Ridiculous Plan
Posted by: Kitty Lady Oregon on Jan 5, 2006 10:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you could call this drug scam a plan. I am not going to enroll. I take two generic blood pressure drugs and spend about $50 per year. Why on earth would I ever enroll in this scam for the drug companies and insurance companies? You have to be either stupid, or have extremely high drug costs to enroll. It turns out that I am allergic to most all pain medications and all antibiotics. For years before I was old enough for Medicare, I had no health insurance and stayed pretty healthy by eating organic and only natural meats and very little beef. If you eat good food and exercise as much as you can, you won't need all those pills. Lots of seniors are taking way too many meds. Some of their problems are undoubtedly caused by the damn meds. I have arthritis and just keep moving and live with the pain. I think I'm a lot healthier for it.

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» RE: idiculous Plan Posted by: Lizmv
» RE: thank you for sharing this Posted by: HawkSpirit
there's more money in keeping people sick than in keeping us well.
Posted by: Sojourner on Jan 5, 2006 1:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Public healthcare is motivated to keep people well. That's its job.

Private healthcare is motivated to make a profit, and the easiest way to do that is to keep people sick. That's its job.

Today's statistics about the profit level of US hospitals makes it 'perfectly clear.' Since the US healthcare level ranks somewhere far down from the top in the world, that's the new definition of 'The American Way:' follow the money.

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Why is everyone so surprised
Posted by: bookwoman on Jan 5, 2006 2:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This law was passed in November, 2003. I know because I sat glued to C-Span in a way I never do with television. The reason was that I couldn't believe that anyone in their right mind except someone in Congress who was too dumb to exist would vote for it. Several high ranking Democrats and even a few fiscally conservative Repuglicans stood for hours arguing, with charts, about how bad it was and how much it was going to cost. After it was passed, we heard stories about how the "hammer" had twisted arms and made promises to get even Republicans to vote for it. The voting period which was supposed to run for 17 minutes was kept open several extra hours far into the night. Didn't any of you who are now sitting with open mouths wonder what all the fuss was about.

This program is a mess. No one can explain it. About a year ago, I became eligible for Medicare, and because I had a private drug plan from my former employer, I called Medicare and asked a simple question - since delaying signing up for Plan B Medicare (doctors visits and peripherals) brought about a penalty on top of the premium, would the same be true of Plan D as the drug plan is called. In other words, if I delayed taking Plan D, would I have to pay a penalty for not taking Plan D on January 1, 2006. I was put on hold several times and finally was told that they didn't know. One of our local tv stations did a feature on this new plan, and one pharmacist said that she had been trying to get through to a Medicare conselor for three days to get an answer for one of her regular patients.

This was supposed to be a plan to give drug benefits to those elderly who had no coverage. It was turned into a gift for the insurance companies and the drug companies and left, as they say, big donut holes for those it was supposed to help.

By the way, I have heard recently that the insurance companies and the drug companies are fighting because the insurance companies think the drug companies are taking advantage of them.

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Medicare Drug Benefit: Shop till you Drop
Posted by: Maryanne on Jan 5, 2006 2:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In January 2006 issue of FOREVER YOUNG, the above article by Roger Cook, noted that Bush called the drug benefit "the greatest advance in health care for seniors since the creation of Medicare 40 years ago. " Cook procedes to demolish Bush's perception, and includes comments from Senator Charles Schumer of New York.

Schumer says the drug program is "so messed up that congress should scrap it and start all over again. " He notes the program is confusing because of "incompetance. and the program was passed to satisfy the pharmaceutical and insurance industries, not to satisfy the average insuree."

Cook concludes that the government is "trying to help" Medicare beneficiaries to assess the various plans to find the one that best meets each individual's needs through an internet site. To find that one you must fill out screen after screen of questions with numerous boxes to check to get options and choices- to comparison shop. ( And if you aren't computer savvy, this can be done by phone). He concludes, " There have been complaints that this help system is the dot.com equivalent of red tape. "

Lets hope others get on Schumer's band wagon and scrap this program before too many get burned.

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Northern Line, Public vs. Profit ?
Posted by: CommonWealth on Jan 5, 2006 3:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With Respect to the article “Our Medicare Misery”, another way of doing things is the publicly funded and privately delivered form of Health Care or Government run program for Seniors in the Province of Ontario, it works this way:

Over 65 years of age, you pay the first $100.00 dollars of you prescription (s) per year and ALL prescriptions after that are $6.11 each. This method was enacted by the Neo-Con Government of Premier Mike Harris, before his disturbing reign Seniors only paid $2.00 per prescription.

The Question is: Is health care a product just like floor wax?

Should the profit motive be allowed in the health care realm?

CommonWealth

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Give Part D a passing grade
Posted by: rac on Jan 5, 2006 8:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Medicare Part D--the program liberals love to hate and conservatives just hate. My sentiments are with Mr. Kuttner, but he has some of his numbers wrong. I’m enrolling people daily in Part D and can say they are cutting their drug costs substantially. Right now, the biggest problem is with pharmacists not being able to determine what plans dual eligibles are enrolled in. Prescriptions are not being processed without a hitch, the NDCHealth database is overwhelmed, enrollees are not being informed about transitional policies, and confusion and anger is widespread among seniors. There’s potential for greater fallout.

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When You Have The "Best" Government Money Can Buy
Posted by: doneman2000 on Jan 5, 2006 11:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
you get phucked up legislation written by the industries the program affects the most. In this case insurance and drug companies got what they paid for with the GOP allowing those industries to seriously affect a program which should have had seniors in mind in lieu of profits. With Goddamn Republicans it's always profits. Unless money is taken out of politics the republic will fall as it will work only if the the governing parties abide the constitution and keep the heart and the will of the people as their guiding light when enacting any legislation. When you're a whore for corporate and special interest money it is impossible to follow what's best for the people unless the peoples interests happen to cross paths with special interests. How many times does that happen?

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Is this really true?
Posted by: mistery509 on Jan 7, 2006 7:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am a Canadian Senior and I remember that when Bill Clinton was in power, he was trying to put in a Medical Bill similar to the
Canadian Medical Bill. Of course it did not pass.

When we become 65 years old in Canada, we do not pay any medical bills whatsoever. Our perscription drugs are also cut and after spending $300.00 on drugs the cost is free.

The American seniors are abused and used. You have had your chances but the population seems to be voting and getting what they voted for.

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» RE: Is this really true? Posted by: Lizka