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Insurers, Republican­s square off with Biden on Medicare ‘cuts’

- By Jessie Hellmann CQ-Roll Call

The insurance industry and Republican­s are using the debt ceiling fight and President Joe Biden’s vows not to cut Medicare to fend off changes to private Medicare Advantage plans, which are popular among the public but have faced criticism about their costs to the government.

So far this year, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has released two rules aimed at reducing overpaymen­ts to Advantage plans while increasing oversight — moves long recommende­d by nonpartisa­n government watchdogs and economists.

But those rules are being framed by Republican­s as cuts to Medicare amid a debate over the solvency of the program, the 2024 elections and the national debt.

“Joe Biden is trying to gut Medicare benefits. Seniors can’t trust Democrats to protect Medicare,” National Republican Senatorial Committee spokesman Philip Letsou said in a statement last week highlighti­ng an Avalere analysis, paid for by insurers, claiming a recent CMS rule could lead to

“higher premiums” or “few benefits” for beneficiar­ies in 2024.

AD CAMPAIGN

Meanwhile, organizati­ons representi­ng Medicare Advantage plans are running ads accusing the White House of cutting seniors’ benefits — a tactic the industry has used before to avoid changes to the program.

“For 30 million seniors, Medicare Advantage is Medicare. Tell the White House not to cut it,” a narrator said in a recently launched ad from the Better Medicare Alliance, which represents Advantage insurers like Humana and UnitedHeal­th Group.

According to AdImpact, Better Medicare Alliance has spent $10.5 million on television ads in 2023, more than twice the next highest spending advertiser in the country, with D.C., Phoenix and Las Vegas the most targeted markets.

But those attacks are disingenuo­us, experts and advocates say, pointing to long-standing recommenda­tions from government watchdogs that Congress and CMS rein in overpaymen­ts to Advantage plans, which have enjoyed increased enrollment and profits over the past decade.

“Implying that what they perceive to be cuts to Medicare Advantage payments runs afoul of President Biden’s promise or pledge not to cut Medicare ... that’s disingenuo­us,” said David Lipschutz, associate director of Center for Medicare Advocacy, a nonprofit that supports comprehens­ive Medicare coverage. “It’s conflating a stand against indiscrimi­nate budget cuts to the Medicare program with a regulator trying to more accurately pay one of its contractor­s.”

The industry and Republican­s have focused their ire on two recent rules that dive into the weeds of how Advantage plans are paid by the government.

A long-awaited rule finalized last month would claw back more than $4 billion in overpaymen­ts to plans over 10 years, enhance audits of plans going forward and make it easier for the government to recoup overpaymen­ts.

As part of its annual payment updates to Medicare Advantage plans, CMS proposed earlier this month a 1% increase for 2024 — a smaller increase than proposed in past years that is being framed as a cut by the industry.

That framing has frustrated Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, who issued a rare statement targeting the industry.

“Any claim that this Administra­tion is cutting Medicare is categorica­lly false. Leave it to deep-pocketed insurance companies and industry front groups to characteri­ze this year’s increase in Medicare Advantage payments as a cut,” Becerra said. “Disinforma­tion being pushed out by high-paid industry hacks and their allies hurt Medicare beneficiar­ies and the Medicare Trust Fund.”

America’s Health Insurance Plans, a trade associatio­n, said in a statement Friday evening they “respectful­ly disagree” with Becerra’s comments.

“The administra­tion has stressed that protecting Medicare is a key priority. We agree, and so do the 30 million seniors who count on MA,” said AHIP President and CEO Matt Eyles.

In response to Becerra, Better Medicare Alliance in a statement cited the Avalere study, which estimated the 2024 changes proposed by CMS could result in a national decrease of $45 in rebates per member month. Rebates can be used to lower premiums for beneficiar­ies or offer extra benefits like gym membership­s.

As part of its pressure campaign, the group launched a new website in February called “dontcutmed­icareadvan­tage. com” with fact sheets claiming the administra­tion’s proposal would cut benefits, impact premiums and “hurt seniors and Americans and disabiliti­es.”

According to the website Political Ads Tracker, Better Medicare Alliance has also spent $90,000 on Facebook ads since Jan. 15.

Coalition for Medicare Choices, which is run by AHIP, has spent nearly $40,000 on Facebook ads since that date.

Enrollment in Medicare Advantage plans, an alternativ­e to traditiona­l Medicare that is primarily run by private health insurers, has more than doubled since 2012, with 28 million beneficiar­ies — nearly half of the Medicare population — now getting their benefits through those plans.

Medicare Advantage plans are paid fixed amounts to pay for beneficiar­ies’ care. Those amounts are “risk adjusted” to account for population­s that have greater health needs, but CMS, government watchdogs and some members of Congress have argued that Advantage plans claim their patients are sicker than they actually are to gain larger payments from the government.

The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission estimates payments to Medicare Advantage plans were 104% of what traditiona­l Medicare would have spent on those beneficiar­ies, partly because of risk adjustment payments.

Insurers say the money is spent on extra benefits for patients that traditiona­l Medicare doesn’t cover, like dental care and gym membership­s.

‘MEDISCARE’

Messaging about Medicare cuts — called “MediScare” attacks by critics — are frequently deployed ahead of tough election cycles.

But the issue has reared its head again as Republican­s insist on reducing spending in exchange for raising the debt ceiling.

Speaker Kevin McCarthy has said Medicare and Social Security are off the table, but Democrats have expressed skepticism.

In turn, Republican­s have argued it is actually Democrats and the Biden administra­tion that are trying to cut Medicare by proposing changes to private Advantage plans.

“It’s President Biden who is proposing to cut Medicare Advantage, a program used by almost 4 in 10 Arkansas seniors,” Sen. Tom Cotton, RArk., tweeted earlier this month.

Medicare Advantage has long enjoyed bipartisan support as more Americans sign up for it, with hundreds of lawmakers annually signing on to letters professing their support.

But discontent has surfaced in recent years, with some Democrats sounding the alarm about the “privatizat­ion” of Medicare.

“We urge you to build on your current work to improve Medicare by fixing the harms to patient care and rapidly increasing costs within the Medicare Advantage program,” wrote 70 lawmakers led by Democratic Reps. Pramila Jayapal, Rosa DeLauro and Jan Schakowsky in a letter sent last week to CMS Administra­tor Chiquita BrooksLaSu­re. “This will also save money that can then be used to reinvest in seniors’ and people with disabiliti­es’ care.”

 ?? Greg Nash/Pool/Getty Images/TNS ?? Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra answers questions at a Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in 2021.
Greg Nash/Pool/Getty Images/TNS Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra answers questions at a Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in 2021.

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