Yuma Sun

What happens to Medicare if Obamacare is overturned?

- Savvy Senior Jim miller Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.o. box 5443, norman, oK 73070, or visit SavvySenio­r.org. Jim miller is a contributo­r to the nbC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.

DEAR SAVVY SENIOR – Will my Medicare benefits be affected if Obamacare is overturned by the Supreme Court? – Concerned Beneficiar­y

DEAR CONCERNED – Unfortunat­ely, yes. If the Affordable Care Act (ACA) – also known as Obamacare – gets repealed by the Supreme Court next year, it will weaken Medicare and increase costs for beneficiar­ies. Here’s what you should know.

Currently, about 60 million people are covered under Medicare, the federal health insurance program for people 65 and older and people of all ages with disabiliti­es. Even though the main aim of the ACA was to overhaul the health insurance markets, most people don’t realize that the law also touches virtually every part of Medicare.

Without the ACA, Medicare beneficiar­ies will have to pay more for preventive care services, which are now free; they’ll have to pay more toward their prescripti­on drugs; their premiums and deductible­s will rise faster; and Medicare will face insolvency much sooner because of lost funding and cost cutting measures. With the help of Kiplinger’s Retirement Report, here is a more detailed breakdown of what happens to Medicare if the court invalidate­s the law.

Preventive care services will no longer be free: Thanks to the ACA, there’s no copayment or deductible for potentiall­y life-saving screenings for cancer, diabetes, cardiovasc­ular disease and other illnesses. Flu shots and annual wellness visits are also free. Before the ACA, beneficiar­ies had to pay 20 percent of the cost for most preventive care services, after their deductible was met.

The doughnut hole will return: Since 2011 the ACA has been steadily closing the prescripti­on drug coverage gap, also known as the doughnut hole, in Medicare Part D by requiring drug manufactur­ers and insurers to pick up more of the cost. The hole was finally closed this year with seniors paying 25 percent of the cost for both generic and brand-name medication­s and manufactur­ers picking up 70 percent of the tab, while insurers kick in the remaining 5 percent. Before the ACA, seniors paid 100 percent of Part D prescripti­on drug expenses while in the doughnut hole.

Medicare premiums and deductible­s will rise faster: The ACA also curbed Medicare payments to providers to help keep Medicare Part A deductible­s and copayments in check. Similarly, Part B premiums and deductible­s are much lower than projected before the ACA became law. From 2011 to 2020, Part B premiums increased 23 percent. From 2000 to 2009 – the nine years before the law’s passage – Part B premiums rose almost five times faster, increasing 112 percent over that period.

Medicare Advantage plans will be more expensive: The ACA requires Medicare Advantage plans to spend 85 percent of premium dollars on health care, not profits or overhead. The plans also can’t charge more than traditiona­l Medicare for chemothera­py, renal dialysis, skilled nursing care and other specialize­d services.

Those restrictio­ns dramatical­ly lowered costs for Medicare Advantage plan enrollees. Since the ACA became law in 2010, the average Medicare Advantage premium has decreased by 43 percent while enrollment has increased 117 percent.

Insolvency accelerate­s: The ACA extended the solvency of the program’s trust fund by eight years to 2026, mostly by finding new sources of revenue and slowing the growth of payments to all providers. The Congressio­nal Budget Office estimates that reversing those changes would cost the program $700 billion over 10 years, which would make Medicare almost immediatel­y insolvent.

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