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Paying more for Medicare?

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The heated debate over the federal deficit has pumped new life into controversial proposals for requiring Americans on Medicare to pay more for their healthcare, raising the possibility that seniors’ medical bills could jump hundreds or even thousands of dollars.

It remains unclear if any of the proposals, which congressional Republicans have demanded to cut trillions of dollars from the federal budget, will be enacted this year, given the continued stalemate over government spending.

But the ideas, once considered politically toxic, have gained enough traction that many in Washington expect them to resurface, if not now, then after the 2012 election.

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“Over the long haul, beneficiaries will have to pay more and taxpayers will have to pay more,” said Henry Aaron, a longtime healthcare expert at the Brookings Institution. “It’s just too darn expensive.”

That could mean higher co-pays, higher deductibles or higher premiums for many seniors.

Though the elderly are much better off financially than they were when Medicare was enacted, half of seniors subsist on incomes below $22,000 a year.

Raising costs for consumers would also represent a substantial shift in how the federal government has provided health insurance to the elderly for the last half century.

Since Medicare’s creation in 1965, presidents and members of Congress from both parties have largely avoided transferring costs to seniors. Though the program began charging high-income seniors higher Medicare premiums in 2003, Washington leaders have mainly sought to control Medicare costs by regulating the amounts that hospitals, doctors and other providers could charge -- a strategy employed again in the healthcare overhaul that President Obama signed last year.

Many healthcare experts believe this can drive improvements in quality and efficiency by rewarding medical providers that get good results and penalizing those that commit costly errors. That could yield savings in the long run.

But with the nation’s Medicare tab projected to nearly double over the next decade to almost $1 trillion, pressure is growing to restrain the program’s spending more quickly.

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That is fueling renewed interest in charging beneficiaries more, a phenomenon that is already happening in the commercial insurance market.

Medicare, which now insures nearly 50 million elderly and disabled Americans, was designed to require enrollees to pay at least some of their own healthcare bills.

“What many people may not realize is that the Medicare benefit package is not actually very generous,” said Jonathan Oberlander, a University of North Carolina health policy professor who has written extensively about the program’s history.

On top of standard premiums of more than $141 a month, enrollees must pay a $1,132 deductible for every hospital stay, and hundreds of dollars a day more for long hospital stays.

Medicare beneficiaries are also responsible for 20% of the bills for medical equipment such as wheelchairs and non-hospital procedures, such as kidney dialysis, physical therapy or outpatient surgery.

Medicare also doesn’t cover long-term care in nursing homes. And unlike many private plans, Medicare doesn’t offer catastrophic protection by capping how much beneficiaries have to pay out of pocket every year.

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That can mean substantial healthcare tabs for some seniors.

Medicare households on average spent $4,620 on healthcare in 2009, more than twice what non-Medicare households spent, according to the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation.

But millions of seniors protect themselves from even higher medical bills by buying supplemental health plans that cover at least some of their out-of-pocket expenses.

At the same time, some medical services covered by Medicare, such as lab work and home healthcare, still don’t require any co-payments, making them effectively free for beneficiaries.

Conservative economists and policymakers say that encourages overuse of healthcare services because seniors, particularly those with supplemental insurance plans, don’t have to evaluate whether care is worth the cost.

Indeed, some research has found that seniors with so-called Medigap supplemental plans use 25% more health services than those without such coverage.

“We will do better if people are more involved in making healthcare choices,” said Gail Wilensky, a health economist who oversaw the Medicare program under President George H.W. Bush. “There are few people who are more price sensitive than seniors.”

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How much more seniors can afford to pay continues to stoke intense debate, however, especially as Medicare beneficiaries are already projected to spend as much as quarter of their income on healthcare in 2020, up from around a sixth now.

House Republicans faced a fierce backlash when they proposed replacing Medicare with a system of vouchers for private insurance. That plan would increase the average senior’s medical bill by $6,000 in 2022, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

None of the proposals that have been discussed in the current debt negotiations would shift costs that dramatically. But some could still push up bills.

Negotiators have considered charging $530 to seniors who buy the most generous Medigap plans. Another proposal to begin charging co-pays for home health services would cost seniors on average $600 more a year in 2013, under one option analyzed by the CBO.

“Some have the impression that seniors are quite wealthy and could afford more premiums,” said Tricia Neuman, director of the Medicare Policy Project at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “The numbers tell a different story.”

A recent Kaiser analysis showed that half of all Medicare beneficiaries have less than $33,100 in retirement accounts and other savings.

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Neuman and others also warn that increasing co-pays and deductibles may discourage seniors from seeking medical care.

Brown University researchers, for example, found that seniors went to the doctor less frequently after their Medicare-managed plans raised co-pays for outpatient visits. At the same time, they spent more time in the hospital.

Because hospital care is so much more expensive, that probably ended up costing Medicare more than the program saved, said Dr. Amal Trivedi, the lead author of the study.

“Policymakers should be very sensitive to adverse and unexpected consequences of increased cost-sharing,” Trivedi said. “It can be a lose-lose proposition.”

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noam.levey@latimes.com

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