Health reform law saves $2.1 billion for 3.6 million Americans with Medicare
Health reform law saves $2.1 billion for 3.6 million Americans with Medicare
New data show average American with Medicare to save nearly $4,200 through 2021 thanks to health reform
Nearly 3.6 million people with Medicare saved $2.1 billion on their prescription drugs in 2011 thanks to the Affordable Care Act according to data issued today by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Savings for people with Medicare will increase over time. According to a new report issued today from HHS, the average person with Medicare will save nearly $4,200 by 2021 because of the new law.
“The Affordable Care Act is already saving money for millions of Americans with Medicare,” said HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. “As we move forward, we will close the donut hole completely and save even more money for everyone with Medicare.”
The Affordable Care Act provides a 50 percent discount on brand-name prescription drugs and this year, a 14% discount on generics. Last year, it provided a seven percent discount on covered generic medications for people who hit the prescription drug coverage gap known as the donut hole, with 2,814,646 beneficiaries receiving $32.1 million in savings on generics.
In 2011, the 3.6 million Americans who hit the donut hole saved an average of $604 on the cost of their prescription drugs.
Data also show that women especially benefitted from the law’s provision with 2.05 million women saving $1.2 billion on their prescription drugs.
By 2020, the donut hole will be closed completely. The new report released today by the Department of Health and Human Services finds that this provision and other features of the health reform law will generate substantial savings for people with Medicare. Typical Medicare beneficiaries will save an average of nearly $4,200 from 2011 to 2021. People with high prescription drug costs could save as much as $16,000.
The savings are a product of provisions in the Affordable Care Act and other cost trends that:
- Decrease prescription drug costs for seniors
- Make preventive services like mammograms free for everyone in Medicare
- Reduce growth in Part B premiums (for physician services)
- Reduce growth in cost-sharing under both Parts A (hospital care) and Part B.
These announcements come one day after HHS announced that in 2012, Medicare Advantage premiums have fallen by seven percent on average and enrollment has risen by about 10 percent since last year.
For more details on that announcement, visit http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2012pres/02/20120201a.html
For state-by-state savings figures for today’s donut hole announcement, visit: http://www.cms.gov/Plan-Payment/
For a fact sheet about donut hole savings, visit http://www.cms.gov/apps/media/fact_sheets.asp
For the report regarding savings those with Medicare will see over time, visit http://aspe.hhs.gov/hp/reports/2012/MedicareBeneficiarySavings/ib.shtml
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Medicare Beneficiary Savings and the Affordable Care Act
Abstract
This Issue Brief provides estimates of Medicare Parts A, B, and D savings from the Affordable Care Act to seniors and people living with disabilities enrolled in traditional Medicare. The Affordable Care Act will favorably affect beneficiary expenditures in four ways: lowering part B premiums growth, lowering beneficiary copayments and coinsurance growth under Part A and B, closing the Medicare prescription drug coverage gap, and providing many preventive services to seniors at no additional cost. The study estimated the savings to beneficiaries from these effects for the 2011-2021 period.
Summary
The Affordable Care Act makes many changes to strengthen Medicare and provide stronger benefits to seniors, while slowing cost growth. As a result, average Medicare beneficiary savings in traditional Medicare will be approximately $4,200 over the 2011 to 2021 period (see Table 1). Beneficiaries who have high prescription drug spending will save much more — close to $16,000 over the same period. In comparison, Medicare beneficiaries with low drug costs will save about $3,000 over this period.
This report provides estimates of savings from the Affordable Care Act to seniors and people living with disabilities enrolled in traditional Medicare. The Affordable Care Act will favorably affect beneficiary expenditures in four ways. First, premiums for Part B physician and certain other services are expected to increase at a slower rate than would have occurred without the Affordable Care Act, resulting in lower Part B premiums over time. Second, beneficiary copayments and coinsurance under Part A and B will increase more slowly because the Affordable Care Act slows the rate of growth in payments to hospitals and other providers. Third, closing the Medicare prescription drug coverage gap, often called the “donut hole,” will lower costs for beneficiaries who otherwise would have been required to spend thousands of dollars out of their own pocket for their prescription drugs. Finally, the Affordable Care Act will provide many preventive services to seniors at no additional cost.
The Affordable Care Act will reduce Medicare spending through reductions in extra subsidies paid to Medicare Advantage plans, reductions in the rate of growth in provider payments, efforts to make the Medicare program more efficient, coordinated, and quality-oriented, and reductions in waste, fraud and abuse. These provisions will lead to corresponding savings for beneficiaries through lower copayments and premiums. An expected slower rate of growth in Medicare spending leads to a slower rate of growth in beneficiary out-of-pocket payments, and a slower rate of growth in Part B premiums. In addition, the closing of the donut hole will result in large savings for beneficiaries with high levels of prescription drug spending.
Average savings per traditional Medicare beneficiary are estimated to be $90 in 2011, increasing to $710 in 2021 (see Table 1). For a beneficiary with spending in the donut hole, total estimated annual savings increase from $631 in 2011 to $2,386 in 2021.
Table 1
Year | Beneficiary Not Reaching the Donut Hole |
Beneficiary Reaching the Donut Hole |
All FFS Beneficiaries |
---|---|---|---|
2011 | 27 | 631 | 90 |
2012 | 92 | 735 | 160 |
2013 | 134 | 857 | 209 |
2014 | 168 | 996 | 251 |
2015 | 212 | 1,152 | 303 |
2016 | 261 | 1,327 | 362 |
2017 | 310 | 1,555 | 426 |
2018 | 354 | 1,799 | 488 |
2019 | 405 | 2,075 | 559 |
2020 | 462 | 2,196 | 623 |
2021 | 539 | 2,386 | 710 |
Total 2011-21 | 2,964 | 15,710 | 4,181 |
Notes:
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Changes in premiums and cost sharing will also occur in the Medicare Advantage program. The Affordable Care Act will reform this program, gradually eliminating excessive payments to health plans, rewarding quality, and improving protections for beneficiaries against overly high cost sharing. The most recently available data on Medicare Advantage plans suggest that premiums have fallen by 7 percent on average, and enrollment has risen about 10 percent since this time last year.[1]
Methods
This memo was prepared by analysts in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) in consultation with the Office of the Actuary (OACT) of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). The savings for traditional Medicare beneficiaries from reduced Part B premiums, reduced Parts A and B coinsurance and copayments, and from increased Part D premiums were estimated by OACT.[2] Savings from reduced Part A and B coinsurance will vary across beneficiaries. Beneficiaries with multiple chronic conditions, those using a higher than average volume of services, as well as those who make greater use of preventive services, will enjoy a greater than average amount of savings. The estimated effects for beneficiaries not in the donut hole are shown in Table 2.
Table 2
Year | Effects of reduced part B premium |
Effects of reduced A & B coinsurance |
Effects of increased part D premium |
Total Effect |
---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | 19 | 14 | -6 | 27 |
2012 | 53 | 41 | -2 | 92 |
2013 | 72 | 62 | 0 | 134 |
2014 | 90 | 79 | -1 | 168 |
2015 | 113 | 101 | -2 | 212 |
2016 | 139 | 124 | -2 | 261 |
2017 | 169 | 148 | -7 | 310 |
2018 | 192 | 175 | -13 | 354 |
2019 | 218 | 207 | -20 | 405 |
2020 | 248 | 245 | -31 | 462 |
2021 | 281 | 291 | -33 | 539 |
Notes:
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The Affordable Care Act requires drug manufacturers to provide a discount for covered brand name Part D drugs sold to seniors in the donut hole (50% starting in 2011) and later provides subsidies for covered brand name Part D drugs to those beneficiaries rising from 2.5% in 2013 to 25% in 2020. Finally, the Affordable Care Act provides subsidies for generic drugs purchased in the donut hole beginning at 7% in 2011 and rising to 75% in 2020. Together, these changes mean that a beneficiary will pay the standard 25% coinsurance in a standard plan in 2020 for generic and brand drugs, and the donut hole will be closed.
In 2011, nearly four million seniors and people with disabilities in Medicare Part D received $2.1 billion in discounts on prescription drugs in 2011 when they hit the “donut hole” coverage gap, for an average of $604 per person. These discounts, which beneficiaries received automatically under the Affordable Care Act, will continue to grow through 2020 until the donut hole is fully closed.
The Affordable Care Act also lowers the rate of growth of the out-of-pocket threshold for drug spending by beneficiaries in the donut hole from 2014 to 2019. We estimate savings to beneficiaries from this change using a combination of information from OACT and results from the analysis described above.[3]
The estimates are presented in Table 3 below. For beneficiaries with spending in the donut hole, total estimated Parts A, B, and D savings increase from $631 in 2011 to $2,386 in 2021.
Table 3
Year | Effects of reduced A & B coinsurance and B premium /1 | Effect of increased D premium /1 | Filling the donut hole /2 for a beneficiary whose spending reaches the hole | Reducing the growth in part D OOP threshold for a bene in the gap /1 | Total Effect |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | -6 | 0 | 250 | 0 | 244 |
2011 | 33 | -6 | 604 | 0 | 631 |
2012 | 94 | -2 | 643 | 0 | 735 |
2013 | 134 | 0 | 723 | 0 | 857 |
2014 | 169 | -1 | 780 | 48 | 996 |
2015 | 214 | -2 | 879 | 62 | 1,152 |
2016 | 263 | -2 | 954 | 112 | 1,327 |
2017 | 317 | -7 | 1,114 | 131 | 1,555 |
2018 | 367 | -13 | 1,293 | 153 | 1,799 |
2019 | 425 | -20 | 1,492 | 178 | 2,075 |
2020 | 493 | -31 | 1,734 | 0 | 2,196 |
2021 | 572 | -33 | 1,847 | 0 | 2,386 |
Notes:
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Endnotes
[1] To find the most recent publicly available MA and Part D contract and enrollment data, visit: https://www.cms.gov/MCRAdvPartDEnrolData/MCESR/list.asp
[2] Memo by John Shatto, Director of Medicare & Medicaid Cost Estimates Group, CMS Office of the Actuary, October 5, 2010.
[3] In a memo from Richard Foster, April 22, 2010; Table 3, sec 1101, OACT estimated that the cost to Medicare from the slower growth in the out of pocket threshold was approximately 11% of the cost to Medicare from closing the donut hole. We apply this 11% estimate to our estimate of the cost to Medicare from closing the donut hole to estimate the savings to beneficiaries from the slower growth in the out of pocket threshold from 2014 to 2019.
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* The above information is adapted from materials provided by USA Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
** More information at USA Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)