Revision of issue guide: Medicare Prescription Drug Act from May 27, 2008 - 10:19am
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Pro & Con
see also the skinny, background & facts, links
What the Supporters
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What the Critics are SayingThe act poses new challenges for the elderly who must navigate the plan's often confusing benefits and options. A report released by a bipartisan group of pollsters shows that confusion and skepticism are running high among seniors. Findings from the Kaiser Family Foundation, which provides in-depth information on key health policy issues, found that 55 percent of total seniors had an unfavorable view of the new health care law. This number jumped to 73 percent when posed to seniors who were relatively familiar with the new bill. The cost of the program has been estimated to be $395 billion over 10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Many believe that the majority of this money will go to HMOs and pharmaceutical companies, which will benefit from both the increase in Medicare recipients choosing private health care providers as well as the lack of curbs on price setting (a policy advocated by some but rejected by Congress), respectively. The law prohibits the government from negotiating with drug companies for lower-cost drugs. By comparison, the Department of Veteran Affairs negotiates prices by purchasing the top 10 drugs most widely prescribed to their constituents. Individuals who receive VA coverage will still pay less than beneficiaries of the new plan, even though all of those on Medicare represent a larger and more powerful block, able to negotiate even lower discount prices. The discount drug cards offer nominal savings because the plan does not restrict drug companies from raising drug prices. The AARP, formerly the American Association of Retired Persons, which initially supported the act, released a study showing that drug prices rose at three times the rate of inflation in the first three months of this year, negating the card's discounts. Analysts have pointed out, though, that the study is misleading because all health care costs have been far outpacing inflation for years. Although the act offers to subsidize plans that seniors currently have through past employers, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that the act will encourage businesses to drop up to 2.7 million retirees (8% of all seniors) from their current drug coverage plans. |
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