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October 8, 2024

Harris Announces Medicare At Home, Expands Healthcare Agenda Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris announced a new Medicare at Home initiative. She would provide home health aide and other in-home supports for seniors and the disabled in Medicare. This would extend the current scope of benefits officially from short-term home care to chronic home care. I have proposed a comprehensive long-term care program paid through Medicaid and with buy-ins by seniors. As well, Harris wants to have hearing and vision coverage added to the traditional program. She would pay for most of the initiatives by expanding Medicare drug price negotiations and instituting pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) reforms. On other news, Harris is turning up the heat on Trump with a healthcare agenda. The Harris campaign thinks healthcare can be a swing issue and move undecideds to her side. In addition, a new study in Health Affairs has found that, while Medicare

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October 7, 2024

MA Fallout Much Greater Than CMS Indicates The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has reported that all is fine in the Medicare Advantage (MA) and standalone Part D worlds. But we know that is just not the case. It is political spin in an election year. We featured some good analysis last week about why choice will drop and some premiums and out-of-pocket costs will go up in standalone Part D. Now, an analysis of MA shows a similar thing. Insurers are exiting geographic markets, reducing benefits, increasing premiums, and imposing higher out-of-pocket costs. An ATI Advisory analysis says more than 7% of beneficiaries, or about two million people, will need to find new offerings. This is up from fewer than 100,000 in past years. This is major displacement right around the election and is the October Surprise I have been talking about. (Article may require a subscription.)

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Docs Need Rate Relief In Medicare Program

The time has come for a real fix to Medicare physician fees. The big stall is hurting healthcare. Poor Medicare docs. They have been on a proverbial reimbursement roller coaster for decades now. The ups and downs have undermined independent practices, led to our primary care deficit, and actually fostered physician group acquisitions that increase costs in the healthcare system in several ways. More background A caution before I give you details on the history of Medicare physician pay — I am by no means a traditional Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) program rate expert. So, I am keeping this short and giving you a broad overview. The long and short of it is that Medicare physicians have had a rather broken rate system dating back to 1992. The bad system has been undermined further with various budget reduction requirements applied to the physician rates along the way. Congress created the Medicare

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October 4, 2024

CBO Says Costs of Medicare Part D Changes Are Ballooning The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has updated its projections on the cost of the redesign of the Medicare Part D program passed by Democrats in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). I have argued in several blogs (see these: https://www.healthcarelabyrinth.com/part-d-premium-woes-due-to-the-inflation-reduction-act/ and https://www.healthcarelabyrinth.com/part-d-restructuring-in-inflation-reduction-act-could-have-huge-implications-on-standalone-part-d-program/ ) that Democrats did not think through the impact on both premiums over time as well as the stability of both Medicare Advantage (MA) and the standalone Part D (PDP) program. The generous out-of-pocket reductions would be paid by higher premiums and benefit changes since the government did not fund the policy changes. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) created an emergency demonstration program to stabilize premiums in 2025. But that only lasts for three years. I also think the program is extra-legal. Now, the CBO is saying that the original estimates of the Part D changes have

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October 3, 2024

United Healthcare Sues CMS on Call Center Measures For Star Year 2025 Interesting development already on Star Year 2025 even before the public announcement of results on 10/10. In addition to a major drop in Stars for Humana for Star Year 2025, United Healthcare seems to have been hit with lower Stars and is now suing CMS. Humana has appeals on its ratings, too. In the United case, the company is suing over what it says are arbitrary assessments of calls regarding timely connection to TTY or a foreign language translator as well as CMS asking the right questions and following procedures. Just one arguable assessment on a call by CMS for the Part C and D measures can cost you a higher score on those measures but also perhaps impact your overall score. This is what United says happened to them. This builds on what happened in Star Year

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The Biggest Lie Of The VP Debate: Trump Salvaged Obamacare!

Trump did not salvage the Affordable Care Act — he sabotaged it. Tall tales are always part of politics and candidate debates. America takes it for granted. But the biggest lie of the vice-presidential debate Tuesday night was quite the doozy and I could not let it go without some explanation. The big lie can be credited to GOP vice presidential candidate JD Vance. Vance attempted to concoct a story that somehow former President Trump salvaged the Affordable Care Act (ACA) when it was on the verge of collapse. This of course is true only in Vance’s and Trump’s minds. Vance’s fanciful rewrite of history went like this. Vance said Trump “actually implemented some of these regulations when he was president of the United States. … And I think you can make a really good argument that it salvaged Obamacare, which was doing disastrously until Donald Trump came along. I

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October 2, 2024

Trump Won’t Reintroduce Drug Price Reform Donald Trump is backing away from his previous support for some form of drug price reform. In his first administration, Trump proposed drug price negotiations for Part B medical drugs in Medicare and the eventual cap of prices to international benchmarks. The U.S. would pay the lowest of other nations. He indicated he wanted to extend the concept to Part D retail drugs as well. The change is surprising given polls showing overwhelming support for drug price reform across Democrats, Independents, and Republicans. The reform was pulled back by the Biden administration due to rule-making issues and poor design. (Article may require a subscription.) #drugpricing #medicare #branddrugmakers https://insidehealthpolicy.com/daily-news/trump-campaign-trump-won-t-pursue-most-favored-nation-policy-drugs Democratic Senators Urge FTC To Investigate PBM Co-Manufacturing Finance Chair Sen. Ron Wyden, D-OR, and Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-OH, want the Federal Trade Commission to investigate pharmacy benefits managers (PBMs) who have co-manufacturing agreements with drug

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October 1, 2024

Hospital Consolidation Has Meant Little Competition In Many Markets A great Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) analysis shows the impact of massive hospital consolidation over the past many years. Nearly half (47%) of metropolitan areas had only one or two hospitals or health systems providing inpatient hospital care in 2022. About one in five (19%) metropolitan areas have only one hospital or health system providing hospital care. More than a quarter (27%) are controlled by two hospitals or systems. Digging deeper, in 82% of metro areas, one or two hospitals or health systems were responsible for at least three quarters of all inpatient hospital discharges. This signifies these markets are highly concentrated under federal antitrust guidelines. We know that hospital consolidation has led to major price increases. As well, hospitals and healthcare systems have acquired physician practices, raising prices for physician care by changing practice patterns to more expensive hospital locations.

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September 30, 2024

Biden Administration Announced Q3 Drug Inflation Rebates The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced that many Medicare enrollees will pay less for 54 drugs available through Medicare Part B. The drugs will have a lower Part B coinsurance rate from October 1, 2024 – December 31, 2024 because drug makers increased prices higher than applicable inflation. Over 822,000 people with Medicare use these drugs annually to treat conditions such as cancer, osteoporosis, and pneumonia. The inflation cap and rebate were passed as part of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), the same bill that has Medicare drug price negotiations. Savings on some drugs could be in the thousands. Additional articles: https://www.hhs.gov/about/news/2024/09/30/hhs-announces-cost-savings-for-prescription-drugs-thanks-to-medicare-inflation-rebate-program.html and https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payers/hhs-releases-cost-savings-54-prescriptions-including-cancer-drug #ira #drugpricing #branddrugmakers https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/4904127-medicare-savings-rebates-inflation-reduction-act CVS Facing Possible Activist Investor; To Layoff 2,900 Glenview Capital Management, a key hedge fund investor for CVS Health, will meet with the

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WSJ Editorial Wrong On FTC Lawsuit On PBMs

I promised to follow up on my newsfeed on The Wall Street Journal’s (WSJ) editorial on the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) lawsuit against the Big 3 pharmacy benefits managers (PBMs) – CVS Caremark, Cigna’s Express Scripts, and United’s OptumRx. I feel so much is wrong with what the WSJ editorial board is saying about the lawsuit. So here are some additional thoughts on the subject. The editorial is at a link below so you can read as well. What does the lawsuit charge? The FTC’s bombshell lawsuit charges that the PBMs have used formulary placement and rebates to rig the system and disadvantage the American public at the point of sale. While the FTC believes the anticompetitive activities permeate the entire system and apply to almost all brand drugs, it is focused in this lawsuit on insulin prices. The FTC says that the PBMs use the formulary and rebate scheme to

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