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What You Need to Know About the End of Medicare Part A Date

Proposed drug price reform

Current pace InMedicare's Hospital Insurance Trust Fund will run out of funds in 2028, according to the June 2022 Medicare Trustee ReportThis is a two-year extension from previous estimates, but According to the house, it's still not good news and the government needs to stop messing with its thumbs. Here's what you should know:

What if the Trust Fund is depleted?

If the Medicare hospital insurance trust fund is depleted, it does not mean that Medicare Part A will implode. However, the program will be short of about 10% from 2029, not earning enough revenue to cover all operating costs.

Health care providers and health insurers are coming due, and these payments will become increasingly delayed over time," said Senior Fellow of the USC-Brookings Schaeffer Initiative for Health Policy. One Matthew Fiedler said.

This backlog could create a major economic shock to hospitals that depend on Medicare revenues to operate. Ultimately, Fiedler said, "hospitals may reconsider how much they want to participate in the Medicare program."

It is important to understand that the Medicare Hospital Insurance Trust Fund does not fund all of Medicare. We fund Medicare Part A, or hospital insurance. Medicare Part B, which covers doctor visits and outpatient care, and Medicare Part D, which covers prescription drugs, are funded primarily by patient premiums and general government revenues.

What is the most likely fix?

There are several ways governments can deal with this situation. For example, from fine-tuning service coverage to revenue redirection. You have several options.

Transition some Medicare Part A services to Part B

suggests that it is possible to Posthospital Physiotherapy or Nursing Management — Part A to Part B.

"This will make the Part A trust fund look better because it has reduced some of the off-the-books expenses," he says. Mark McClellan Robert J. Margolis is Professor of Business, Medicine and Policy at Duke University and holds a Ph.D. in Economics. "But it doesn't really change the overall cost or sustainability of the program."

Unless otherwise stated, it could mean that some post-acute services that are 100% covered under Part A may be covered by the Part B deductible and 20% co-insurance. A plan that covers some costs.

Modernize Medicare drug benefits

When Medicare Part D was introduced in 2006, there weren't many expensive specialty drugs on the market. did. Today, governments bear most of the bills for expensive drugs. Another option is to reduce drug costs and apply the savings to a Part A trust fund. Congress' current legislation will help Medicare beneficiaries spend less on prescription drugs and gradually reduce the cost of certain expensive drugs. Includes significant modernization of Medicare drug benefits, to provide more comprehensive coverage for Medicare beneficiaries with high drug costs, and to enable Medicare drug plans to negotiate more aggressively with drug companies It's from," McClellan said.

Cut payments to providers

In the short term, governments may cut Medicare payments to some or all Part A providers. There is, says Senior Fellow and Wilson H. Joseph Antos. Taylor Scholar of Health Care and Retirement Policy at the American Enterprise Institute.

"Congress has done this before and can do it again. Especially effective in the 9th or 10th year, with other adjustments to return funds. The case is even more so," Antos said in an email. (The Congressional Budget Office has a 10-year cost estimate, so a 9-year or 10-year adjustment schedule “maximizes recordable savings, but informs providers that the savings will be temporary. Antos said.)

For beneficiaries, the impact of this approach would be minimal, but reduced access to some health care providers and Health care providers may add services not covered by Medicare to increase revenue, Antos explained.

The most likely option is for the government to authorize a one-time shot of the General Fund to the Medicare Trust Fund. "It was easy to see how they would say, 'Temporarily, for five years, we're going to approve an injection from the General Revenue to make up for it,'" he said.

If that happened, the country's debt would continue to grow, he said. "It doesn't affect the beneficiaries," Antos said. "It will affect their children."

This article was provided to his Associated Press by personal finance website NerdWallet. Kate Ashford is a writer for her NerdWallet. 

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