Heathcare Insurance Companies Abandoning Medicare Advantage

There are changes coming to the Medicare market place and Medicare Advantage.

“Market exits by Humana, Aetna, and UnitedHealthcare will collectively affect nearly 70% of those 1.8 million individuals.”

The remainder of the 1.8 million will be looking at new plans with the same insurance provider. The market consisting of people exiting their old Medicare Advantage plans “may” be faced with joining new companies or having to transition back to Traditional Medicare.

Traditional Medicare accepts all people and does not get to deny them. The company’s existing in Medicare Advantage are denying care to their patients as they leave the market. Just so you know, Supplemental Healthcare Insurance which backs up Traditional Medicare does not keep the same fees over the years. The fees do increase. I have not found the increases to be overwhelming. Some might find it costly. Something to think about in the years forth coming and what the solution may be.

The graphs in this commentary were added by Angry Bear. I find pics helpful in explaining the point of the commentary. It takes a while to add, but they are worthwhile.

– by Emma Curchin, Brandon Novak, and Peter Hart

The quasi-privatized system called “Medicare Advantage,” otherwise known as Part C, was created in 2003 as a means of expanding the role of private sector corporations in the publicly-funded Medicare system. Proponents claimed it would lower costs and improve health care for seniors. It has achieved neither of those goals, Instead, MA has become a wildly profitable scheme for private insurance giants. They have become adept at taking advantage of Medicare’s billing model to claim exorbitant profits. At this point, MA is more profitable for many companies than their conventional insurance businesses.

And the program continues to grow. MA now has more enrollees than traditional Medicare, thanks in no small part to aggressive public relations campaigns that sell seniors on the idea that the plans cut costs and increase choice. Congress has simultaneously failed to plug the holes in traditional Medicare, pushing seniors towards MA to avoid high out-of-pocket costs. Policymakers can fill these gaps and guarantee true comprehensive coverage simply by redirecting the overpayments to MA insurers into Medicare.

Numerous studies and media investigations have documented the problems with Medicare Advantage. What follows is a collection of some of the most notable figures documenting the high costs of this failed experiment in privatizing Medicare.

$35 billion
The amount that MedPAC estimates taxpayers will overpay MA insurers this year through ‘favorable selection,’ the practice of targeting healthy seniors for their plans.

$1,730
The gross profit margin posted by MA companies in 2021 – more than double their profit margin on the individual market.