-Caveat Lector-

A Taste of Things to Come:
Medicare Restricts How Grandma Spends Her Own Money

Seniors are getting a taste of what bureaucratic control does to their right
to choose. This year, Medicare took a giant leap toward eliminating Grandma�s
right to choose her own doctor and purchase the best health care available.

As part of last year�s budget deal, President Clinton and Congress made it
illegal for Grandma to pay her own doctor out-of-pocket for Medicare-covered
services � even though she is spending her own money, not the government�s.

Even British grannies � who live under a system of socialized medicine � have
the right to see their own doctor outside the government program.

As President Clinton tries to fold age group after age group into a
government-run health care system, this kind of tyranny could be a taste of
things to come.

How the Balanced Budget Act Will Soon Cut Off Medicare Beneficiaries' Choice
of Doctors

by Michael F. Cannon

Americans have always taken pride in being the freest people in the world. As
recently as 1994, the American public recoiled at the thought of receiving
health care through a socialist system similar to Great Britain's. Among that
system's many horrors, "more than one million patients are waiting for
surgery in Britain, for everything from tonsillectomies to heart bypasses to
exploratory surgery for cancer."1

Yet, America's senior citizens will soon have less medical freedom than
British seniors. Whereas British seniors may agree with their doctor to
receive services privately and at their own expense, Medicare beneficiaries
soon will not be able to do so, under a new law passed by Congress.
Legislation in the House (H.R. 2497) and Senate (S. 1194) would reverse this
law, and avert a disaster before it happens.

Government rate cuts. Medicare, the federal government's health insurance
program for elderly Americans, pays for doctor visits at a fixed rate.
Congress has repeatedly cut that rate � most recently in the Balanced Budget
Act (BBA) of 1997. This limits the quality of care Medicare patients receive.
Thus, some seniors go outside the system to pay for Medicare-covered
treatment themselves.

Enter the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), the federal agency
that runs Medicare. In the late 1980s, HCFA tried to cut off this option. The
agency threatened doctors with fines and jail time if they administered
Medicare-covered treatment to Medicare beneficiaries without sending the bill
to the government.

Outraged doctors and seniors took the HCFA to court. Their case was dismissed
in 1992, however, because the HCFA had never issued a formal regulation
barring contracting.2 In 1993, the HCFA finally published its policy barring
Medicare beneficiaries from paying for covered treatment themselves, despite
having no statutory authority to do so.3 Thus, the harassment continued.

The legislative fix and the poison pill. Earlier this year, Sen. Jon Kyl
(R-AZ) proposed legislation as part of the BBA to overturn the HCFA rule and
give Medicare beneficiaries the explicit and unrestricted right to receive
Medicare-covered treatment outside the program. However, White House budget
negotiators rejected this proposal and insisted that, starting January 1,
1998, doctors who provide such treatment be excluded from treating any
Medicare patients for two years. Congress capitulated.

Most doctors rely heavily on their Medicare practice. Internists receive 36
to 48 percent of their revenue from Medicare.4 Because most doctors cannot
afford to abandon their Medicare patients (and who would want them to?) this
poison pill effectively prohibits Medicare patients from going outside the
program for treatment. Many seniors are therefore worse off now than they
were before. Whereas there used to be some question about seniors' right to
go outside Medicare � a question the courts might have decided in their favor
� they now have had that right taken away.

Starting next year, Medicare beneficiaries who seek to pay for their own
treatment outside Medicare cannot do so with their own doctor. Instead, they
must find one of the four percent of doctors who treat no Medicare patients.5
The nearest may be hundreds of miles away.

Hurting the poor. Moreover, such doctors are likely to be specialists or live
in wealthy communities. Specialists who are leaders in their field and have a
few wealthy clients may be able to rely on outside-Medicare business
entirely. Under the new policy, they will be shut out of the Medicare program
and forbidden to treat less-affluent Medicare patients who will then be
denied the best available care.

If this logic were applied to the school system, public school teachers who
tutor students on the side would be banned from teaching in the public
schools for two years. Tell that to the parents who have finally found a
teacher who can reach their child.

The new law not only restricts seniors' basic personal freedoms; it is pure
nonsense from a budgetary standpoint. When seniors pay their medical bills
themselves, they save the federal government money. Why would the Clinton
administration oppose a practice that gives beneficiaries more treatment
choices and lessens the financial pressures on Medicare? The only thing HCFA
loses in the transaction is control over the lives of seniors. The new
restrictions on private contracting should be rethought before seniors must
travel to Great Britain to get the care they need.

Michael F. Cannon is a health care policy analyst at Citizens for a Sound
Economy Foundation.

Permission to reprint or quote from, in whole or in part, is expressly given
provided Citizens for a Sound Economy Foundation and the author are credited.

1Sarah Lyall, "For British Health System, Bleak Prognosis," The New York
Times, January 30, 1997.

2Stewart v. Sullivan, 816 F. Supp. 281 (D.N.J., 1992).

3" 3044. Effect of Beneficiary Agreements not to Use Medicare Coverage,"
Medicare Carrier's Manual, Part 3, Health Care Financing Administration,
1997.

4Martin L. Gonzalez, ed., Physician Marketplace Statistics 1996: Profiles for
Detailed Specialties, Selected States and Practice Arrangements, Center for
Health Policy Research. This figure excludes pediatricians and residents.

5Ibid.


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