<<http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/20/politics/20MEDI.html?ex=1395118800&en=
b55a3388a20b7a6f&ei=5007&partner=USERLAND>>

Medicare Actuary Gives Wanted Data to Congress By ROBERT PEAR

Published: March 20, 2004


WASHINGTON, March 19 � Richard S. Foster, the chief actuary of Medicare,
provided Congress with documents on Friday showing that federal payments
to private health insurance plans under a new Medicare law could far
exceed what Congress assumed when it passed the measure last fall.
 
For months, lawmakers had been seeking the data, but Mr. Foster said in
an interview that he had withheld it under instructions from Bush
administration officials. 

He turned over documents outlining the information at a meeting on Friday
with Congressional aides of both parties who work on health legislation.

The documents estimate that the new law will increase Medicare payments
to private health plans by a total of $46 billion over the next 10 years,
not the $14 billion assumed by lawmakers when they voted on the
legislation. Mr. Foster had cited the discrepancy in an interview earlier
this week, but the documents he turned over on Friday, Mr. Foster said,
show that the Bush administration was aware of the gap well before
Congress approved the new law.

Moreover, the documents show that the administration expects a huge
increase in the number of Medicare beneficiaries enrolled in various
types of managed care. About 12 percent of the 41 million current
Medicare beneficiaries are in such private health plans today. By 2009,
Mr. Foster says, the proportion will reach 32 percent, equally divided
between health maintenance organizations and preferred provider
organizations.

By contrast, the actuary estimates that enrollment in the traditional
government-run Medicare program will decline from 2006 to 2009, along
with payments to many health care providers.

For example, the documents show that payments to doctors under Medicare's
fee schedule will decline each year from 2006 to 2012, while spending for
inpatient hospital services and skilled nursing homes under the
traditional government-run program will decline in 2006 and 2007.

Doctors and hospitals have lobbied vigorously against such cuts in recent
years. The actuary's report suggests they will need to mobilize their
lobbyists again if they want to preserve the gains they won last year.

Many Republicans wanted to encourage the growth of private health plans
because they believe such insurers coordinate care better than the
traditional Medicare program. 

But if the estimates of higher costs had been known last year, they would
have given ammunition to Democrats and other critics who said the bill
was lavishing money on insurance companies at the expense of the
traditional Medicare programs.

Mr. Foster said he withheld the cost estimates and other information from
Congress last year on instructions from Thomas A. Scully, who was then
administrator of the Medicare program. 

Mr. Foster, who has been a government actuary for more than 30 years,
said Mr. Scully had threatened to fire him if he gave the data to
Congress.

Mr. Scully, who left the government in December, confirms that he told
Mr. Foster to withhold certain information, but denies threatening to
fire him.

A federal law stipulates that officials must not try to prevent federal
employees from having "oral or written communication or contact" with any
member of Congress on matters relating to the employees' duties. 

On Thursday, a group of 18 Democratic senators led by Frank R. Lautenberg
of New Jersey asked the comptroller general to investigate whether Mr.
Foster had been muzzled in violation of this law.

Trent D. Duffy, a White House spokesman, said no White House official had
instructed Mr. Foster or Mr. Scully to withhold information from
Congress. But Mr. Duffy acknowledged that the actuary's cost estimates
had been sent to White House officials, including Doug Badger, a special
assistant to President Bush who negotiated with Congress on the Medicare
bill.

Some Republicans, especially conservatives concerned about the cost of
the new law, have criticized the administration for withholding
information.

An earlier Medicare law, adopted in 1997 at the behest of Republicans,
explicitly protects the actuary's independence. 

A spokeswoman for Representative Bill Thomas, Republican of California,
who helped write that provision, said Mr. Thomas believed "that members
of Congress should have access to differing assumptions and estimates and
that any administration should provide requested information."

Representative Jeb Hensarling, Republican of Texas, who voted reluctantly
for the Medicare bill, said the costs of benefit programs often soared
beyond expectations.

"I never believed anybody's cost estimates for the Medicare bill," Mr.
Hensarling said. "I didn't believe the Congressional Budget Office or the
administration."

Consumer advocates told the administration on Friday that one way to hold
down costs would be to allow Americans to import drugs from Canada and
other countries.

They said the government could guarantee the safety of such imports by
inspecting foreign production plants, licensing wholesale importers and
tracking shipments from factory to pharmacy, with the help of new
technology.

The administration has strenuously opposed drug imports, saying they pose
an unacceptable risk to consumers. But under a requirement in the new
Medicare law, a panel of 13 administration officials is studying ways to
ensure the safety of imported drugs. 

David M. Certner, director of federal affairs at AARP, told the panel:
"Individuals are already doing this on their own. It would be far better
to establish a safe regime for imports."

Mr. Certner said the Food and Drug Administration should, on its Web
site, provide a list of "approved pharmacies" that could supply safe
medicines from abroad.

Dr. Georges C. Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health
Association, said federal officials should be able to guarantee the
safety of imported drugs because doctors, pharmacists, wholesalers and
manufacturers were all "trusted agents," subject to federal or state
regulation.


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to