Elderly Depend on Medicare

Medicare has evolved into a program rather different now than when it started. It covers over 40 million seniors and it has changed the way it is administrated. In addition, poor oversight has caused cutbacks and tight budgets which means that there are cutbacks in services, cutbacks in payments to doctors, hospitals and other medical professionals.
Yet, Medicare still moves on. They have been predicting its demise for years but it is still here. Now, don't get me wrong. It is obvious that Medicare has some serious financial issues. It is also possible that in the years between now and the time the program is supposed to run out of money, there are many things that can be done to straighten out the program by creating better oversight regarding fraud and abuse, creating better incentives for doctors in the program to stay - especially some of the great doctors that are treating Medicare patients at a fracthion of the price that they treat their private patients. This is a sacrifice financially because they care about their Medicare patients.
I have talked to doctors and other healthcare professionals who treat Medicare patients. Some of these have a patient load of 50% Medicare patients. I know of a few that treat nearly all Medicare patients because they have no place else to go. The majority of doctors say they can't afford to take on any new Medicare patients. The sad part of the situation is that with the right "tweaks" many doctors could take a few Medicare patients each. If a doctor is taking home $250,000 per year and took 10% Medicare patients, it wouldn't make him or her go broke, it would bring in extra money and it would help elderly people who need medical care. If he Medicare system could help devise a way where doctors got something out of treating Medicare patients and send out information about this to every doctor in the country, more doctors would be able to take a few Medicare patients and more elderly would be receiving continuous treatment. This would save money for the system because even if these doctors who took 10% of their caseload as Medicare patients and received a small bonus or other perk for doing so, the majority of patients would stay healthier longer and avoid costly trips to the emergency room or costly stays in the hospital or long term care. Medicare pays for these. If a doctor could help Medicare patients stay healthier and out of the hospital, perhaps he/she could receive a bonus which could come from a small percentage of what was saved for Medicare by keeping the patient healthy and at home. So the doctor gets $1,000 and Medicare saves $10,000 to $50,000. That sounds like smart finance and a win-win situation for everyone.
The elderly depend on Medicare. Some still have the means for private insurance, but even so, their Medcare benefits help defray other costs. There are ways to make sure that doctors can afford to treat Medicare patients and make enough money for it to work while at the same time actually saving Medicare money.
I am not privvy to the information being discussed in the battle over Medicare, Social Security and Healthcare by lawmakers on the hill in D.C. I just know that if I can think up something this basic, the leaders who are far more savvy than I am should be able to come up with a solution to keeping our elderly covered by Medicare and our doctors willing to take Medicare patients. There is enough time for these intelligent thinkers to come up with a plan that will work for everyone. This is not a maybe. This is a moral imperative.
Filed under: General-Medicare




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