
RELEASE: Affordable Care Act Affirmation: Medicare Trustees Note Cost Savings 
 
 Today’s [8-05-10] annual assessment of the financial health of the  Medicare program reinforces the historic nature and great promise of the  Affordable Care Act. This report, which examines the short- and  long-range stability of the Hospital Insurance (Part A) and Supplemental  Medical Insurance (Parts B and D) Trust Funds, attributes significant  savings in future Medicare spending to changes made by the new health  law. The report also highlights how important it will be to the future  of these programs to aggressively implement new authority within the new  law. 
 
 A great leap 
 
 According to the Medicare trustees, the Part A trust fund will remain  solvent through 2019—a gain of 12 years compared to last year’s  projected depletion date. The trustees attribute this significant  improvement in the trust fund’s health to the changes in Medicare  payments to providers and insurers within the Affordable Care Act. These  changes assure that Medicare is not overpaying but rather promoting  efficiency in the delivery of services to its beneficiaries. In  particular, the changes assure that private plans, which have generally  been substantially overpaid, will be paid on a level playing field with  traditional Medicare, and can receive bonus payments for delivering  high-quality care. 
 
 A challenge to the health care system 
 
 The good news in this year’s report should be celebrated. The Affordable  Care Act helped to stabilize the Medicare program, and will enable  people with Medicare coverage and taxpayers at large to reap the rewards  of controlling health care costs. 
 
 Alongside these achievements, the trustees report issues a stiff  challenge to the health care system. The trustees note that for Medicare  to build on this strong start and establish long-run financial  stability, the nation’s health care providers will need to generate and  sustain productivity improvements in how they deliver health care  services—reducing their costs-per-service and keeping growth in Medicare  payments at a sustainable rate. Fortunately, the Affordable Care Act  responds to this challenge by reforming our current fee-for-service  payment system. Today, most providers are paid in a manner that rewards  volume and complexity of services rendered rather than the suitability  and quality of these services. That’s why health care providers have  little incentive to improve productivity. 
 
 The Affordable Care Act includes new authority that enables Medicare to  develop and broadly implement new payment systems and financial  incentives that reward providers who deliver efficient, high-quality  care at lower costs. Ideally, Medicare, private insurers, and Medicaid  (the joint federal-state health care program for low-income and disabled  Americans) can work together to each implement payment approaches that  reinforce this drive toward greater productivity, greater efficiency,  and higher-quality care. 
 
 A recent analysis underscores how powerful successful implementation of  these delivery systems and payment reforms can be. Health care  economists David Cutler, Karen Davis, and Kristof Stremikis estimate  that effective system modernizations will save an additional $127  billion in Medicare spending over the first ten years of implementation  of the Affordable Care Act. More importantly, they estimate the  comprehensive health reform will reduce annual growth in Medicare  spending to 4.9 percent over the 10-year, 2010-2019 period. 
 
 The true challenge facing policymakers and health care providers will be  to use the new tools in the health reform law to make meaningful and  long-lasting changes in the health care system. Delivering on this  promise is now up to the Obama administration working with health care  providers nationwide.
Photo by AFL-CIO, courtesy Flickr, cc by 2.0
