Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Lessons from the Food Stamp Program for Health Care
For your friends and family that may not know this help is available. --Dick McDonald
Lessons from the Food Stamp Program for Health Care
The
Food Stamp program (SNAP) appears to work much better than health
assistance programs for low-income seniors, says NCPA President and CEO
John C. Goodman in his new book, Priceless: Curing the Healthcare
Crisis.
Currently
three Medicare savings programs are designed to make Medicare more
affordable for poor and near-poor beneficiaries by paying premiums and
eliminating out-of-pocket cost sharing:
· The
Qualified Medicare Beneficiary Program pays all Medicare premiums and
out-of-pocket cost sharing for beneficiaries who have incomes at or
below 100 percent of the federal poverty level and who are ineligible
for full Medicaid coverage.
· The
Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiary Program pays Part B premiums
for Medicare beneficiaries with incomes of 101 percent to 120 percent of
the federal poverty level.
· The
Qualified Individual Program pays Part B premiums for beneficiaries
with incomes of 121 percent to 135 percent of the federal poverty level.
Yet amazingly, fewer than one-third of eligible Medicare beneficiaries enroll in these programs.
Contrast
what we do in health care with SNAP, which has about 60 million
participants (most of whom are probably also Medicaid enrollees).
· Low-income
shoppers can enter any supermarket in America and buy almost anything
the facility has to offer by adding cash to the "voucher" the government
gives them.
· They can buy anything you and I can buy because they pay the same price you and I pay.
· But we forbid them to do the same thing in the medical marketplace.
Like
food, health is generally considered a necessity. So why not treat it
the same way we treat food? This would make certain that the poor have
the wherewithal to pay for their health care not by forcing them to wait
or take poorer quality, but with health care dollars. These health care
dollars would be full dollars to providers, ensuring that the poor can
complete for resources with all other buyers of care.
To read more and purchase the book:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment