Publication | Open Access
Effects of supplemental coverage on use of services by Medicare enrollees.
28
Citations
18
References
1997
Year
Health Insurance ReformInsurance SupplementPrivate Insurance SupplementsHealth PolicyHealth EconomicsHealth InsuranceMedicare EnrolleesHealth FinancingSupplemental CoverageHealth Care CostFinancial ProtectionNational Health InsuranceManaged CarePublic HealthInsuranceHealth Services ResearchHealth Care Delivery
This article estimates the extent to which private insurance supplements affect use of services by Medicare enrollees. Three types of supplements to Medicare's coverage are examined--Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs), medigap (MGP) plans, and employment-based indemnity (EBI) plans. While each kind of supplement reduces cost sharing on Medicare-covered services, only HMOs do so without increasing enrollees' overall use of services. Use of services by HMO enrollees is about 4 percent lower than use by similar Medicare enrollees with no insurance supplement. By contrast, use of services by enrollees with MGP coverage is 28 percent higher, and use of services by enrollees with EBI plans is 17 percent higher.
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