Publication | Open Access
Medicare Beneficiaries' High Out-of-Pocket Costs: Cost Burdens by Income and Health Status
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2017
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Health Insurance DesignFinancial ProtectionHealth Care FinanceMedicare BeneficiariesManagementHealth FinancingPublic HealthManaged CareInsurance RegulationsFifty-six MillionInsuranceHealth Services ResearchHealth Insurance ReformCost BurdensHealth PolicyHealth InsuranceNational Health InsuranceHealth ReimbursementEconomic EvaluationCost SharingHealth Care DeliveryHigh Out-of-pocket CostsHealth EconomicsHealth Care ReimbursementIssue BriefU.s. PopulationHealth Care CostLong-term Care Insurance
ISSUE: Fifty-six million people--17 percent of the U.S. population--rely on Medicare. Yet, its benefits exclude dental, vision, hearing, and long-term services, and it contains no ceiling on out-of-pocket costs for covered services, exposing beneficiaries to high costs. GOAL: To inform discussion of possible changes to Medicare, this issue brief looks at beneficiaries’ out-of-pocket costs by income and health status. METHODS: Spending estimates based on the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey. FINDINGS AND CONCLUSION: More than one-fourth of all Medicare beneficiaries--15 million people--spend 20 percent or more of their incomes on premiums plus medical care, including cost-sharing and uncovered services. Beneficiaries with incomes below 200 percent of the poverty level (just under $24,000 for a single person) and those with multiple chronic conditions or functional limitations are at significant financial risk. Overall, beneficiaries spent an average of $3,024 per year on out-of-pocket costs. Financial burdens and access gaps highlight the need to approach reform with caution. Already-high burdens suggest restructuring cost-sharing to ensure affordability and to provide relief for low-income beneficiaries.