The lower rate of post-heart attack deaths seen in the Medicare Advantage program in 2009 was no longer evident in 2018.
Today, about half of all Americans with health insurance through Medicare receive their insurance through a for-profit organization that participates in the Medicare Advantage program of the federal government. But choosing one of these plans doesn’t give as much of an advantage over traditional Medicare as it once did, a new study shows – at least when it comes to heart attack care.
‘The gap in the key outcome for traditional and private-insurance Medicare participants has narrowed in recent years, though differences remain in cardiovascular care during and after hospitalization.’
For the two most common types of heart attack – called STEMI and NSTEMI, with the MI standing for myocardial infarction – the percentage of people dying within 30 days of their heart attack declined for both groups to around 17%. But the 1.5 percentage point survival difference that existed in 2009 narrowed to almost nothing by 2018.
Medicare and Heart Disease
This essentially means that Medicare Advantage plans are getting paid by the federal government for care that ultimately produces the same rate of survival as care not actively managed by an insurance company, the researchers note.The narrowing of the survival gap also suggests that an effect known as favorable selection – the enrollment in Medicare Advantage of people who are less sick in important ways -- likely explained much of the difference in mortality in the earlier time period.
However, as Medicare Advantage enrollment has grown to encompass almost half of the adults over 65 or with disabilities who are covered by Medicare, the opportunities for selection have diminished.
The team was led by Bruce Landon, M.D., MBA, M.Sc. of Harvard Medical School and John Z. Ayanian, M.D., M.P.P., director of the University of Michigan Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation.
The researchers also looked at other aspects of heart attack care and outcomes that relate to in-hospital and post-discharge care.
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Some differences persisted. For instance, people covered by Medicare Advantage still had a higher chance of getting cholesterol-lowering drugs and other recommended medications that matched national guidelines. They also had a lower chance of being admitted to an intensive care unit or being readmitted to the hospital within 30 days of being discharged.
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Medicare Advantage participants in 2018 were still more likely to go directly home from the hospital rather than to a care facility. But traditional Medicare participants are now much more likely to head directly home from the hospital than they once were.
In calculating the results, the researchers took into account the demographic and health differences between the two populations who enrolled in the two types of Medicare. However, they note that Medicare is not allowed to take into account most demographic factors when setting payment rates for Medicare Advantage plans.
In an accompanying editorial, three Brown University researchers – including former U-M School of Public Health faculty member Andy Ryan, PhD – note that it will be important to study variation between specific Medicare Advantage plans, and to focus on the value of care, reducing overpayments and taking into account social and demographic factors.
Source-Eurekalert