As Medicare and Medicaid celebrate their 50th anniversaries, a new study in the July 28 theme issue of JAMA – Journal of the American Medical Association focuses on their roles in the US healthcare system.

The theme of the July 28 issue is “Medicare and Medicaid at 50,” according to a news release from JAMA.

Per the release, the study, by Drew Altman, PhD, of the Kaiser Family Foundation, Menlo Park, Calif, and William H. Frist, MD, former U.S. Senate majority leader, analyzed the roles of Medicare and Medicaid in the health system using publicly available data and private surveys of the public and beneficiaries.

The release explains that together, Medicare (n = 55 million) and Medicaid (n = 66 million) provide health coverage to about 111 million people, or one in three Americans, including 10 million dual-eligible people covered by both programs. That number is projected to reach 139 million people by 2025. The programs accounted for approximately $1 trillion in total spending in 2013 (Medicare, $585.7 billion; Medicaid, $449.4 billion). Together, they constitute 39% of national health spending, account for 23% of the federal budget, and generate 43% of hospital revenues.

Spending on the two programs for 2013 to 2023 is projected to increase at an average rate of 3.7% per year, which is slower than the projected growth for private health insurance, despite that Medicare and Medicaid generally serve populations with more illness and health problems, the release continues.

The authors note in the study that future issues confronting both programs include whether they will remain open-ended entitlements, the degree to which the programs may be privatized, the scope of their cost-sharing structures for beneficiaries, and the roles the programs will play in payment and delivery reform, per the release.

“While public attention has focused on the Affordable Care Act (ACA), Medicare and Medicaid remain the core of the nation’s public health insurance system. Together, these programs serve more than a hundred million of the nation’s most vulnerable people—low-income children and adults, people with disabilities, and older persons,” the authors write, per the release.

“Because beneficiaries, health practitioners and organizations, and policy makers all have different interests in these programs, it is difficult to reconcile their conflicting perspectives and priorities and enact large-scale program changes. Few policies can simultaneously constrain spending, improve reimbursement rates, and protect and strengthen benefits. Reaching bipartisan agreement on policy change is especially challenging in the current polarized political environment,” the authors continue, per the release.

Altman and Frist add in the release that both Medicare and Medicaid are changing their roles in the healthcare system to become more proactive forces for payment and delivery reform.

“The goal of moving 90% of traditional Medicare reimbursements to alternative value-based payment arrangements by 2016 signals a new effort to use Medicare’s purchasing power to promote quality and reform the delivery of care. While it gets less attention, payment and delivery reform in Medicaid is also under way in virtually every state. Medicaid programs have also been increasingly aggressive purchasers of drugs,” they continue, per the release.

Together, Medicare and Medicaid have more than $1 trillion a year in purchasing power, “and they are now pursuing common strategies in the form of accountable care organizations, medical homes, managed care for chronically ill persons, and a variety of value-based payment options,” they write.

“The private sector is generally regarded as the engine of innovation in the United States, but on the 50th anniversary of Medicare and Medicaid, healthcare’s two largest public health insurance programs are playing a much larger role in innovation in payment and delivery reform and reshaping the delivery of care for the future,” the authors conclude, per the release.

[Source(s): JAMA, Science Daily]