Providence VA Medical Center, and Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
JAMA. 2012 Jul 4;308(1):67-72. doi: 10.1001/jama.2012.7115.
Some veterans are eligible to enroll simultaneously in a Medicare Advantage (MA) plan and the Veterans Affairs health care system (VA). This scenario produces the potential for redundant federal spending because MA plans would receive payments to insure veterans who receive care from the VA, another taxpayer-funded health plan.
To quantify the prevalence of dual enrollment in VA and MA, the concurrent use of health services in each setting, and the estimated costs of VA care provided to MA enrollees.
Retrospective analysis of 1,245,657 veterans simultaneously enrolled in the VA and an MA plan between 2004-2009.
Use of health services and inflation-adjusted estimated VA health care costs.
Among individuals who were eligible to enroll in the VA and in an MA plan, the number of persons dually enrolled increased from 485,651 in 2004 to 924,792 in 2009. In 2009, 8.3% of the MA population was enrolled in the VA and 5.0% of MA beneficiaries were VA users. The estimated VA health care costs for MA enrollees totaled $13.0 billion over 6 years, increasing from $1.3 billion in 2004 to $3.2 billion in 2009. Among dual enrollees, 10% exclusively used the VA for outpatient and acute inpatient services, 35% exclusively used the MA plan, 50% used both the VA and MA, and 4% received no services during the calendar year. The VA financed 44% of all outpatient visits (n = 21,353,841), 15% of all acute medical and surgical admissions (n = 177,663), and 18% of all acute medical and surgical inpatient days (n = 1,106,284) for this dually enrolled population. In 2009, the VA billed private insurers $52.3 million to reimburse care provided to MA enrollees and collected $9.4 million (18% of the billed amount; 0.3% of the total cost of care).
The federal government spends a substantial and increasing amount of potentially duplicative funds in 2 separate managed care programs for the care of same individuals.
一些退伍军人有资格同时参加医疗保险优势(MA)计划和退伍军人事务部的医疗保健系统(VA)。这种情况产生了联邦支出重复的可能性,因为 MA 计划将收到支付给接受 VA 护理的退伍军人的款项,VA 是另一个由纳税人资助的医疗保健计划。
量化 VA 和 MA 同时注册的流行程度、在每个环境中同时使用医疗服务的情况以及向 MA 注册人提供的 VA 护理的估计费用。
对 2004-2009 年间同时参加 VA 和 MA 计划的 1245657 名退伍军人进行回顾性分析。
卫生服务的使用和经通胀调整后的估计 VA 医疗保健费用。
在有资格参加 VA 和 MA 计划的人群中,双重注册人数从 2004 年的 485651 人增加到 2009 年的 924792 人。2009 年,MA 人群中有 8.3%的人参加了 VA,5.0%的 MA 受益人为 VA 用户。MA 注册人在 6 年内的 VA 医疗保健费用估计为 130 亿美元,从 2004 年的 13 亿美元增加到 2009 年的 32 亿美元。在双重注册者中,10%的人仅使用 VA 进行门诊和急性住院服务,35%的人仅使用 MA 计划,50%的人同时使用 VA 和 MA,4%的人在日历年期间没有接受任何服务。VA 为这部分双重注册人群提供了 44%的所有门诊就诊(n=21353841)、15%的所有急性内科和外科入院(n=177663)和 18%的所有急性内科和外科住院日(n=1106284)。2009 年,VA 向私人保险公司收取 5230 万美元,以报销向 MA 注册人提供的护理费用,并收取 940 万美元(计费金额的 18%;护理费用总额的 0.3%)。
联邦政府在为同一批人提供护理的两个独立管理式医疗保健计划中支出了大量且不断增加的潜在重复资金。