Any of you that read this blog know that I have been predicting big changes for the Medicare Advantage business ever since the Democrats took control of the Congress--particularly for the controversial Private Fee-For-Service (PFFS) part of the program.
But I have often felt alone in that opinion so a recent news story from TheStreet.com coming to much the same conclusion caught my eye. It pretty much reflects my thinking on the subject:
- "Medicare Advantage players better count their blessings while they still can."
- It's not whether there will be cuts but just how deep.
- Private Fee-For-Service plans, and the few companies who emphasize them, are particularly vulnerable.
- Medicare Advantage payments continue to be the plump target Congress needs to find a way to fix the Medicare physician fee problem that is on autopilot to cut doc payments 15% by January 1, 2009.
- If Medicare Advantage companies saw their payments equalized with the traditional Medicare program, they would see their reimbursement fall by $65 billion over the next five years and $160 billion over the next ten.
- "Clearly, then investors should weigh both a company's exposure to MA in general and to PFFS in particular before placing their bets next year [2008]."
The Medicare Advantage payment problem hasn't been solved, it has just been made more critical.
From the looks of Medicare Advantage-heavy HMOs' share prices, there's apparently lots of sand on Wall Street and a great many people have their heads buried in it.