Medicare is a federal health insurance program that primarily provides health insurance for Americans aged 65 and older. Establish in 1965, the program expanded in 1972 to cover younger Americans who have a long term disability. Medicare consists of four different parts: Part A covers inpatient hospital stays, Part B covers physician visits, outpatient services and preventative care, Part C covers the Medicare Advantage program, and Part 4 covers outpatient prescription drugs through contracted plans. Medicare reimbursement rates often play a role in the reimbursement rates that private healthcare plans offer.
The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation consistently works with policymakers, providers and other key stakeholders to construct and test alternative payment and delivery models. Medicare has tested a variety of new models, most of which focus on shifting the emphasis to quality care and provide incentives for hospitals and providers to lower spending and decrease cost to patients, while providing higher quality care.
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Source | Date |
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When Health Insurance Prices Rose Last Year, Around a Million Americans Dropped Coverage | New York Times | July 3, 2018 |
Where There’s Rarely a Doctor in the House: Assisted Living | New York Times | March 29, 2019 |
While Considering Medicare For All: Policies For Making Health Care In The United States Better | Health Affairs Blog | June 6, 2019 |
Whitehouse, Cassidy Urge Azar to Focus on Reforming How Americans Pay for Health Care | March 20, 2018 | |
With Merging of Insurers, Questions for Patients About Costs and Innovation | New York Times | July 5, 2015 |