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Daily Health
Policy Report
Administration News | President Bush in FY 2008 Budget Will
Seek $70B in Savings From Medicare, Medicaid, According to
Administration Officials, Lobbyists
[Feb 02, 2007]
President Bush next week is expected to propose more than
$70 billion in savings from Medicare and Medicaid over five
years, according to administration officials and health care
lobbyists, the
New York Times
reports. The proposed cuts are part of Bush's plan to
balance the budget by 2012, beginning with his fiscal year
2008 budget scheduled for release next week. Under Bush's
proposal, a greater percentage of Medicare beneficiaries
with relatively high incomes would be required to pay more
than the standard monthly premium, which currently is
$93.50. Administration officials did not provide details
about proposed Medicare premium increases. Bush also is
"expected to propose freezing Medicare payments to home
health agencies and reducing inflation allowance paid to
hospitals, nursing homes and other providers," the
Times reports. The FY 2008 budget proposal
assumes that an 8% Medicare reimbursement cut for doctors
scheduled to go into effect next year will not be reversed.
Bush also is expected to propose changes to SCHIP to
"sharpen its focus on low-income families," possibly by
reducing federal payments to states that cover children
whose families have incomes that exceed 200% of the federal
poverty level, the Times
reports. Administration officials said Bush will not propose
lowering reimbursements to private Medicare plans.
Analysis,
Reaction
"Even some administration officials say they cannot imagine
approval of such large cutbacks in a Congress now controlled
by Democrats," according to the
Times.
Anticipated proposals from Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.)
and other Democratic lawmakers to expand SCHIP likely would
clash with Bush's proposal.
House Ways and Means Committee
Chair Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) said, "There is a large area
for potential compromise and agreement, but with these
latest Medicare proposals, the president is just asking for
controversy. He still acts as if Republicans were in
complete control and Democrats had lost the election." House
Ways and Means Committee ranking member Jim McCrery (R-La.)
said, "The current rate of growth in Medicare, fueled by
rising health costs and an aging population, is
unsustainable. If Congress does not undertake sensible
reforms soon, the system will be swamped as the baby boom
generation begins to retire. Taxes will rise, benefits will
be cut and the entire economy will suffer."
American Enterprise Institute
economist Joseph Antos said, "The president's budget is an
opening bid, the start of negotiations with Democrats over
health care and other programs." Hospital lobbyists are
planning to fight Bush's proposal.
American Hospital Association
Executive Vice President Richard Pollack said, "Two-thirds
of hospitals already lose money treating Medicare
beneficiaries" (Pear, New York Times,
2/2).
Biodefense
In other budget news, a budget omnibus bill that would fund
most government agencies for the remainder of FY 2007 that
won House
approval this week does not include funding for the
Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, a
new program intended to coordinate vaccines and
countermeasures for biological threats (Berger,
CQ HealthBeat,
2/1). BARDA, signed into law in December 2006 by Bush, was
created to distribute $1.07 billion over two years to
biotechnology companies for the development of vaccines and
treatments (Kaiser
Daily Health Policy Report,
12/20/06).
CQ HealthBeat
reports that the "absence of funding for BARDA ... is
surprising, considering passing BARDA legislation was
supposed to be a top priority for Democrats after their
electoral victories in November." Laura Caudell, a
spokesperson for Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.), the bill's
primary sponsor, said that Burr was "disappointed." Caudell
added, "He believes support for the development of drug and
vaccine countermeasures to protect the nation against future
threats should be a top priority for Congress." An
HHS spokesperson was unavailable for comment. The Senate
could add funding for BARDA when it considers the budget
resolution next week, or funding could be added in an
emergency supplemental spending bill (CQ
HealthBeat, 2/1).