Commentary: One key issue neither presidential campaign is talking about enough

While seniors famously prefer for politicians to keep their hands off their Medicare, it should be more of a big deal on the campaign trail than it is.

Sure, Kamala Harris last week did propose recent additions to the federally run health coverage for seniors, saying she wants it to cover long-term care plus hearing and vision care. And Donald Trump, on his campaign website, has vowed to protect it without much detail.

Yet neither presidential candidate is talking enough about the central issue plaguing Medicare — its growing cost, which doesn't necessarily amount to better care.

Medicare accounts for 10% of the federal budget, a share projected to grow to 18% by 2032, according to KFF. Medicare Advantage, the privatized option under Medicare, makes up 22% of the total spending and has become a lightning rod for criticism from medical providers who say insurers running these plans too often delay and deny care while getting paid too much by the federal government.

What the next administration does — if anything at all — could alter the course of healthcare coverage that now affects 67 million of our seniors and — God willing — will touch us all eventually.

"I think it's an incredible opportunity for a Harris or Trump administration to leave a legacy," said Dr. Sachin Jain, CEO of SCAN Health Plan, a not-for-profit Medicare Advantage plan provider. "Because it's a program that needs a fundamental reboot."

FILE - A UnitedHealthcare Group Medicare Advantage PPO card rests on top of a Medicare card is seen in Portland, Ore., June 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)
A UnitedHealthcare Group Medicare Advantage PPO card rests on top of a Medicare card is seen in Portland, Ore., June 10. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

In the last decade, the popularity of Medicare Advantage plans has soared, covering more than half of the senior-eligible population. They often offer perks such as dental and vision care and low or no premiums that traditional Medicare does not.

But the budget for MA plans has also ballooned to the point that the federal government is overpaying insurers offering these plans by $80 billion this year, according to The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission. On average, these insurers receive $2,329 more per beneficiary than what the federal government would have spent if the senior was in traditional Medicare.

Much of this overpayment can be attributed to two factors. First, MA plans receive a flat fee based on the average cost per patient in traditional Medicare, but these plans typically enroll seniors who cost below the average, accounting for $35 billion in overpayments.

Second, the flat monthly payments are increased for seniors with MA plans who have certain health conditions. Some insurers are "goosing their revenues" by making their enrollees appear sicker than they are by increasing their health risk codes, said Steve Lieberman, a senior scholar at the Schaeffer Center at the University of Southern California.