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Independent Payment Advisory Board Accused By Republicans Of 'Rationing' Medicare

Michele Bachmann Medicare Cuts

RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR   07/18/11 12:48 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Remember the debunked death panels? A new Medicare board that Republicans are calling a "rationing panel" could become the next boogeyman in the nation's hyperbolic health care debate.

But don't look for the Independent Payment Advisory Board to start slashing anytime soon. IPAB doesn't even exist yet. Although the new health care law authorized the board to control excessive Medicare cost increases, President Barack Obama can wait until after the 2012 election to set it up.

IPAB is forbidden by law from rationing, but that hasn't stopped critics. Nearly every health industry lobbying group is pushing to repeal it, as are some consumer advocates.

IPAB has the power to force Medicare cuts if costs rise beyond certain levels and Congress fails to act. Medicare's own experts predict IPAB cuts will be needed in 2018 and 2019. If that happens, the law explicitly prohibits IPAB from rationing care, shifting costs to retirees, restricting benefits or raising the Medicare eligibility age.

Yet the uproar is getting louder.

"Senior citizens will lose control over what they actually get in Medicare," GOP presidential candidate Michele Bachmann told conservative bloggers in Minneapolis last month, "because a politically appointed 15-member board that's unelected and unresponsive to the will of the people called IPAB will make the decisions about what care we get and what care we don't."

After their own plan to essentially privatize Medicare for future retirees ran into trouble, Republicans became more vocal about IPAB. At a news conference of the GOP Doctors Caucus, Georgia Rep. Phil Gingrey suggested the board could leave a trail of bodies.

"Under this IPAB ... a bunch of bureaucrats decide whether or not you get care, such as continuing on dialysis or cancer chemotherapy," said Gingrey, an ob-gyn physician. "I'll guarantee you, when you withdraw that, the patient is going to die."

IPAB does represent an unusual delegation of power by Congress to what would be a new executive branch agency. But the administration doesn't seem to be rushing to take advantage.

Just this spring, Obama had proposed beefing up IPAB to squeeze Medicare harder. But as opposition grew, and prominent House liberals and AARP voiced their own objections, the administration played down that idea. In recent testimony before two House committees, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said IPAB is just a "backstop," a "failsafe."

"If Congress is actually paying attention to the bottom line of Medicare, IPAB is irrelevant ... and it never triggers in," she said.

Obama hasn't made any moves to set up the new agency, said Sebelius, but has only consulted about possible board candidates. Those members would have to be confirmed by the Senate, a fight the administration may be unwilling to pick when it can't even get Medicare chief Don Berwick approved.

"The more interesting question is whether it will ever get off the runway," said economist Robert Reischauer, one of the public trustees overseeing Medicare finances. "Can they find 15 people willing to serve under the conditions laid out in the legislation? Will the Senate confirm them?"

It wouldn't be the first time cries of rationing forced Democrats to pull back. During the congressional health care debate, Sarah Palin denounced a plan to have Medicare pay for voluntary end-of-life consultations between patients and their doctors. Although the "death panels" accusation was discredited, the idea got dropped.

Rationing is a criticism Americans respond to, said Reischauer. "They are fearful that health reform might include limitations on their ability to access any care they consider worthwhile."

HHS spokeswoman Erin Shields said comments such as Gingrey's amount to "scare tactics" and IPAB is "absolutely prohibited" from rationing. It could recommend savings that don't involve cuts, she said.

Backers say the board is meant to balance a Congress addicted to spending, unable to turn down lobbyists for hospitals, doctors, drug companies, nursing homes, power wheelchair companies and other businesses that depend on Medicare, and whose executives and employees make political contributions.

"The system now is that people come up here that work the Congress like crazy, lobbyists making millions of dollars," said Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., one of IPAB's biggest supporters. "The Congress often doesn't know how to say no. And the Congress has the practice of never saying no. And costs go up."

Dispassionate experts can do a better job, Rockefeller contends. Some of his colleagues don't like IPAB "because they don't get ... the big connection with the lobbyist," he added. Under the law, Congress can override the board's recommendations with its own savings, as long they add up to the same total.

Critics say their concerns can't be dismissed as easily as that. Because IPAB is an attempt to cap Medicare spending, a stingy approach could stifle promising new medical innovations. And if IPAB leads to steep payment cuts, doctors and other providers will be reluctant to take Medicare patients, limiting access even without explicit rationing.

"It will in effect be used to ration care or limit access," said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, leading the push for repeal.

The early evidence does not seem particularly alarming.

For example, the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service tried last fall to estimate the impact of projected IPAB cuts and came up with about $60 per year, per beneficiary from 2015-2019. Annual Medicare spending during that period was estimated to increase from an average of $13,374 per enrollee in 2015 to $15,749 in 2019.

Updated cost projections from other government offices differ on whether IPAB cuts will be required in the short run. The Congressional Budget Office says no. But Medicare's Office of the Actuary says yes, in 2018 and 2019. Under the law, it's the actuary who makes the call.

That's keeping critics on edge.

___

Associated Press writer Brian Bakst in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — Remember the debunked death panels? A new Medicare board that Republicans are calling a "rationing panel" could become the next boogeyman in the nation's hyperbolic health care deba...
WASHINGTON — Remember the debunked death panels? A new Medicare board that Republicans are calling a "rationing panel" could become the next boogeyman in the nation's hyperbolic health care deba...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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Ohioan4truth 12:16 PM on 07/18/2011
The Healthcare industry is like a new oil "boom". Drill and drill into it until there's nothing left. Politicans have made sure the only programs government is invested in is what private industry doesn't want. But all those public endeavors that can make billions upon billions of dollars for CEOs and private share-holders are always handed over to the private sector. Utilities like natural gas, oil and  Read More...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MKWaters esq
11:20 PM on 07/18/2011
Wait - they want to dismantle medicare so, they complain about mythical rationing of it? Yep, in$ane is what the GOP is! They want it both ways - I say no, they can't take my medicare or scare me into thinking they are the ones who won't take it - I'm not gullible!
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Tenderlies1
Im Old Enough to know better, are you
05:26 PM on 07/18/2011
Wonder what the title would be for the billions taken from Social Security by Goverment. What were they thinking when they moved it to the Federal Budget and dipped their hands in it for what ever they wanted. The last Budget President Bush did was borrowed and he took 200 billion from Social Security but all you hear now is what President Obama has spent. I am sure it has been quite sizeable, but he also didn't get much choice as he was left with a lot to cover in goverment and no bank roll to cover it. The Republicans would like to play dumb but they are not dumb enough not to know the Tax Breaks should have ended with the second War and with full control they could have in any year from 2003 through 2006 but no they borrowed and gave away and still are. No quality Insurance for the people, cuts for the ederly . No funding for quality schools, No funding for Police and Fire. Cuts for our Veterans as they are no longer of service. Ending abortion but cutting care for children . My My My haven't we progressed so well. No Jobs, lost homes , if we paid you people for your worth you wouldn't have a Pot to Pee in. Fine example for America's finest and Michelle Bachman running at the top. GREAT
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Littlewords
My micro bio was outsourced to my nano-bio: I'm me
05:23 PM on 07/18/2011
The new totally made up BS rhetoric and phantom bogie man dreamed up by lying Repubs.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
shag11
05:09 PM on 07/18/2011
I pay for Aetna and all my care is rationed, so why doesn't the Republican led Congress help my out of control costs. Oh, that's right, it's the Free Market.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Gudrun
My micro-bio is empty
08:10 PM on 07/18/2011
Bingo!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DigESource
12:22 AM on 07/19/2011
"Free Market" is the one little detail Republicans like to leave out when they are sensationalizing their anti-accessibility-to-healthcare rhetoric against the Universal Healthcare Coverage Plan. They always like to leave out their little trump card during this, but then throw it in our face when they impose their ideas of healthcare in our lives: "It's a Free Market, deal with it" is their attitude and trump card.
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Cthulhu On Call
As soon as I'm done with my nap, you're all in tro
03:53 PM on 07/18/2011
The only group going after Medicare and Social Security are the Republicans. If you're a senior, you're the one the Republicans are calling Welfare queens and leeches. Rick Perry, the guy Republicans want to run for President, calls Social Security a disease. Paul Ryan wants to replace Medicare with a voucher program.
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PERPLEXED IN TEX
What we have here, is a failure to communicate
05:49 PM on 07/18/2011
I would love a voucher program that pays me $1000/month for what the private insurance would cost me $3400/month due to pre-existing conditions (over 50 and has had some treated blood pressure issues plus depression about the political crap I see). Congress with their free health care is not a body representing us that I would count on.
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Cthulhu On Call
As soon as I'm done with my nap, you're all in tro
07:24 PM on 07/18/2011
The CBO said that the voucher recipients would probably have to purchase less extensive coverage or pay higher premiums than they would under current law, for two reasons. First, most of the savings for Medicare under the proposal stem from reducing the amounts that the federal government would pay for enrollees on a per capita basis, relative to the projections under current law. Second, future beneficiaries would probably face higher premiums in the private market for a package of benefits similar to that currently provided by Medicare.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SimianNation
Progressive NOT Regressive
03:49 PM on 07/18/2011
Goodbye Bachmann, hello Angry Bird!
03:49 PM on 07/18/2011
As if their plan to cancel Medicare and replace it with vouchers that don't keep pace with the cost of medical care would NOT limit access.
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pphhrogg
domestic clown goddess
03:48 PM on 07/18/2011
If they were "rationing" Medicare, we would have had to PAY for my husband's cancer surgery and his heart surgery...but we paid absolutely NOTHING for either of those procedures (or the hospital bill, or the doctor bills). All the pubbies are trying to do (again) is fearmonger. It's not working with most seniors, though, since we know how to THINK.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Israelibabs
Artist Tribally Speaking
03:46 PM on 07/18/2011
The headline should read "Goodbye Sanity, Here Comes Bachman".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rktboy
Fire this mother up!!
03:45 PM on 07/18/2011
Come now. The real "rationing boards" are insurance companies and Paul Ryan's voucher program.
03:45 PM on 07/18/2011
My grandmother, who is 94 needs new teeth. She has Medicare and Medicaid. When my stepfather took her to the Dentist, in greater Cincinnati, some tea bagger 'Nancy Grace' like rethuglican NUT just decided to make it hard for her. Giving her the paperwork run around. To the point that my mom is like f*** it. We just have to start over at a new Dentists office. Sorry but that kind of thing doesn't happen in the NYC area. Thank DOG. These right wing peeps are freaks! Thoroughly indoctrinated freaks who haven't just drank Grandpa's anti-communist Kool Aid. They are deliriously high and drunk on it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TazoWolf
Med student, Colorado
03:44 PM on 07/18/2011
I thought the republican party didn't want socialized medicine, so they shouldn't even want medicare.

Seriously, though, private insurance companies ration health care plenty in order to maximize their profits. If we got rid of THEIR rationing, perhaps more seniors wouldn't need to supplement their insurance w/ medicare, leaving more funds to cover those for whom medicare is their ONLY coverage.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rolor
'round and 'round we go
03:43 PM on 07/18/2011
Death Panels have been rebranded by the GOP into something which looks sweet and savoury but kills more grannies in the long run.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DanBeach
non-profiteer
03:41 PM on 07/18/2011
Her style should rightfully be called Christo-fa­scism...An­d wouldn't Jesus be pleased and BTW Michelle what specifically are your plans for creating jobs? Operative word here is specific…anyone?
03:31 PM on 07/18/2011
Squawkman thinks she deserves more healthcare than anyone else. What a bunch of selfish children republicans are.