Joint
Chiefs to Back Higher TRICARE Fees for Retirees
Since 01-02-06
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Sent: Saturday, December 31, 2005 12:56 PM
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Subject: Joint Chiefs to Back Higher TRICARE Fees for Retirees
http://www.military.com/features/0,15240,84069,00.html?ESRC=dodnews.RSS
Fee Increase Supported
Military.com
by Tom Philpott
December 29, 2005
Joint Chiefs to Back Higher TRICARE Fees for Retirees
Alarmed that soaring health care costs are crimping budget dollars for
higher-priority defense programs, the Joint Chiefs intend to endorse the Defense
Department’s plan to
raise TRICARE
fees sharply over the next three years for retirees under 65 and their
families, say senior military officers. One officer described a likely scenario,
early in 2006, of the nation’s top military leaders sitting shoulder to shoulder
before the armed services committees to testify that medical costs are now a
critical readiness issue.
Higher
TRICARE fees for younger retirees also will be endorsed in the Quadrennial
Defense Review report which the service chiefs are completing to propose a
realignment of military programs to meet future needs. The QDR recommendations
are expected to be unveiled in early February when the Bush administration also
sends its 2007 defense budget request to Congress.
The “24-star” endorsement, a reference to the six four-star officers who
comprise the Joint Chiefs – the chairman, vice chairman, and top officer of the
Army, Navy,
Air
Force and
Marines
Corps – is seen as necessary to persuade Congress to accept the first TRICARE
fee increases in a decade and then to help insulate supportive lawmakers from
the wrath of angry retirees.
As first reported here three weeks ago, Defense officials want annual enrollment
fees for TRICARE Prime, the military’s managed care plan, to triple by October
2008 for working-age retired officers, from $230/$460 a year (individual/family
coverage) up to $750/$1500, and to double, to $450/$900, for under-65 enlisted
retirees. Retirees who use TRICARE Standard, the military’s traditional
fee-for-service health insurance, would see their annual deductible raised too.
They also would pay for the first time an annual enrollment fee. Beyond 2008,
all TRICARE fees and co-payments would be indexed to medical inflation.TRICARE
retail pharmacy co-payments also would be raised, which would be the only change
to impact Medicare-eligible retirees too.
The goal would be to discourage purchase of maintenance medicines through the
more expensive retail network, by increasing the $3 co-payment for generic drugs
to $5 while offering free generic drugs by mail. The current $9 co-pay for brand
drugs would jump to $15 retail and $10 by mail order.
Officials assume a 14 percent shift of TRICARE retail users to base pharmacies
or into the mail order program. Dr. William Winkenwerder Jr., assistant
secretary of defense for health affairs, and his staff developed the proposed
fee increases as a way to slow the rise in health costs, most of which is traced
to the start in 2001 of the TRICARE for Life and senior pharmacy programs for
elderly beneficiaries.
The idea behind the Winkenwerder’s plan is to have working-age retirees and
family members pay a bigger share of their TRICARE costs or use alternative
health plans offered by civilian employers. TRICARE officials estimate that the
higher fees and a decline in users will dampen projected health care costs by
$12 billion within five years and $32 billion through fiscal 2015. But the
numbers are viewed as optimistic, even by senior analysts, one source
explained.
They assume that 600,000 current beneficiaries, facing higher fees, will shift
to employer-provided health insurance by 2011. The “flaw” behind that figure,
the official explained, is it’s based on civilian HMO surveys of disenrollments
when their fees are raised. Most HMO users, however, seek lower-cost
alternatives.
For TRICARE Prime users, even if the $460 enrollment fee for families is bumped
to $1500 a year, as proposed for under-65 retired officers, TRICARE still will
be a better deal. If so, most of the projected cost savings will flow from the
higher fees, which it might be argued is just a budget move to have younger
military retirees and their families cover some of the cost of TRICARE for Life
and senior pharmacy benefits for older retirees, their spouses and survivors.
Senior leadership, this official said, “is finally beginning to realize that the
primary driver of costs is the benefit offered. This is a constant source of
frustration for senior civilian leadership…charged to deal with the growing top
line for defense health care.” But, he added, the comparisons now being made
between military benefits and medical costs paid by civilians “gloss over the
sacrifices those retirees made and the promises made to them.”
Winkenwerder argues, however, that TRICARE fee increases are overdue. Because
they haven’t been raised since first set in 1995, more and more retirees are
moving out of employer-provided health insurance, with its own rising cost
shares, to use TRICARE benefits.
In October, the Congressional Budget Office released an updated report on “The
Long-Term Implications of Current Defense Plans” which presents the kind of
kudzu-like cost projections for military health care that have persuaded the
Joint Chiefs to back Winkenwerder’s plan.
By 2024, CBO says, military medical costs will grow “by 80 percent in real
terms…from $37 billion in 2006 to $66 billion.” That is 37 percent of total
budget growth expected across military operations, maintenance and personnel
accounts, which represent 60 percent of the defense budget.
Other than the cost of war and contingency operations, CBO says, the greatest
budget risk facing the military is health care costs. The CBO report encourages
an increase in fees, but suggests that a “transformational” set of higher fees
and co-payments would boost out-of-pocket user costs to the level of civilian
HMOs, and hit not only younger retirees and their families but Medicare-eligible
beneficiaries and active duty family members too.
To comment, write Military Update, P.O. Box 231111, Centreville, VA, 20120-1111,
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)
Any man or woman who may be asked in this century what they did to make life
worthwhile in their lifetime....can respond with a great deal of pride and
satisfaction, "I served a career in the United States Navy."