PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Medicare Advantage beneficiaries did not receive more dental, vision or hearing care

Mass General Brigham researchers found that while Medicare Advantage beneficiaries have more supplemental benefits, they did not use more of these services and had similar out-of-pocket costs

2025-01-14
(Press-News.org) As the privatized form of Medicare, Medicare Advantage plans advertise dental, vision, and hearing benefits not covered by traditional Medicare, but a recent analysis found that Medicare Advantage beneficiaries do not typically receive more of these supplemental services than traditional Medicare beneficiaries. Additionally, out-of-pocket spending was similar for most supplemental services. The research led by a team from Mass General Brigham is published in JAMA Network Open.

 

“Medicare Advantage plans receive more money per beneficiary than traditional Medicare plans, but our findings add to the evidence that this increased cost is not justified,” said first author Christopher L. Cai, MD, who conducted this work as a resident in the Department of Internal Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system.

 

For their study, Cai and his colleagues analyzed 2017–2021 data from two continuous surveys, the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey and the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey. In total, the investigators assessed information on 76,557 Medicare beneficiaries.

 

Only 54.2% of Medicare Advantage beneficiaries were aware of having Medicare Advantage dental coverage while just 54.3% were aware of having vision coverage. Medicare Advantage enrollees were no more likely to receive eye examinations, hearing aids, or eyeglasses than traditional Medicare enrollees.

 

Out-of-pocket expenses for supplemental benefits were similar or modestly lower for Medicare Advantage. Medicare Advantage and traditional Medicare enrollees paid $205.86 and $226.12, respectively, for eyeglasses (9.0% less for Medicare Advantage); $226.82 and $249.98, respectively for dental visits (9.3% less for Medicare Advantage); and no differences for optometry visits or durable medical equipment (a proxy for hearing aids), after adjusting for demographics.

 

Nationwide, Medicare Advantage plans’ annual spending on vision, dental services, and durable medical equipment totaled $3.9 billion, while enrollees spent $9.2 billion out-of-pocket for these services and other private insurers covered $2.8 billion. In contrast, Medicare Advantage plans received $37.2 billion dollars annually more than taxpayers would have spent if beneficiaries had enrolled in traditional Medicare, a cost that is partially intended to fund supplemental benefit use.

 

“Supplemental benefits are a major draw to Medicare Advantage, but our findings show that people enrolled in Medicare Advantage have no better access to extra services than people in traditional Medicare, and that much of the cost comes out of their own pockets,” said senior author Lisa Simon, MD, DMD, assistant professor in  the Division of General and Internal Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “Older adults and people with disabilities deserve better from Medicare.”

 

Authorship: In addition to Cai and Simon, authors include Sonia Iyengar, Steffie Woolhandler, David U. Himmelstein, Kavya Kannan.

Disclosures: Cai reported receiving personal fees from the California Health Care Foundation and Alosa Health outside the submitted work. Simon reported receiving personal fees from the American College of Dentists, American College of Legal Medicine, American Dental Association, American Dental Therapy Association, and California Dental Association outside the submitted work. Additional disclosures can be found in the paper.

Funding: This study was supported in part by the Brigham and Women’s Hospital Faculty Career Development Grant.

Paper cited: Cai CL et al. “Use and Costs of Supplemental Benefits in Medicare Advantage, 2017-2021” JAMA Network Open  DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.54699

 

###

About Mass General Brigham

Mass General Brigham is an integrated academic health care system, uniting great minds to solve the hardest problems in medicine for our communities and the world. Mass General Brigham connects a full continuum of care across a system of academic medical centers, community and specialty hospitals, a health insurance plan, physician networks, community health centers, home care, and long-term care services. Mass General Brigham is a nonprofit organization committed to patient care, research, teaching, and service to the community. In addition, Mass General Brigham is one of the nation’s leading biomedical research organizations with several Harvard Medical School teaching hospitals. For more information, please visit massgeneralbrigham.org.

EMBARGOED UNTIL MONTH JANUARY 14, 2025 AT 11 AM ET
 

Contact:

Adam Bagni

abagni@mgb.org; 617-960-6620
 

Medicare Advantage Beneficiaries Did Not Receive More Dental, Vision or Hearing Care

 

 

Mass General Brigham researchers found that while Medicare Advantage beneficiaries have more supplemental benefits, they did not use more of these services and had similar out-of-pocket costs

 

As the privatized form of Medicare, Medicare Advantage plans advertise dental, vision, and hearing benefits not covered by traditional Medicare, but a recent analysis found that Medicare Advantage beneficiaries do not typically receive more of these supplemental services than traditional Medicare beneficiaries. Additionally, out-of-pocket spending was similar for most supplemental services. The research led by a team from Mass General Brigham is published in JAMA Network Open.

 

“Medicare Advantage plans receive more money per beneficiary than traditional Medicare plans, but our findings add to the evidence that this increased cost is not justified,” said first author Christopher L. Cai, MD, who conducted this work as a resident in the Department of Internal Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system.

 

For their study, Cai and his colleagues analyzed 2017–2021 data from two continuous surveys, the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey and the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey. In total, the investigators assessed information on 76,557 Medicare beneficiaries.

 

Only 54.2% of Medicare Advantage beneficiaries were aware of having Medicare Advantage dental coverage while just 54.3% were aware of having vision coverage. Medicare Advantage enrollees were no more likely to receive eye examinations, hearing aids, or eyeglasses than traditional Medicare enrollees.

 

Out-of-pocket expenses for supplemental benefits were similar or modestly lower for Medicare Advantage. Medicare Advantage and traditional Medicare enrollees paid $205.86 and $226.12, respectively, for eyeglasses (9.0% less for Medicare Advantage); $226.82 and $249.98, respectively for dental visits (9.3% less for Medicare Advantage); and no differences for optometry visits or durable medical equipment (a proxy for hearing aids), after adjusting for demographics.

 

Nationwide, Medicare Advantage plans’ annual spending on vision, dental services, and durable medical equipment totaled $3.9 billion, while enrollees spent $9.2 billion out-of-pocket for these services and other private insurers covered $2.8 billion. In contrast, Medicare Advantage plans received $37.2 billion dollars annually more than taxpayers would have spent if beneficiaries had enrolled in traditional Medicare, a cost that is partially intended to fund supplemental benefit use.

 

“Supplemental benefits are a major draw to Medicare Advantage, but our findings show that people enrolled in Medicare Advantage have no better access to extra services than people in traditional Medicare, and that much of the cost comes out of their own pockets,” said senior author Lisa Simon, MD, DMD, assistant professor in  the Division of General and Internal Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “Older adults and people with disabilities deserve better from Medicare.”

 

Authorship: In addition to Cai and Simon, authors include Sonia Iyengar, Steffie Woolhandler, David U. Himmelstein, Kavya Kannan.

Disclosures: Cai reported receiving personal fees from the California Health Care Foundation and Alosa Health outside the submitted work. Simon reported receiving personal fees from the American College of Dentists, American College of Legal Medicine, American Dental Association, American Dental Therapy Association, and California Dental Association outside the submitted work. Additional disclosures can be found in the paper.

Funding: This study was supported in part by the Brigham and Women’s Hospital Faculty Career Development Grant.

Paper cited: Cai CL et al. “Use and Costs of Supplemental Benefits in Medicare Advantage, 2017-2021” JAMA Network Open  DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.54699

 

###

About Mass General Brigham

Mass General Brigham is an integrated academic health care system, uniting great minds to solve the hardest problems in medicine for our communities and the world. Mass General Brigham connects a full continuum of care across a system of academic medical centers, community and specialty hospitals, a health insurance plan, physician networks, community health centers, home care, and long-term care services. Mass General Brigham is a nonprofit organization committed to patient care, research, teaching, and service to the community. In addition, Mass General Brigham is one of the nation’s leading biomedical research organizations with several Harvard Medical School teaching hospitals. For more information, please visit massgeneralbrigham.org.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Green hydrogen: Big gaps between ambition and implementation

2025-01-14
"Over the past three years, global project announcements for green hydrogen have almost tripled," says PIK researcher and lead author Adrian Odenweller. "However, only seven percent of the production capacity originally announced for 2023 has been completed on time during this period." According to the study, the recent problems with the market ramp-up of green hydrogen can be attributed to increased costs, a lack of willingness to pay on the demand side and uncertainties about future subsidies and regulation. "Enormous additional subsidies of around one trillion US dollars would be required to realise all announced hydrogen projects by 2030," explains Falko ...

Global study pinpoints genes for depression across ethnicities

2025-01-14
New genetic risk factors for depression have been identified across all major global populations for the first time, allowing scientists to predict risk of depression regardless of ethnicity. The world’s largest and most diverse genetic study ever into major depression has revealed nearly 300 previously unknown genetic links to the condition, experts say. 100 of the newly discovered genetic variations – small differences in the DNA sequence that makes up a gene – were identified due to the inclusion of people of African, East Asian, Hispanic and South Asian descent, the study found. Previous research into the genetics ...

Epigenetics ensures placenta functioning

2025-01-14
If the development of blood vessels in the placenta is impaired, fetal growth retardation may result. Scientists from the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) and the Mannheim Medical Faculty of Heidelberg University discovered that the correct development of functioning blood vessels in the mouse placenta is controlled epigenetically: One of the enzymes that modify gene activity using methyl groups is responsible. The researchers also observed a connection with a deficiency of this “methyltransferase” in a well-known pregnancy complication. In all female mammals, including humans, the growing fetus in the uterus is supplied via the placenta. Through this temporary ...

New computer models open door to far more targeted antibiotics

New computer models open door to far more targeted antibiotics
2025-01-14
With antibiotic resistance a growing problem, University of Virginia School of Medicine researchers have developed cutting-edge computer models that could give the disease-fighting drugs a laser-like precision to target only specific bacteria in specific parts of the body. As it stands, antibiotics kill bacteria indiscriminately. Because the drugs are used so widely, increasing numbers of dangerous bugs are growing resistant, threatening one of modern medicine’s most important weapons against disease.  UVA’s new approach, on the other hand, would dramatically limit how ...

Researchers discover how cigarette smoke impairs critical lung immune cells

Researchers discover how cigarette smoke impairs critical lung immune cells
2025-01-14
Cigarette smoking is widespread and deadly, yet our understanding of how cigarette smoke actually causes serious respiratory illnesses is incomplete, which has severely hampered the development of effective treatments. Today (TBC) Australian researchers reveal how multiple chemicals found in cigarette smoke and e-cigarettes alter the function of a key type of immune cell found in the lungs.   The study, published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine (JEM), suggests that these alterations make cigarette smokers, ...

Commonly prescribed medications increase fall risk and related injuries in people with COPD

2025-01-14
Miami (January 14, 2025) – People with COPD experience more falls and related injuries requiring medical care when using common fall-risk increasing drugs, according to a new study. The study is published in the November 2024 issue of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases: Journal of the COPD Foundation, a peer-reviewed, open-access journal.   Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is an inflammatory lung disease, comprising several conditions, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. Symptoms include breathlessness, fatigue and chronic cough. The disease affects more than 30 million Americans and is the fourth leading ...

This metaphorical cat is both dead and alive – and it will help quantum engineers detect computing errors

This metaphorical cat is both dead and alive – and it will help quantum engineers detect computing errors
2025-01-14
UNSW engineers have demonstrated a well-known quantum thought experiment in the real world. Their findings deliver a new and more robust way to perform quantum computations – and they have important implications for error correction, one of the biggest obstacles standing between them and a working quantum computer. Quantum mechanics has puzzled scientists and philosophers for more than a century. One of the most famous quantum thought experiments is that of the “Schrödinger’s cat” – a cat whose life or death depends on the decay of a radioactive atom. According to quantum mechanics, unless the atom is directly observed, ...

Digitizing hope: Collaboration helps preserve a species on the brink of extinction

Digitizing hope: Collaboration helps preserve a species on the brink of extinction
2025-01-14
The vaquita, which means “little cow” in Spanish, is the world’s smallest porpoise and most endangered marine mammal. They also have the smallest range of any marine mammal; about 1,500 square miles within the northern Gulf of California. Since 1997, vaquitas have experienced a dramatic population loss from about 600 individuals to an estimate of less than 10 animals to date. At this current rate, vaquitas are expected to become extinct imminently.  The vaquita’s decline is caused by entanglement in illegal gillnets used to fish totoaba, an endangered species prized for its swim bladder. Despite a gillnet ban and conservation efforts, ...

The Dark Side of the ocean: New giant sea bug species named after Darth Vader

The Dark Side of the ocean: New giant sea bug species named after Darth Vader
2025-01-14
Giant isopods of the genus Bathynomus, which can reach more than 30 cm in length, are known as bọ biển or “sea bugs” in Vietnam. For the first time, one such species was described from Vietnamese waters and named Bathynomus vaderi. The name “vaderi” is inspired by the appearance of its head, which closely resembles the distinctive and iconic helmet of Darth Vader, the most famous Sith Lord of Star Wars. Bathynomus vaderi belongs to a group known as “supergiants,” reaching lengths of 32.5 cm and weighing over a kilogram. So far, this ...

Roman urbanites followed medical recommendations for weaning babies

2025-01-14
Babies were weaned earlier in cities in the Roman Empire than in smaller and more rural communities, according to a study of ancient teeth. Urban weaning patterns more closely hewed to guidelines from ancient Roman physicians, mirroring contemporary patterns of adherence to medical experts in urban and rural communities. Roman health authorities recommended breastfeeding babies for two years. Carlo Cocozza and colleagues were interested in how ancient Romans actually fed their babies in varying settlement types. Carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios in dentine from the first permanent molars record ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How a broken bone from arm wrestling led to a paradigm shift in mental health: Exercise as a first-line treatment for depression

Alarming levels of microplastics discovered in human brain tissue, linked to dementia

Global neurology leader makes The Neuro world's first open science institute

Alpha particle therapy emerges as a potent weapon against neuroendocrine tumours

Neuroscience beyond boundaries: Dr. Melissa Perreault bridges Indigenous knowledge and brain science

Giant clone of seaweed in the Baltic Sea

Motion capture: In world 1st, M. mobile’s motility apparatus clarified

One-third of older Canadians at nutritional risk, study finds

Enhancing climate action: satellite insights into fossil fuel CO2 emissions

Operating a virtual teaching and research section as an open source community: Practice and experience

Lack of medical oxygen affects millions

Business School celebrates triple crown

Can Rhizobium + low P increase the yield of common bean in Ethiopia?

Research Security Symposium on March 12

Special type of fat tissue could promote healthful longevity and help maintain exercise capacity in aging

Researchers develop high-water-soluble pyrene tetraone derivative to boost energy density of aqueous organic flow batteries

Who gets the lion’s share? HKU ecologists highlight disparities in global biodiversity conservation funding

HKU researchers unveil neuromorphic exposure control system to improve machine vision in extreme lighting environments

Researchers develop highly robust, reconfigurable, and mechanochromic cellulose photonic hydrogels

Researchers develop new in-cell ultraviolet photodissociation top-down mass spectrometry method

Researchers develop innovative tool for rapid pathogen detection

New insights into how cancer evades the immune system

3 Ways to reduce child sexual abuse rates

A third of children worldwide forecast to be obese or overweight by 2050

Contraction inhibitors after 30 weeks have no effect on baby's health

Nearly 1 in 5 US college athletes reports abusive supervision by their coaches

THE LANCET: More than half of adults and a third of children and adolescents predicted to have overweight or obesity by 2050

Ideal nitrogen fertilizer rates in Corn Belt have been climbing for decades, Iowa State study shows

Survey suggests people with disabilities may feel disrespected by health care providers

U-Michigan, UC Riverside launch alliance to promote hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engines

[Press-News.org] Medicare Advantage beneficiaries did not receive more dental, vision or hearing care
Mass General Brigham researchers found that while Medicare Advantage beneficiaries have more supplemental benefits, they did not use more of these services and had similar out-of-pocket costs