Sunday, December 22, 2024

Dr. Oz wants to expand private Medicare plans. Here’s how he could do it.

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By choosing Dr. Mehmet Oz for a key healthcare post this week, President-elect Donald Trump didn’t just add another TV star to his team — he picked a vocal champion for expanding the private sector’s role in Medicare.

On Tuesday, Trump announced that he would tap the daytime talk show host to run the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the critical agency that oversees health programs covering about 160 million Americans.

It was an unconventional choice for a role that typically goes to an experienced bureaucrat or policy expert familiar with CMS’ sprawling portfolio, which along with Medicare and Medicaid also encompasses the Children’s Health Insurance Program and the Affordable Care Act market. During his prior administration, Trump handed the job to Seema Verma, a conservative Obamacare critic who had helped shape several state Medicaid programs as a policy consultant.

Oz is better known for his medical advice, that nutritional supplements can help prevent cancer, than his views on insurance. However, he has long been an eager advocate of Medicare Advantage, the popular but controversial federal program that lets seniors buy private coverage as an alternative to traditional, fee-for-service Medicare.

”Given his past track record, I assume this will be a fairly favorable environment for Medicare Advantage,” said Matthew Fiedler, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution’s Center on Health Policy.

Dr. Oz’s prescription for Medicare

On his hit show, Oz has by Medicareadvantage.com, a commercial website that helps customers shop for the coverage. In one spot posted to his Youtube channel this August, he told viewers they could be eligible for plans with $0 premiums and benefits like free hearing aids, before bringing out one of the company’s insurance agents to walk through more details.

“Everyone around you is signing up!” he informed the audience, before eventually urging them to call a toll-free number.

As the COVID pandemic raged in 2020, Oz co-authored a outlining a universal health insurance proposal they dubbed “Medicare Advantage for All”; it would have essentially moved all Americans who weren’t on Medicaid into private Medicare plans, funded with a 20% payroll tax.

Oz was less specific about his policy vision during his failed 2022 Pennsylvania Senate run. But he did again to expand Medicare Advantage. The “plans are popular among seniors, consistently provide quality care, and have a needed incentive to keep costs low,” he .

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