A Political History of Medicare and Prescription Drug Coverage
- 14 June 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in The Milbank Quarterly
- Vol. 82 (2) , 283-354
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0887-378x.2004.00311.x
Abstract
This article examines the history of efforts to add prescription drug coverage to the Medicare program. It identifies several important patterns in policymaking over four decades. First, prescription drug coverage has usually been tied to the fate of broader proposals for Medicare reform. Second, action has been hampered by divided government, federal budget deficits, and ideological conflict between those seeking to expand the traditional Medicare program and those preferring a greater role for private health care companies. Third, the provisions of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 reflect earlier missed opportunities. Policymakers concluded from past episodes that participation in the new program should be voluntary, with Medicare beneficiaries and taxpayers sharing the costs. They ignored lessons from past episodes, however, about the need to match expanded benefits with adequate mechanisms for cost containment. Based on several new circumstances in 2003, the article demonstrates why there was a historic opportunity to add a Medicare prescription drug benefit and identify challenges to implementing an effective policy.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Health Spending Rebound Continues In 2002Health Affairs, 2004
- Managing The Pharmacy Benefit In Medicare HMOs: What Do We Really Know?Health Affairs, 2000
- Perspective: Covering Prescription Drugs Under Medicare: For The Good Of The PatientsHealth Affairs, 1999
- Perspective: A Drug Benefit: The Necessary Prescription For MedicareHealth Affairs, 1999
- Plenty of Nothing — A Report from the Medicare CommissionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1999
- Pharmacy Benefit Management Companies: Dimensions of PerformanceAnnual Review of Public Health, 1999
- Policy Paradigms, Social Learning, and the State: The Case of Economic Policymaking in BritainComparative Politics, 1993
- Analysis, Advice, and Congressional Leadership: The Physician Payment Review Commission and the Politics of MedicareJournal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 1993
- The Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act: A Post-MortemHealth Affairs, 1990
- Reflections from Inside the Beltway: How Congress and the President Grapple with Health PolicyPs, 1987