With Mergers, Concerns Grow About Private Medicare
As some of the nation’s largest health insurers plan to merge, a new report raises fresh concern over the lack of competition in the private Medicare market. The analysis, released on Tuesday, concludes “there is little competition anywhere in the nation.”
The report from the Commonwealth Fund, a research group, looked at the market share of insurance companies offering private Medicare Advantage plans in 2012. The authors found that 97 percent of markets in United States counties were “highly concentrated,” in which a small number of insurers dominated. The lack of competition was worse in rural markets.
Only one county, Riverside, Calif., qualified as a competitive market, according to the report.
For decades, insurers have offered private plans as an alternative to traditional Medicare, the government-run program that provides coverage to about two-thirds of beneficiaries.