Medicare’s Drug Benefit Is Firmly-Established After Its First Decade, With Flat Premiums in Recent Years but Higher Cost-Sharing Over Time 

With Medicare Part D nearing the end of its tenth year, the program — which now provides drug coverage to 72 percent of all Medicare beneficiaries — has experienced no growth in average premiums in recent years but some notable increases in cost-sharing, according to a new report from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

At a time of heightened public concern about the cost of prescription drugs, the report, Medicare Part D at Ten Years: The 2015 Marketplace and Key Trends, 2006-2015, and a companion article in Health Affairs, examine the program’s first decade just ahead of the 2016 Medicare open enrollment period (October 15-December 7). Both papers were co-authored by Jack Hoadley of Georgetown University and Juliette Cubanski and Tricia Neuman of the Foundation. Among the key findings:

 

 

Both the full report and the Health Affairs article, Medicare’s Part D Drug Benefit at 10 Years: Firmly Established And Still Evolving, are available at kff.org.

Contact

Chris Lee
(202) 347-5270
clee@kff.org
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