Many High-Income Medicare Enrollees Struggle, Too: Survey

About 20% reported having cost-related problems with access to care.

Even many high-income Medicare enrollees have a hard time coping with health care costs.

Faith Leonard and other Commonwealth Fund researchers put data about the problem in a new summary of results from a recent Medicare enrollee survey.

For participants ages 65 and older with Medicare coverage and household income of at least 400% of the federal poverty level:

What It Means

Typical high-income Medicare enrollees have an easier time with health care costs than lower-income enrollees, but some are suffering.

The Survey

The Commonwealth Fund is a New York-based health care research center.

The fund researchers commissioned a survey that reached some participants online and some by telephone.

The researchers divided the participants into a low-income category, for household income under 200% of the federal poverty level; a middle-income category, for income from 200% to 399% of the federal poverty level; and a high-income category, for income of at least 400% of the federal poverty level.

In most of the country, for a one-person household, the current federal poverty level is $13,590. The 200% cutoff is $27,180, and the 400% cutoff is $54,360.

What People Own

Commonwealth Fund survey participants look different from the general Medicare population.

About 14 million of all of the 65 million Medicare enrollees, or 21%, have Medicare supplement insurance, and 30 million, or 46%, have Medicare Advantage plan coverage.

About 52% of the survey participants reported having Medicare Advantage plan coverage, but only 7.3% knew they had Medicare supplement insurance or other supplemental coverage.

Roughly 31% of all of the survey participants were in the high-income category.

Only 111 of the survey participants knew they had both traditional Medicare coverage and supplemental coverage, and 43% of the participants who reported having traditional Medicare with supplemental coverage were in the high-income category.

Calculations based on survey figures suggest that about 10% of the high-income survey participants had traditional Medicare with supplemental coverage.

The headquarters of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in Woodlawn, Maryland. Credit: Jay Mallin/Bloomberg