Medicare and Medicaid at 60: Historic Milestones, Looming Changes

Published in RINewstoday on August 4, 2025

As 68 million Medicare beneficiaries recognize the 60th anniversary of Medicare, changes are coming to these landmark programs. Presented as efforts to slash costs and combat fraud, the thought of change to Medicare in almost any way leaves many older Americans feeling threatened that their health and financial security will be impacted in a negative way.

A Legacy Under Threat – or Repair?

On July 30, 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed H.R. 6675 into law during a ceremony at the Truman Library in Independence, Missouri. Lasting between 45 and 60 minutes, the event marked the official creation of Medicare and extended guaranteed health coverage to 16 million Americans aged 65 and older—coverage that had not previously existed.

Former President Harry Truman, who had fought for national health insurance two decades earlier, was present for the ceremony. He was enrolled as Medicare’s first beneficiary and received the first Medicare card at the event.

Speaking at the bill signing, President Johnson declared, “No longer will older Americans be denied the healing miracle of modern medicine. No longer will illness crush and destroy the savings that they have so carefully put away over a lifetime… No longer will young families see their own incomes, and their own hopes, eaten away simply because they are carrying out their deep moral obligations to their parents.” Johnson concluded, “When the final chapter of this generation is written, it will be said that we met the needs of the old, and that we did not abandon them to the despair and loneliness and hardship that comes when illness strikes the aged.”

Today, Medicare provides universal health coverage to Americans age 65 and older—though, as the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare (NCPSSM) humorously noted in its blog, “Ironically, the program is not yet old enough to qualify for itself.”

 The law created Part A to provide hospital insurance funded through payroll taxes and Part B to cover doctor visits and outpatient services on a voluntary basis. Part C, known as Medicare Advantage, offers a privatized, for-profit alternative to traditional Medicare. Part D (coverage through private, for-profit insurers rather than through the traditional Medicare program), added in 2003, provides coverage for prescription drugs. Over the years, Medicare has evolved to offer a wider range of services, yet it still falls short in some areas. Efforts to expand coverage to include essential benefits like dental, hearing, and vision have repeatedly failed to pass Congress.

Medicaid is a federal-state program that offers health coverage to low-income individuals, including children, pregnant people, and those with disabilities — in addition to covering long-term care for eligible seniors. It is a key funding source for U.S. safety net healthcare providers.

NCPSSM’s President and CEO, Max Richtman said that, “We should take a moment to marvel at the fact that — like Social Security — Medicare was created by national leaders who had a vision of a more just society, where, instead of leaving older people to get sick and die in poor houses or becoming a burden to their children, America would commit itself to providing basic health (and financial) security to our most vulnerable citizens.  Through the foresight of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson, these benefits (Medicare Part A and Social Security) would be earned through workers’ payroll contributions, giving Americans a true stake in insuring themselves against the hardships of aging.”

What’s at Stake

Despite Medicare’s broad support, it has frequently come under political attack, often rationalized by concerns over its long-term financial viability. The most recent Medicare Trustees report projects that the program’s Part A trust fund could be depleted by 2033 if Congress does not act. At this point the fund’s reserves would only be able to pay 90% of the total scheduled benefits in what there is to spend on Part A.

In 2025, following weeks of political discourse, the “Big Beautiful Bill” was signed into law on July 4, 2025. Known formally as H.R. 1, the sweeping 900-page legislation passed the House on May 22 by the razor-thin margin of 215–214–1. Every House Democrat opposed the measure. Two Republicans joined them. Freedom Caucus Chair Andy Harris of Maryland voted “present.” Two Republican members abstained.

Richtman, sharply criticized the law, saying it “rips health coverage away from as many as 16 million Americans and food assistance from millions more.” Its Richtman’s opinion to warn that 7.2 million seniors who are dually enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid, and another 6.5 million who rely on SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program), stand to lose vital support for health care and nutrition.

The Center for Medicare Advocacy (CMA) also raised serious concerns. CMA is a national, non-profit law organization, working to advance access to Medicare and quality health care through advocacy on behalf of older and disabled people. They warn that Medicare is being steadily privatized. More than half of all beneficiaries now receive their care through Medicare Advantage plans, which costs taxpayers approximately 20 percent more than traditional Medicare. These plans often restrict access to care through networks and pre-authorization requirements. CMA estimates that the $84 billion in overpayments to Medicare Advantage plans this year alone could instead have funded comprehensive dental, vision, and hearing coverage for every Medicare recipient.

CMA further maintains that H.R. 1 strips Medicare coverage from certain lawfully present immigrants who had earned eligibility through their work histories. Undocumented immigrants are not eligible for Medicare. It also blocks implementation of enhancements to the Medicare Savings Program that would have helped low-income beneficiaries afford care, stops new federal nursing home staffing standards estimated to have the potential to save 13,000 lives per year, and limits Medicare’s ability to negotiate lower drug prices for some of the most expensive medications.

Medicaid, enacted alongside Medicare in 1965 to serve low-income individuals and families, faces even steeper reductions under H.R. 1. The law’s new eligibility restrictions are projected to cause from 10-16 million people to lose coverage.

Medicaid Fraud, Waste, and Abuse

Medicaid fraud, like other forms of healthcare fraud, involves intentionally submitting false information to receive payment for services not rendered, unnecessary services, or inflated claims. This fraudulent activity has serious consequences, harming patients, honest providers, and taxpayers. In 2024, the national Medicaid improper payment rate was estimated at 5.09%, translating to $31.1 billion in federal Medicaid improper payments. Medicaid Fraud Control Units (MFCUs) recovered $1.4 billion in FY 2024, representing a return of $3.46 for every $1 spent. Criminal recoveries in FY 2024 were the highest in 10 years, reaching $961 million, more than double the five-year average.

In 2024, 8% of Medicaid claims were deemed improper payments due to fraudulent practices. Fraudulent billing for services not rendered or exaggerated in complexity (upcoding or ghost billing) was a common theme in 2024 fraud cases. Misuse of telehealth and the involvement of third-party billing firms were also notable trends in Medicaid fraud cases in 2024. Prescription drug scams, especially involving opioids and controlled substances, remain among the most significant Medicaid fraud cases. Medicaid fraud in managed care settings increased by 30% in the past five years.

Examples of recipient fraud include lending or sharing a Medicaid Identification card; forging or altering a prescription or fiscal order, using multiple Medicaid ID cards, re-selling items provided by the Medicaid program, and selling or trading the card or number for money, gifts or non-Medicaid services.

Examples of provider Fraud, Waste, and Abuse include billing for Medicaid services that were not provided or for unnecessary services, selling prescriptions, intentionally billing for a more expensive treatment than was provided, giving money or gifts to patients in return for agreeing to get medical care, and accepting kickbacks for patient referrals.

Rhode Island Senators React 

In response to the changes in H.R. 1, Rhode Island’s U.S. Senators Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse joined the entire Senate Democratic caucus to introduce S. 2556 on July 30, the 60th anniversary of Medicare and Medicaid. This three-page bill seeks to repeal the health care cuts included in H.R. 1 and permanently extend the Affordable Care Act’s enhanced tax credits, which are set to expire at the end of 2025. Full Democratic caucus sponsorship of legislation—led in this case by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer—is exceptionally rare and underscores their urgent need to call out the Big Beautiful Bill for its healthcare changes.

S 2556 has been referred to the Senate Finance Committee and at press time no House companion measure has been introduced.

Senator Reed emphasized the wide-reaching impact of H.R. 1, saying that millions of people are expected to lose health coverage under the combined effects of the bill’s Medicaid and ACA cuts. The repercussions, he said, will be felt by health clinics, hospitals, seniors, nursing homes, and patients across the country.

According to an analysis by KFF (formerly the Kaiser Family Foundation) 43,000 Rhode Islanders could lose health coverage due to the bill. Of those, 38,000 would lose insurance as a result of Medicaid cuts, and another 5,500 due to changes in the Affordable Care Act. The same analysis projected that Rhode Island would lose $3 to 5 billion in federal Medicaid funding over the next decade due to the law’s provisions.

Reed also noted that the bill includes cuts to the SNAP (food stamps) program—reducing federal funding by 20 percent through 2034. States would have the option to pick up the difference using their own funds.  In Rhode Island, where 1/3 of the population is on social welfare assistance of some kind, including Medicaid and SNAP, an estimated 144,000 Rhode Islanders are expected to lose SNAP benefits entirely. To maintain SNAP provisions in Rhode Island, the estimated cost could be as high as $51 million.

Reed explained that without ACA premium tax credits, younger workers will also face rising health insurance premiums beginning in 2026, putting additional financial strain on working families. When people lose access to health insurance, they are more likely to delay or skip care, leading to poorer health outcomes and higher overall costs. Federal law would still require hospitals to provide emergency care, meaning hospitals will absorb the financial burden when patients cannot pay. There are also new limits on how medical costs can be held against individuals, especially in Rhode Island, with provisions against destroyed credit ratings, liens, and bankruptcy moves.

BBB Supporters Say It’s a Pill We May Need

According to supporters of H.R. 1, recent changes to Medicare, Medicaid, and SNAP may be seen as fearful, but positive, because they improve affordability, access, and long-term health outcomes.  They says that H.R. 1. Medicare’s new $2,000 cap on drug costs protects seniors from crushing out‑of‑pocket expenses. Medicaid’s pilot coverage for obesity treatments like GLP‑1 drugs supports preventative care and could reduce chronic illness. Meanwhile, efforts to modernize SNAP enrollment and target benefits more effectively aim to reduce administrative waste and better serve low‑income families. However, the introduction of new SNAP work requirements, while controversial, is intended to encourage workforce or volunteer participation among beneficiaries. These reforms reflect a broader commitment to updating essential safety net programs, making them more efficient, equitable, and responsive to today’s health and economic realities—without sacrificing core benefits, supporters add.

A New Reality

As aging advocates and policymakers mark the 60th anniversaries of Medicare and Medicaid, they are forced to address a new reality in both programs. Rather than continually expanding to meet growing needs of older adults, these programs now face reductions that could lead to challenges in access, lower quality care, increased paperwork, disruption in treatment, higher premiums, and fewer covered services. Provider reimbursements are also expected to be cut, which may further limit access to care.

Instead of being a milestone for celebration, the 60th anniversary of Medicare and Medicaid has become a turning point for aging advocate groups—marking not progress, but threat for millions of older Americans who depend on these essential programs to live with dignity, independence, and health.

Seniors would benefit in President Biden’s $6 trillion budget

Published in RINewsToday on June 14, 2021

On May 28, with the release of a $6 trillion budget for fiscal year (FY) 2022, President Joe Biden outlined his values and vision as to how he proposes to revive the nation’s sputtering economic engine as it emerges from the devastating impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The 72-page budget document, “Budget of the United States,” (with more than a 1,400-page appendix) details his spending priorities that begin next Oct. 1. Biden’s generous budget depends on increasing taxes on America’s corporations (from 21 to 28 percent) and high earners, who received significant tax breaks from the President Trump/GOP tax cuts of 2017.

With the FY 2022 Budget pushing federal debt to the highest levels since World War 1I, Republican lawmakers quickly called the proposal “dead on arrival” in Congress.  However, Cecilia Rouse, chair of President Biden’s Council of Economic Advisors says the Biden Administration is willing to live with a budget deficit to invest in the economy now, especially with low interest rates to borrow; deficits can be reduced later. 

President Biden’s new spending under the just released proposed FY 2022 budget, recognizing his Administration’s priorities, reflects the major proposals already outlined under the administration’s $2.3 trillion American Jobs Plan and $1.8 trillion American Families Plan. Provisions in these two proposals would overhaul the nation’s aging infrastructure and invest in education, childcare, paid family and medical leave, fight climate change. 

President Biden’s spending plan also recognizes priorities outlined in the American Rescue Plan passed earlier this year as well as the Administration’s “skinny” discretionary budget request released in April. Most importantly, it reflects a commitment from the president to safeguard Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.

Loving It or Hating It Depends on Where You Sit

In remarks delivered Thursday in Cleveland, President Biden made the case for his budget request and what he describes as an investment in the country’s future. “Now is the time to build [on] the foundation that we’ve laid to make bold investments in our families and our communities and our nation,” he said. “We know from history that these kinds of investments raise both the floor and the ceiling over the economy for everybody.”

In the FY 2020 Budget proposal’s “Message from the President”, Biden says, “The Budget invests directly in the American People and will strengthen the nation’s economy and improve our long run fiscal health. It reforms our broken tax code to reward work instead of wealth while fully paying for the American Jobs and American Family Plans over a 15- year period. It will help us build a recovery that is broad-based, inclusive, sustained, and strong,”

Of course, response to Biden’s Spending plan depends on which side of the aisle you are sitting.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) released a statement strongly endorsing Biden’s fiscal blueprint. “Congressional Democrats look forward to working with the Biden-Harris Administration to enact this visionary budget, which will pave the path to opportunity and prosperity for our nation. The Biden Budget is a budget for the people,” she said.

On the other hand, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell strongly opposing Biden’s Budget proposal. “Americans are already hurting from far-left economics that ignores reality,” said McConnell, in a statement. “The Administration’s counterproductive ‘COVID relief bill’ has slowed rehiring. Families are facing painful inflation, just as experts warned the Democrats’ plans might cause. And the Administration wants to triple down on the same mistakes?” said the six-term Republican Kentucky Senator.

With the Democrats holding the slim majorities in the House and Senate and controlling the White House, Biden’s FY 2022 Budget proposal will have more weight than if the Republicans were in the majority, says Dan Adcock, Government Relations and Policy Director at the Washington, DC-based National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare (NCPSSM).

According to Adcock, Biden’s funding numbers will change as his FY 2022 budget proposal goes through the appropriation process in the upcoming months. With its release, Congress can now begin negotiating funding levels and spending bills. Competition for a finite amount of funding will ultimately result in funding level ultimately allotted to programs and agencies by each of the 12 appropriations under their jurisdiction. Funding for most programs important to older Americans is under the jurisdiction of the Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services and Education.

“With 10,000 Baby Boomers turning 65 every day – and the number of seniors projected to double by 2050 – it’s clear that President Biden understands the need to safeguard the older Americans he calls ‘pillars of every community – now and into the future.” Says Max Richtman, NCPSSM’s President and CEO.

Slashing Drug Costs to Pay for Expanding Medicare Coverage

Richtman says that Biden’s fiscal blueprint calls on Congress to allow Medicare to negotiate prices for certain high-cost, life-saving drugs that many seniors currently cannot afford and to require manufacturers to pay rebates when drug prices rise faster than inflation. These reforms could yield over half a trillion in federal savings over 10 years, which could help pay for coverage expansions and improvements, including access to dental, hearing, and vision coverage in Medicare,” he notes. Today, traditional Medicare does not cover routine care like dental checkups or hearing aids.

According to Richtman, President Biden’s budget also includes more than $400 billion in new spending over ten years to expand Home and Community-based Services (HCBS) for low-income seniors and people with disabilities who prefer to receive skilled care in the comfort of their homes and communities, even moreso after the devastation COVID wrought on nursing homes.  

In states that have not taken advantage of Affordable Care Act (ACA) opportunities to expand Medicaid, the budget proposes providing premium-free, Medicaid-like coverage through a federal public option, along with incentives for states to maintain their existing expansions. 

Biden’s FY 2022 budget also urges Congress to improve customer service for Social Security beneficiaries to prescription drug pricing reform to expanded HCBS, adds Richtman.  It also proposes a $1.3 billion (or 9.7%) funding increase for the Social Security Administration.  The increase seeks to improve customer service, including services at SSA’s field offices, state disability determination services, and teleservice centers.

 The Older Americans Act (OAA) provides funding for a wide range of home and community-based services, such as meals-on-wheels and other nutrition programs, in-home services, transportation, legal services, elder abuse prevention and caregivers’ support. These programs help seniors stay as independent as possible in their homes and communities. 

For details about Biden’s FY 2022 Budget proposal and OAA funding levels, made available from the Washington, DC-based National Association of Area Agencies on Aging, go to: https://www.n4a.org//Files/FY22%20PresBudget%20and%20historical%20Labor-HHS%20Appropriations%20Chart.pdf

 Stay Tuned 

The House continues its work on hammering out appropriation bills through subcommittees in June and in the full House in July.  The Senate’s work is expected to begin in mid-Summer and to continue well into September. If the appropriate bills are not passed and signed into law by Oct. 1, Congress will need to pass a continuing resolution to fund the federal government into the first months of FY 2022.

Like most Budget proposals, especially in a partisan Congress, Biden’s spending plan will need to be rewritten to win support from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. However, it will serve as a roadmap for a Democratic controlled Congress in crafting 12 appropriation spending bills. Partisan bickering during the appropriations process may well force passage of a continuing resolution before Oct. 1 to block a government shutdown. 

Trump Spending Priorities Would Fray Social Safety Net Programs

Published in the Woonsocket Call on March 16, 2019

Last Monday, President Donald Trump released his proposed FY 2020 budget request to Congress. Lawmakers, who rejected many of these budgetary spending requests in the president’s previous two submitted budgets proposals, consider his latest to be “dead-on-arrival.”

But, Trump’s $4.7 trillion fiscal blueprint, outlined in the 150-page “Budget for a Better America,” gives us a clear picture of his spending priorities and policies he seeks to implement through executive orders and regulator changes.

Trump’s FY 2020 spending plan proposes funding increases for combating the opioid epidemic, improving veteran’s health care, fixing the nation’s crumbling infrastructure ($200 billion increase), even giving the Pentagon a 5 percent increase in spending exceeding what the military asked for. White House senior advisor Ivanka Trump successfully pushed for the FY 2020 budget to include $750 million to establish a paid parental leave program and a $1 billion one-time fund to provide childcare to under served populations.

Trump’s budget proposal makes a commitment of $291 million to eliminate the spread of HIV within a decade, it slashes the National Institutes of Health’s funding by 12 percent, and the budget for the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention by about 10 percent.

Trump does not back away from his controversial stance of building a wall, putting in an additional $8.6 trillion for the construction of a U.S. Mexico border barrier. Congress had earlier opposed his demand for $5.7 billion for the construction project.

Trump Budget Proposal Puts Senior’s Earned Benefits at Risk

In 2016, Presidential candidate Trump had pledged not to cut Medicare, Medicaid or Social Security, but he does in his submitted FY 2020 budget proposal.

Trump calls for a 5 percent cut in non-defense federal agencies, including a whopping $ 1.5 trillion in Medicaid over 10 years. The budget plan instead allocates $1.2 trillion to create “market-based health care grants,” (a.k.a block grants) for states that would start in 2021. This gives states the power to set their own rules for this program.

Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) would be eliminated by Trump’s FY 2020 budget proposal by ending ACA’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions and causing millions of people to join the ranks of the uninsured. About 15 million more Americans have joined Medicaid since the ACA expansion was enacted.

Trump’s budget proposal also cuts Medicare by $845 billion over the next decade by cutting payments to hospitals and physicians, rooting out fraud and abuse, and by lowering prescription drug costs.

Meanwhile, the Social Security Disability Insurance program takes a huge budgetary cut of $25 billion and the Social Security Administration’s (SSA) operating budget is slashed by 1 percent, at a time when the agency is working hard to ratchet up its customer service provide to SSA beneficiaries.

Trump’s budget proposal would cut $220 billion from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), popularly referred to as the food stamp program. The program currently serves 39 million people. Under this budget, beneficiaries would be required to be employed for 20 hours a week to be eligible for assistance and replacing the EBT-debit card used to purchase groceries with the delivery of a “Harvest Box” filled with non-perishable foods like cereal and pasta, canned goods and surplus dairy products.

Housing and Urban Development’s 202 housing program for seniors and people with disabilities takes a $36 million hit, says long-time aging advocate Bill Benson, principal of Washington, D.C.-based Health Benefits ABC, in the March 15th issue of Aging Policy and Public Health News.

According to Benson, several Older Americans Act programs including the Family Caregiver Support program would be cut in Trump’s budget proposal. The Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program would be cut by $1 million. Elder Justice Programs would also be cut under the President’s budget including a $2 million cut to the Elder Justice Initiative at Administration for Community Living.

” Cruelest of all [budgetary cuts] is the proposed out-right elimination of the Social Services Block Grant (SSBG) which is the only source of sustained federal funding to states for Adult Protective Services (APS),” says Benson. Some 37 states use SSBGs to support their APS programs. SSBG is also used by states for a number of other services benefiting older adults including home-delivered meals and case management.

Shortchanging Seniors

Max Richtman, President and CEO of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare (NCPSSM) warns that Trump’s budget proposal shortchanges seniors. “In combination with 2017’s tax cuts for the wealthy and the administration’s failure to allow Medicare to negotiate with Big Pharma, the Trump budget shows that his administration is not plugged into the realities of being elderly in America,” he says.

Richtman says that Trump’s budget plan also proposes to eliminate federal grants that help pay for programs under the Older Americans Act, such as Meals on Wheels and home heating assistance for the elderly poor.”

According to Richtman, the 116th Congress gives seniors hope with introduced legislation that would boost Social Security benefits and expand Medicare coverage to include dental, hearing and vision services, changes that an overwhelming majority of Americans support. He calls on Congress to “quickly reject this callous budget proposal — and take decisive action to enhance the well-being of older Americans.

Robert Greenstein, president of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, sees Trump’s newly released budget proposal as very troubling, too. “It sharply cuts funding in the part of the budget that invests in future economic growth through education and training, scientific research, infrastructure, and the like,” he says.

“It reverses progress in making affordable health care available to people who don’t have employer coverage or can’t afford private coverage. It cuts basic assistance substantially for families, children, and elderly and disabled people who are in need and struggle to get by. And, it doubles down on policies that take away health care, food, and housing when adults aren’t able to meet a work requirement,” says Greenstein.
“Despite bemoaning deficits, it calls for making the costly 2017 tax cuts — which largely benefit those who already have high incomes and wealth — permanent,” he adds.

Richtman believes that Trump’s 2020 spending proposal serves as a warning of what the administration would do if it were not for the firewall known as the Democratic-led House of Representatives. “These draconian ideas – though rejected by voters in the 2018 mid-terms – remain in the conservative political bloodstream, requiring continued advocacy on the part of seniors and their champions in Congress,” he says.

The release of Trump’s FY 2020 budget program begins the Democratic party’s efforts to retake the White House and Senate in the 2020 presidential election, just over 598 days away. By making major cuts in Social Security and Medicare and turning Medicaid into a state block grant program, Trump is giving Democratic challengers in the 2020 presidential election fodder to create politically-charged themes for ads to turn senior voters against him for seeking cuts in these popular domestic programs.

Herb Weiss, LRI’12, is a Pawtucket writer covering aging, healthcare, and medical issues. To purchase Taking Charge: Collected Stories on Aging Boldly, a collection of 79 of his weekly commentaries, go to herbweiss.com.