Medicare-Covered Ozempic and Long-Term Care Would Be Very Pricey
Healthcare promises always come with high costs.

It's no surprise that campaigning for office is largely a matter of buying votes with unrealistic promises of largesse to be funded—if the promise is ever fulfilled—on the backs of those to be named later. As befits a particularly awful election season, 2024 features some true doozies when it comes to pie-in-the-sky promises. But among them are new schemes to relieve people of covering their own healthcare costs by having Medicare pick up the tab for weight loss drugs and in-home, long-term care.
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Drugs That Cure Obesity—at a Price
With 41.9 percent of Americans adults obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control, Ozempic, Wegovy and other GLP-1 weight loss drugs have soared in popularity. As many as one in eight Americans have tried these drugs, which promise to succeed where dieting, exercise, and willpower often fail. And, in fact, obesity rates do appear to have turned a corner, dipping down after years of the population getting ever more massive. Weight loss drugs may have made the difference.
But nothing comes without a cost, and the price tag for these drugs is substantial. "A monthly supply of Ozempic costs almost $1,000 before discounts or rebates," Bloomberg reported in May. That said, those discounts and rebates can make a big difference in a medical system where prices are as slippery as those in a Middle Eastern bazaar. A 2023 paper by the American Enterprise Institute found that for weight-loss drugs, "net prices received by drugmakers are 48–78 percent lower than list prices."
Still, there's no bargain like having the tab picked up by Uncle Sugar (even if that just moves it over to everybody's tax bill). And that's exactly what federal lawmakers facing the voters have in mind.
"Should the legislation become law, the implications could extend beyond seniors," claimed the office of Rep. Paul Ruiz (D–Calif.) as he announced the bipartisan Treat and Reduce Obesity Act with other lawmakers, including Rep. Brad Wenstrup, (R–Ohio). "Medicare coverage might prod other health insurers to pay for weight-loss medications, as private health plans tend to follow Medicare's lead."
As that statement suggest, the legislation—which currently has 117 cosponsors—would extend Medicare coverage to weight loss drugs, something currently prohibited.
That's not to say that Medicare isn't already paying for Ozempic. This class of drugs was developed to treat type 2 diabetes, and Medicare covers it for that use. In March, coverage was extended to use of the drugs for cardiovascular issues. And off-label use of drugs is common. Earlier this year, KFF, which covers health issues, reported that "Medicare spending on the three newest versions of these diabetes medications that have also been recently approved for weight loss—Ozempic, Rybelsus, and Mounjaro—has skyrocketed in recent years, rising from $57 million in 2018 to $5.7 billion in 2022."
Formally approving Medicare coverage of these drugs for controlling weight will open the floodgates of expense. Working from its own lower estimates of Medicare spending on what it calls anti-obesity medications (AOMs), the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) sees costs quadrupling. "Total direct federal costs of covering AOMs would increase from $1.6 billion in 2026 to $7.1 billion in 2034."
Advocates of coverage expect savings from reducing obesity and resulting healthcare costs, but the CBO isn't impressed by the tradeoff. "Total savings from beneficiaries' improved health would be small—less than $50 million in 2026 and rising to $1.0 billion in 2034."
Keep in mind that Medicare is a massive entitlement problem with even bigger fiscal woes—it's already going bankrupt. But the burdens of covering weight loss drugs pale in comparison to Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris' scheme to have Medicare cover in-home, long-term care.
The High Cost of In-Home Care
"There are so many people in our country who are right in the middle," Harris told the audience of ABC's The View earlier this month. "They're taking care of their kids and they're taking care of their aging parents, and it's just almost impossible to do it all, especially if they work."
Harris's proposal could be a popular one, since caring for elderly relatives is expensive. According to KFF, home health aides cost $68,640 per year, on average. Medicaid currently pays for about 60 percent of long-term care in the U.S., covering costs for people with limited resources. Extending coverage through Medicare would further increase costs for a system that, once again, is already in crisis.
A Brookings Institution proposal for a "conservative" program would cost "around $40 billion annually." The report concedes that "turning the dials more generously would, of course, cost more."
Harris claims Medicare coverage for long-term care can be paid for by negotiating better prices on drugs. But as the Cato Institute's Michael Cannon points out, that's an implicit admission that Medicare is inefficiently wasting money.
"If that's how much waste government health programs create and tolerate, then what does that say about the wisdom of using those savings to create a new government health care entitlement?" he asks.
"In all likelihood, Harris's new health care entitlement will exhibit the same staggering rates of wasteful spending as the existing health care entitlement whose waste she hopes will provide the funding," Cannon adds.
Costs Soar When Coverage Drives Demand
KFF estimates that 14.7 million Medicare beneficiaries could be eligible for Harris' home care plan. But one overlooked aspect of extending third-party coverage to anything, whether it's weight loss drugs or in-home, long-term care, is that it largely divorces people from the cost of what they consume. And people want more when they don't have to foot the bill.
"Third parties provide the bulk of medical payments in the U.S.," Wofford College economics professor Timothy Terrell wrote in 2014. "This separation of consumption and payment makes people act as though they are receiving low-cost or even free services."
With the government—meaning taxpayers and out-of-control borrowing—picking up the tab, third-party coverage is likely to drive much greater demand for Medicare-subsidized Ozempic and home health aides. After all, if somebody else is willing to pay, why not grab as much as possible?
That's true of private insurance as much as for Medicare. But insurance companies don't bankrupt entire countries when they go under. Medicare is a massive, tax-funded system already collapsing under years of political promises. It's expected by its Board of Trustees to become insolvent in a decade.
Both these Medicare expansions require changes to law that may never pass. But they could, and that will cost us. Politicians' vote-buying plans are getting very expensive.
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Eliminate Medicare. The American worker should not be forced to subsidize the obese and sedentary boomer groomer consumers.
Medicare can be funded by advertising costs for Grandparent Gladiators, a competition series involving high risk extreme fights and competitions. To get Medicare you must compete oncr a season.
Does Grandparent Gladiators follow Battle Box?
Any act must include a ban on fatties dancing in the ads for these drugs.
Maybe Jeff could be a “before wight loss” model for these pharmaceuticals. He might demand that all crew are vaxxed and quadruple boostered. The cinematographer would need an extra wide angle lens.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/378988/us-obesity-rate-by-state/
Obvious pattern here.
"A 2023 paper by the American Enterprise Institute found that for weight-loss drugs, "net prices received by drugmakers are 48–78 percent lower than list prices.""
My pharmacist was recently commenting on this, when I was purchasing a new prescription; (No, not Ozempic.) "Wow, the list price of this is almost a thousand dollars a month! Fortunately after I applied this coupon for you it was only $20."
The list prices of drugs are complete fiction these days. Basically nobody pays list price. Not for Ozempic, or many other drugs. It's totally pathological. Why do they announce pretend prices for drugs, that they're not actually charging?
Why do they announce pretend prices for drugs, that they’re not actually charging?
Would you prefer they advertise them as having cost nothing and are available for free as a gift from the government, like mana from Heaven?
No, I'd prefer that they just announce what they actually will charge for them. I perfectly well understand these products cost money to produce, but that's not an excuse for announcing one price, and charging another.
Years ago I was building my own house, and I'd reached the point where it was time to buy the kitchen cabinets. I went to a cabinet store my parents had recommended, sat down with a salesman, laid out the kitchen the way I liked it. He then generated a bill of materials, and the bottom line was $25K.
I got up, apologized for wasting his time, and started walking out of the store. He jumped up behind me and shouted, "Wait! There's an 85% discount!"
I came back and sat down again, but I was quite disgruntled about his not having just given me the REAL price. And said as much.
It's the same here: Why don't they just list the real price, instead of having a fake price, and a commonly available way to avoid paying it? Is it just because it's worth it for them because of the occasional customer with stupid amounts of money, who doesn't blink at the fake price, just pays it?
Apparently you've never negotiated a price at a car dealership. -or anywhere else-
Because when the democrats impose price controls, they can raise the effective price to that 'list price' by reducing discounts, not by raising prices.
Refer to car prices during price controls in the seventies.
That actually makes some sense.
People without insurance do pay list price
In this case, the medication wasn't covered by my insurance. I only got it below list price because of one of those "coupons".
Drugs That Cure Obesity—at a Price
You will eat the bugs, you will be happy. Your government-funded Ozempic script will make sure that you aren't hungry for anything beyond your cricket ration.
JD Vance is wrong about childless fat ladies.
These drugs do not cure anything.
They treat certain conditions.
Drug companies have little incentive to cure anything.
If they develop a treatment they have a lifetime buyer.
Very true. On Ozympic for T2 Diabetes, plus Metformin. With Metformin and Levimir (time release Insulin), I struggled to keep my A1C near 7 (which is the dividing line for “controlled”). On less than a year on Ozympic, at the lowest dosage, plus the Metformin, I lost almost 30 lbs (220 to 190), and A1C is below 6. 36” to 32” pants, and XL to L shirts. Have maintained that for over a year now. Hoping this year to forgo much of the hotel living (we were in Las Vegas for my wife’s doctors) this last year, and eating healthier this coming year, and getting my weight down to 180 lbs, where I was in college a half century ago. Wife still thinks I am fat.
It seems to work mostly through appetite suppression. I just don’t snack much during the day anymore, and our big meal of the day, late, is smaller. Restaurant dinners are now spread over two, even three, nights, instead of being completely eaten in one. I just ask myself if I am really still hungry after one of these half meals, or just feel like eating. And if it is the latter, I just don’t.
I would probably pay, out of my pocket, maybe $500 a month for this. Not maybe $1k. Luckily, for me, I had a well documented medical history of T2 Diabetes before the Ozmpic, so my Medicare Part D pays for most of the cost of the drug.
The "obese" numbers are bullshit. According to that little chart that hangs on my doctor's wall I am obese at 5'11" and 225. But I'm actually in pretty good shape and maybe 15 pounds overweight. Don't have a six pack but then I'm also almost 60 so wouldn't expect to have one. And I'm not and never have been a professional athlete. I'm just a regular guy who works a sedentary job (teaching) and watches what he eats, tries to stay active.
Face it. You are out of shape.
15 pounds * 3
> The “obese” numbers are bullshit.
There are two things at play here:
1.) The obesity numbers are based on BMI which is a sorely flawed metric.
2.) The goalposts shifted. In 1998 they changed the standards for "diagnosing" obesity. In '85, a BMI of 27.8 was considered overweight for men. Just overweight. In '98, the standards shifted downward and a BMI of 25 is considered overweight and 30+ is obese.
You’re right. BMI is utter bullshit. It does not take into account a number of important variables. The best way to determine body fat is through body composition imaging. One of the local imaging companies here offers that for $75.
If it wasn’t about HIGHER COST the Gov-Guns would leave it alone.
‘Guns’ don’t make sh*t.
Their only purpose there is to STEAL more which = Higher Cost.
I think I'm ready for a real reform of Medicare. Constitutional too - though definitely not 'libertarian'. And it's where 'the market' was moving before it got federalized as part of the tax system.
"And people want more when they don't have to foot the bill."
And what's wrong with that?
The problem is DEMANDING without EARNING isn’t a zero-sum resources game.
An endless ledger of debits. "conquer and consume" till it's all gone.
*correction; *is* a zero-sum game.
Seems like this article should have been less about Ozempic, and more about scrapping Medicare/Medicaid.
Kind of a third rail for your leftist audience though, wouldn't it be.
Well, yes. For those of us on Medicare, most of us paid for it throughout our working lives. It started in 1965, and I got my first above-the-table job the next year (where I paid taxes for Social Security and Medicare). That means that I paid into Medicare for almost 50 years before receiving any benefits from it. So, yes, if it is repealed, I think a lot of us would hunt down the members of Congress that repealed it, like the vermin they are.
When the nation insisted the “halls of justice” supply them healthcare they WAIVER-ED their “halls of justice” ensurance.
Gov-Guns either ensure Liberty and Justice or they STEAL; they don’t make sh*t. So when the nation decided to ask them to supply what they really asked them to do is STEAL for them and VOID Liberty and Justice.
You’re a [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire too late to be claiming ‘Justice’ in the situation.
It’s time to PRIVATIZE (make it US Constitutional); not keep pretending there is any Justice assured in Gov-Gun THEFT. THEFT is a zero-sum resources game.
That means that I paid into Medicare for almost 50 years before receiving any benefits from it.
So, the problem with that is the same problem with Obamacare. And, frankly, socialism in general. People, and politicians especially, don't understand what the health service industry OR insurance is.
And instead of trying TO understand it, they decided to go with this "need-based" system instead. The idea here being that you pay into it now, and when you need it later it'll be available for you. Sounds good on paper - but then socialist "need-based" ideas usually do. They sold it as "insurance" without even the slightest clue as to what that word meant ("to cover the unexpected and catastrophic"). Then, they made the critical mistake of declaring health care a human right (even though, by definition, it could never actually BE one). And in doing so, they built a bucket that leaks faster than it can be filled.
Think of it like the dumbest insurance company ever, creating a completely uncircumscribed risk pool, and then handing out benefits to them that far outweigh the premiums they're were collecting. They told YOU, "Look, pay this premium every month and if something bad happens we'll cover you." Then they told everyone else, "And when you're old, we're not just going to cover the unexpected and catastrophic, we'll cover every burp, sniffle, and fart you have! No claims denied!" From an insurance perspective - literally, if you look at the math of it today - it's like collecting $1.50 in premiums for every $10.00 in liabilities. No risk management system can last with that gross an imbalance.
I'm sorry to say it Bruce, but all that money you "paid into" it, the government threw it all away. Redistributed it to others with zero consideration as to when you might be eligible for a claim on it. Robbing Peter (you) to pay Paul (seniors). And now that you're in the role of Paul, you're demanding the fruits of your labor - but Peter is long gone. You got ripped off buddy.
And if you ever voted in a way that supported its Medicare/Medicaid's continued existence (meaning for Democrats, or for coward Republicans more concerned with their power than with the nation), then that's kinda on you. Because you should have known better. And I don't mean you personally Bruce, but rather the American citizen who abdicated their civic duties of being informed, and actively participating in their governance. Any idiot who can do basic math should have been able to see that obvious imbalance and any citizen should have shrieked at LBJ at the top of their lungs "ARE YOU INSANE!?" You talk about hunting down the members of Congress that repealed it today. Why didn't you talk about hunting them down yesterday when they passed, and continued to support it?
We know the system has failed, is irredeemably broken, and that we're now hemorrhaging money we don't have from it. I'm sorry you paid into it Bruce. You shouldn't have had to. It doesn't change the fact that it has got to go. Immediately.
I’ve long favored taking money and property from democrats and RINOs as ‘reparations’ for their misdeeds.
Ozempic- the larger tragedy of this and other weight loss drugs is the misallocation of resources by the pharms (R&D, marketing/advertising, lobbying, etc.) to treat behavior related problems (I appreciate it was developed to treat diabetes, but similar to Viagra, the real money will be made in weight loss).
As to covering it, any prescription should require the user to get an Oura ring and internet-connected scale and the data from the devices would be required to get a refill. You sit on the couch and eat bon bons all day, no refill. You exercise, eat well, drink lots of water, thus showing a weight loss trend and you get your next refill. I'm no RFK, Jr. fan but his MAHA plan has tremendous potential. You have the freedom to opt out of a healthy lifestyle, but you don't have the right to socialize the costs of your behavior.
This will also reduce long term care, as I imagine the demand for such care is directly proportional to obesity with its impact on mobility and co-morbidities associated with the condition.
Just like Social Security, replace Medicare with a 30 year phase out so younger people would know they have to prepare. Replace it with HSA's that are locked until retirement age with private insurance and reconnect the buyer and seller to restore sanity in pricing.
The only possible way of doing anything close to that is to end the democrat party, and round up all their key people.
Nothing changes while there is still a democrat party.
^ yea, that.
I mean, he's not wrong. Plain and simple. This doesn't work with Democrats in power. Period.
Let’s not help finance healthcare for our own citizens so we can finance healthcare and bombs for foreign nations. Yeah, that’s a great idea!