In 2011, 47,672,971 Americans were listed as Medicare beneficiaries. Of those receiving Medicare benefits, 1,505,942 were North Carolina residents. That means that 15.7 percent of North Carolina's population was enrolled in the health care safety net. Of those beneficiaries,
According to the most recent data (2004 figures), Medicare spending estimates Medicare spending in North Carolina was 8,441 million dollars - or 2.8% of total U.S. Medicare spending. That spending was marked a 8.0% increase from 1995 (to 2004). The average spending per North Carolina beneficiary was $6,841.
In 2011, 262,974 of North Carolina Medicare beneficiaries were enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan. Figures from 2010 show that 644,904 North Carolina Medicare beneficiaries were enrolled in stand-alone prescription drug plans, while 644,904 were enrolled in Medicare Advantage Drug Plans.
This bill would end Medicare as we know it, replacing it with a voucher system for seniors to buy health insurance coverage on the open market. Actuaries say the amount of the vouchers would not be enough for seniors to replace the coverage they would lose with the end of Medicare. [more]
No (7)
Not Voting (1) : Melvin Watt
Learn how health care reform is already improving Medicare. A federal summary of the changes reveals a long list of reforms intended to contain Medicare costs while increasing revenue, improving and streamlining delivery systems, and even increasing services to the program. So read how health reform is changing Medicare to work better for North Carolina senior citizens.
The GOP's proposal to repeal President Obama's Affordable Care Act could wipe out critical consumer protections and cost savings for North Carolina seniors, as well as their children and grandchildren. Read how repeal would hurt North Carolina..
medicarevotes.orgSee how members of the North Carolina Congressional delegation voted on Medicare.
How North Carolina would fare
North Carolina could lose if important protections are undone.