S-4583-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
Sponsored by Rand Paul (R-KY)
What it does
This bill would allow Medicare beneficiaries to enter into private contracts with any eligible healthcare professional — whether or not that professional participates in Medicare — for services covered by Medicare. The beneficiary would pay the provider directly and then submit a Medicare reimbursement claim themselves (though they could negotiate for the provider to file on their behalf). The bill would also override state laws that limit how much providers can charge for Medicare-covered services, setting a uniform federal rule.
Who benefits
Medicare beneficiaries who want access to providers who have opted out of Medicare, including those seeking specialists with long waitlists or providers in areas with few Medicare-participating physicians. Non-participating and opted-out physicians and other eligible professionals who could treat Medicare patients without being bound by Medicare's fee schedules. Rural and underserved Medicare patients who may have limited access to participating providers. High-income Medicare beneficiaries with the financial means to pay upfront and await reimbursement. Healthcare professionals such as physician assistants, nurse practitioners, physical therapists, audiologists, and dietitians who gain expanded contracting flexibility.
Who is hurt
Lower-income Medicare beneficiaries who may lack the cash flow to pay providers upfront before receiving reimbursement, potentially creating a two-tiered access system. States that have enacted laws capping provider charges for Medicare patients would lose that regulatory authority under the bill's preemption provision. Medicare-participating providers who compete under fee schedule constraints while non-participating providers gain pricing flexibility. Medicare's administrative infrastructure, which would face increased claim volume from individual beneficiaries rather than providers. Beneficiaries who may face balance billing above Medicare rates if they misunderstand the contract terms.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that current Medicare rules effectively lock beneficiaries into a shrinking pool of participating providers, and that physician participation in Medicare has declined as reimbursement rates have failed to keep pace with practice costs. They contend that allowing direct contracting restores patient freedom of choice — a right already available to patients in most other insurance markets — and that reimbursing non-participating providers at the participating rate ensures Medicare still contributes meaningfully to costs. They further argue that federal preemption of state charge limits creates a consistent national standard that prevents a patchwork of conflicting rules from discouraging provider participation.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill could accelerate the departure of providers from Medicare's participating network, gradually eroding the program's ability to guarantee affordable access for the roughly 67 million beneficiaries who depend on it. They contend that requiring beneficiaries to pay upfront and file their own claims creates a structural disadvantage for lower-income and less health-literate seniors, effectively making the benefit more accessible to wealthier patients. They further argue that preempting state charge-limit laws removes a consumer protection layer that many states have deliberately enacted, and that without a cap on what non-participating providers may charge above the Medicare rate, beneficiaries face unpredictable out-of-pocket exposure.