Health Care Reform (ACA) Implementation Jan. 1st, 2014 – California Updates

Latest Updates

Individuals and Families
• Insurance Carriers are expected to release their health plan offerings for 2014 on Oct. 1st.
• The major carriers offering Individual/Family plans in the Bay Area will be Anthem Blue Cross, Blue Shield, Health Net and Kaiser.
• Individual & Family purchase mandates and penalties will go into effect on Jan. 1st. Large Employer Group (50+ Employees) mandates and penalties, however, have been postponed to 1/1/2015.

Small Employer Groups (50 or fewer employees)
• Model Notices — All Employers are required to give “Model Notices” to all their employees by Oct. 1st, and to new hires within 14 days of hire. This is a Dept. of Labor mandated notice, that talks about employees’ and dependents’ options, under ACA, to employer and individual health coverage, Exchanges, subsidies and tax credits.
• Previously, this Model Notice law carried a penalty to Employers of $1,000 per employee for non-compliance. Last week, the Dept. of Labor announced a waiver of the penalty for non-compliance. But they still want employers to send out those notices.
• Anthem Blue Cross will not be offering any Small Group health plans within the Covered California Exchange. But they will be offering a wide selection of non-standardized plans outside of the Exchange.

Large Employer Groups (50+ employees)
• Model Notices — Penalties waived, see above.

Medicare Individuals
If you are on Medicare, you are mostly unaffected by the implementation of ACA on Jan. 1st.

Phil Lee

Medicare Introduces New Competitive Bidding Program

Medicare (CMS) just announced great success at saving hundreds of millions of dollars in a limited pilot bidding program for Durable Medical Equipment by reducing prices and curbing inappropriate uses.  Kathleen Sebelius, Secretary of the U.S.  Dept. of HHS, who is in charge of CMS credits this success to the Affordable Care Act, ACA, or Health Care Reform.

This raises the following questions:

·         Why did CMS not already have a competitive bidding process in place?  Don’t all Government programs (including the not so frugal Pentagon) routinely use competitive bidding to curb fraud, waste and abuse?

·         Why did CMS wait so long for ACA before implementing such an obvious cost-saving procedure?

·         What other Medicare benefits, other than oxygen tanks, are also experiencing rampant fraud, waste and abuse?

·        Would a private insurer, if they were operating such a program, have allowed such rampant abuse to occur unchecked for so long?

Medicare was originally designed to be an insurance program.  This is more evidence why this program is inflating the nation’s deficit.  It’s become an unfunded Government program with out-of-control spending at Pentagon prices.

More details and links to full story below:

NAHU Newswire April 19, 2012:

Medicare To Expand Bidding Program After Pilot Saved $202 Million In First Year.

USA Today (4/19, Kennedy) reports, “A new competitive bidding pilot program that replaces Medicare fee schedules for durable medical equipment – such as wheelchairs, oxygen tanks or diabetic test strips – has saved Medicare $202 million in its first year,” according to a report by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). “Beneficiaries also saw 42% in savings in their co-insurance payments for medical equipment.” The CMS report also projects that “the program, if expanded nationwide, could save seniors and people with disabilities $17.1 billion over the next 10 years.”

The New York Times (4/19, B1, Pear, Subscription Publication) reports that Secretary Sebelius “said the pilot program had reduced Medicare costs by 42 percent, or $202 million, by securing lower prices and curbing ‘inappropriate utilization’ of personal medical equipment.” She added that “the savings showed the value of the” Affordable Care Act. The story says, “the bulk of the savings came from oxygen equipment, power wheelchairs and mail-order test strips for people with diabetes.” CMS deputy administrator Jonathan D. Blum “said the switch to competitive bidding had not compromised beneficiaries’ access to the items they needed,” and that “Medicare had received few complaints from beneficiaries in the last year.”

The AP (4/19, Alonso-Zaldivar) reports, “The nine-city crackdown targeting waste and fraud has drawn a strong protest from the medical supply industry, which is warning of shortages for people receiving Medicare benefits and economic hardship for small suppliers. But the shift to competitive bidding has led to few complaints from those in Medicare.” It will be expanded “to a total of 100 cities next year, along with a national mail order program for diabetes supplies.” The story quotes Blum saying, “Costs are lower and there is no impact on the health status of our beneficiaries.”

CQ (4/19, Reichard, Subscription Publication) cites Blum saying that “contrary to the claims of critics, the program hasn’t led to disruptions in access to products … Nor has it led to adverse health effects requiring more hospital, doctor, or skilled nursing care.” In response, “Michael Reinemer, spokesman for the American Association for Homecare (AAH), said ‘we don’t find that credible,'” adding, “We documented four or five hundred complaints from patients or clinicians.”

The Hill (4/19, Pecquet) in its “Healthwatch” blog cites the CMS report and the AAH dissent.

www.health-insurance.com
www.healthplantalk.com

Children with Pre-Existing Health Conditions

As part of Health Care Reform (the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010, PPACA), children with pre-existing health conditions may no longer be denied coverage by individual health insurance plans.  Although children are guaranteed to be accepted, carriers may offer coverage at a rate-up of up to 100% if there are pre-existing health conditions.

The Open Enrollment and Guarantee-issue period ends on March 1st, 2011.  In order to take advantage of this new law, children must be enrolled by March 1st.

Read details of this new law at:

http://www.insurance.ca.gov/0250-insurers/0500-legal-info/0200-regulations/HealthGuidance/Guide22441F.cfm

Check rates for children at:

https://health-insurance.com

© Philip W Lee, www.health-insurance.com, www.healthplantalk.com

Is Guarantee Issue Health Insurance for Children going into effect on Sept. 23rd ?

Some of you have been asking us about this feature of the HCR (Health Care Reform) bill. I’m going to share with you a clarification that I received from Anthem Blue Cross. This one aspect of the massive HCR law, which will take effect on Sept. 23 applies only to the following:
1) If an overage dependent has been dropped from a health plan in the past due to having attained age 23, this dependent will be allowed to enroll, guarantee-issue, back onto the parent’s plan after Sept. 23rd, as long as they are not yet age 26.
2) The no pre-existing condition rule for children means that children (under age 18) will no longer have to be subject to the 6 month pre-existing condition waiting period (which currently applies to all PPO plans for individuals who did not have continuous coverage, or did not have prior creditable coverage making them eligible for the 6 month pre-existing condition waiting period waiver.)
3) Rule #2 above does not bar insurers from still denying coverage or ‘rating up premiums’ for dependents (with pre-existing conditions) who do not satisfy Rule #1 above.
4) Rule #4 above has since been revised by the regulators after further discussions and negotiations with insurance companies.  The rules now mandate Guarantee Issue as well as the elimination of Pre-Existing Condition waiting periods for children.

© Philip W Lee, www.health-insurance.com, www.healthplantalk.com

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