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Health Care Reform Bill: A Summary of opportunities

Health Care Reform Bill Summary: Tom's Menu. Handout: the detailsPresentation: the highlightsFocus: on Colorado specificallyon the timing/process of implementationWhat and how much is

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Health Care Reform Bill: A Summary of opportunities

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    1. Health Care Reform Bill: A Summary (of opportunities!) Tom Bost MD HCACF 4/17/10

    2. Health Care Reform Bill Summary: Toms Menu Handout: the details Presentation: the highlights Focus: on Colorado specifically on the timing/process of implementation What and how much is plastic Set up context for Elinor and Jim Links: www.KFF.org DPC.SENATE.GOV/DPCDOC-SEN_HEALTH_CARE_BILL.CFM

    3. Health Care Reform Bill: The Bottom Line Implementation is forever Drew Altman, CEO of Kaiser Family Foundation The real solution here is a legislative fix so all players in the industry can act according to a clear set of rules Wm Schiffbauer, Lawyer for AHIP This is only the beginning

    4. Health Care Reform Bill Summary Title I: Quality, Affordable Health Care for (almost) All Title II: Role of Public Programs Title III: Improving Quality/Efficiency of Health Care Title IV: Prevention of Chronic Disease/Public Health Title V: Health Care Workforce Title VI: Transparency and Program Integrity Title VII: Improving Access to Innovative Therapies Title VIII: CLASS Act Title IX: Revenue Provisions Title X: Reauthorization of Indian Health Act Editorial comments in pink

    5. Health Care Reform Bill Summary: Wheres Our Beef? Title I: Quality, Affordable Health Care for (almost) All *state based exchange options (CO-OP, Basic Plan) Title II: Role of Public Programs *state based expansion of Medicaid Title III: Improving Quality/Efficiency of Health Care Title IV: Prevention of Chronic Disease/Public Health Title V: Health Care Workforce Title VI: Transparency and Program Integrity *state oversight/regulation; multi-state options Title VII: Improving Access to Innovative Therapies Title VIII: CLASS Act Title IX: Revenue Provisions Title X: Reauthorization of Indian Health Act

    6. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title I: Quality, Affordable Care Implications for citizens Implications for employers Implications for states Federal programs with state implications The plans themselves

    7. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title I: Quality, Affordable Care Implications for citizens: Must buy insurance or pay penalty Sliding scale for premium assistance and out of pocket limits based on Fed. Poverty Line FPL=$10k individual; $22k family of 4 Deductibles limited to $2k individ/$4k family Can opt out if premium >8% of income Catastrophic only coverage available for <30 and/or those who do not meet criteria Massachusetts experience

    8. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title I: Quality, Affordable Care Implications for Individual citizens: <133% FPL get enrolled into Medicaid 133% FPL ($14k) 4% premium $290 + $2000 max out of pocket 1/3 HSA limit 200% FPL ($21k) 4% premium $440 + $2000 max out of pocket 1/3 HSA limit 300% FPL ($32k) 8% premium $1320 + $3000 max out of pocket HSA limit 400% FPL ($43k; Colo. Median 50k) 8% premium $2090 + $4000 max out of pocket 2/3 HSA limit 96% of uninsured Coloradoans <400% FPL

    9. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title I: Quality, Affordable Care <133% FPL ($29k): get enrolled into Medicaid 133% FPL ($29k): 4% premium $1160 + $4000 max out of pocket--1/3 HSA limit 200% FPL ($44k) 4% premium $1760 + $4000 max out of pocket1/3 HSA limit 300% FPL ($66k) 8% premium $5280 + $6000 max out of pocket1/2 HSA limit 400% FPL ($88k) 9.5% premium $8360 + $8000 max out of pocket2/3 HSA limit

    10. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title I: Quality, Affordable Care Implications for employers: >200 employees: must provide insurance <50 employees: need not provide insurance (though tax break if they do) 50-200 employees: dont have to provide insurance, BUT if even one of their employees qualifies for premium subsidies, they pay penalty per total # employee - 30

    11. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title I: Quality, Affordable Care Implications for states: Greatly expand Medicaid May choose to create Basic Health Plan (eg Medicaid-like) for citizens 133-200% FPL Must create AND administer: -Health Exchange for Individuals -Exchange for Small Businesses (SHOP)

    12. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title I: Quality, Affordable Care Fed Programs impacting State Exchanges: 2 OPM created multi-state (national) plans --one must be non-profit CO-OP: consumer operated and oriented plan --non-profit, Federal grant sponsored --by July 2013; cannot exist now Regulate Health Care Choice Compacts --allows plans to be offered in other states but subject only to the regulations of the state of origin

    13. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title I: Quality, Affordable Care The plans themselves Guaranteed issue/renewability no pre-existing conditions/rescissions Limits on out of pocket expenses/deductibles Limits on ratings (age 3:1; smoke 1.5:1) State determined essential package elements Free preventative services Limited abortion coverage Streamlined application form/process Standardized information

    14. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title I: Quality, Affordable Care The plans themselves: Various levels: Bronze: 60% coverage Silver: 70% Gold: 80% Platinum: 90% NO Maximum life time/yearly benefits Must cover dependents up to age 26 Catastrophic only: <30 yr old or exempt

    15. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title II: Role of Public Programs Changes in Medicaid Changes in Medicare Gradual closing of donut hole Create Independent Payment Advisory Board SCHIP High risk pool program Re-insurance program Community Health Center support

    16. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title III: Improving Quality of Health Care Grants to states to develop tort reform Community based collaborative care network program (for un/underinsured) Collection of data on disparities

    17. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title IV: Public Health/Prevention Grants for evidence- and community-based programs Employer wellness programs Good idea in theory Possible area for abuse/gouging

    18. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title V: Health Care Workforce Grants to: enhance primary care/underserved areas Primary care models Obvious tie-in to existing Colorado entities San Luis Valley consortium Grand Junction network

    19. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title VI: Transparency State exchanges State ombudsman Consumer protection/advocacy Dispute arbitration State regulation of Insurance industry Share reports on claims/denials etc Justify rate hikes prove that 80-85% of premiums go to services

    20. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title VIII: Community Living Assistance Services, Supports (CLASS Act) Medicaid program (therefore state determined) Encourage community based (vs. institutional care) for those at risk Up to $50/day for non-medical expenses to maintain community residence

    21. Health Care Reform Bill Highlights: Title IX: Revenue Provisions Projected cost: $938 billion/ten years Projected savings: $124 billion reduction in budget over ten years PALES IN COMPARISON TO SINGLE PAYER (Lewin Group 2008: 1.4 billion/yr for Colorado alone)

    22. Health Care Reform Bill: In Summary, then: Americans will always do the right thing only after exhausting all the other possibilities Winston Churchill If we believe leaders must be just, violence muzzled, power accountable and the riches of the Earth shared equitably, such a world will come to pass. I am not deceived. It is the hardest of worlds to make real. Torturous advances won over generations can be lost by a s single stroke of myopic presidents pen or a vainglorious generals sword David Mitchell

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