1 / 37

Agenda

Implementation of the Affordable Care Act: Next Steps for Tobacco Control American Lung Association Updated March 2013. Agenda. Health Insurance – today and the future Affordable Care Act Employer-sponsored Insurance Medicaid State Insurance Marketplaces Prevention & Public Health Fund

semah
Télécharger la présentation

Agenda

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Implementation of the Affordable Care Act: Next Steps for Tobacco ControlAmerican Lung AssociationUpdated March 2013

  2. Agenda • Health Insurance – today and the future • Affordable Care Act • Employer-sponsored Insurance • Medicaid • State Insurance Marketplaces • Prevention & Public Health Fund • What you can do

  3. Comprehensive Benefit • 7 medications • 5 NRTs • Bupropion • Varenicline • 3 types of counseling • Individual (face-to-face) • Group • Phone • Easy to access/no limits

  4. Acronyms ACA = Affordable Care Act (healthcare reform) HHS = U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services EHB = Essential Health Benefits CMS = Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services USPSTF = United States Preventive Services Task Force ABP = Alternative Benefit Plan

  5. Federal Poverty Line = FPL

  6. Health Insurance Coverage in the U.S., 2011 SOURCE: KCMU/Urban Institute analysis of the 2012 ASEC supplement to the CPS. Uninsured, 16% Medicaid/Other Public, 18% Medicare, 13% Employer-Sponsored Insurance, 49% Private Non-Group, 5% Total = 307.9 million

  7. Health Insurance Coverage of the Nonelderly by Poverty Level, 2010 FPL= Federal Poverty Level. The FPL was $22,050 for a family of four in 2010. Data may not total 100% due to rounding. SOURCE: KCMU/Urban Institute analysis of 2011 ASEC Supplement to the CPS.

  8. Affordable Care Act • Already accomplished: • Closing of Medicare “donut hole” • More options for people with pre-existing conditions • Extended coverage for young adults • Required all private health plans to cover preventive care at no cost • Tobacco cessation coverage for pregnant women on Medicaid • Prevention and Public Health Fund

  9. 2012 Developments • June 2012: Supreme Court Decision • Upheld individual mandate • Upheld Medicaid expansion • Struck down enforcing mechanism for Medicaid expansion • November 2012: Obama re-elected • Means ACA is not likely to be repealed • Republicans will still try to dismantle pieces

  10. 2013 Developments • HHS has begun implementing 2014 changes by releasing several proposed and final rules. • Essential Health Benefit in state insurance marketplaces • Essential Health Benefit in Medicaid expansion • Insurance ratings (including ratings based on tobacco use) • Wellness programs

  11. Now State Insurance Marketplaces Employer Sponsored Insurance Medicaid/CHIP Uninsured $-------------------------------------------------------------$$$ Income

  12. 2014 State Insurance Marketplaces Employer Sponsored Insurance Medicaid/CHIP Marketplaces $-------------------------------------------------------------$$$ Income

  13. Employer-Sponsored Insurance • Grandfathered vs. Non-grandfathered • Preventive Services • Required to cover USPSTF ‘A’ and ‘B’-rated services • Required to cover with no copay • Recommendation re: tobacco cessation is vague

  14. Employer-Sponsored Insurance Study released in November 2012 showed that private plans were not covering tobacco cessation treatments in a uniform way. 4 out of 39 plans analyzed covered even close to a comprehensive benefit Some plans included cost-sharing, which is prohibited by ACA

  15. What Can You Do? Encourage private insurance companies to interpret the USPSTF requirement comprehensively Integrate quitline and other cessation services with health plans Submit comments to HHS if the opportunity arises

  16. Medicaid • Supreme Court • HHS Secretary cannot threaten to take away all federal Medicaid funds if a state does not expand Medicaid up to 138% FPL • HHS • Emphasizing flexibility so that as many states as possible will implement the expansion • State implementation • ?? Decisions are ongoing

  17. Medicaid • Joint federal & state program • Four types of coverage • mandatory • states allowed to exclude • prohibited • not covered in the law

  18. Medicaid • Comprehensive Tobacco Cessation Benefit for pregnant women • October 1, 2010 • June 2011 letter to State Medicaid Directors • Rest of people on Medicaid • Still up to the states

  19. Medicaid Future changes: • 2013: Incentive to cover preventive services • 2014: Essential Health Benefit for new enrollees • 2014: Tobacco cessation medications are no longer excludable • Ongoing: transition to managed care

  20. EHB in Medicaid Expansion • HHS released a proposed rule in January 2013 • Alternative Benefit Plans (ABPs) = Plans covering Medicaid expansion population • ABPs must cover tobacco cessation as a preventive service • States are allowed to charge cost-sharing • Must cover tobacco cessation medications, but have wide latitude in “utilization management techniques”

  21. Tobacco Cessation Medications • States will no longer be able to exclude coverage of tobacco cessation medications in 2014 • Will this mean the drugs are truly accessible? • Add to preferred drug lists • Remove barriers (utilization management techniques)

  22. What Can You Do? Find out details of your state’s Medicaid coverage (utilization) Connect Health Department with Medicaid Department Advocate for better coverage Share successes Crunch numbers Keep track of your state’s progress toward 2014 Medicaid expansion Advocate for the expansion (if necessary) Advocate for an ABP that covers a comprehensive cessation benefit

  23. State Insurance Marketplaces • To be implemented Jan. 1, 2014 • States must decide: • Who has authority? • Governing structure? • Clearing house or active purchaser? • Consumer pieces • Website • Patient navigators • Integration with Medicaid, CHIP, etc. • Essential Health Benefit benchmark plan

  24. State Insurance Marketplaces • Three kinds of states: • Implementing a full marketplace on Jan. 1, 2014 • Implementing part of a marketplace in partnership with HHS until a full marketplace can be implemented • Federally facilitated exchange (no state involvement)

  25. Essential Health Benefit in Marketplaces • ACA: directs HHS Secretary to establish an Essential Health Benefit – a minimum federal standard • Must include 10 categories of coverage • Applies to all plans in state marketplaces • Applies to coverage offered to newly eligible Medicaid enrollees

  26. Essential Health Benefit in Marketplaces • Each state has picked its own benchmark plan (or defaulted to a plan) • Benchmark plan’s coverage serves as the Essential Health Benefit (a minimum state standard) • Must supplement if benchmark does not cover all 10 categories of care

  27. Essential Health Benefits Bad news: A LOT of flexibility is allowed for individual plans. • “Substantially equal” • Specific services covered • Quantitative limits • Substitutions within categories • Medications – plan must cover as many drugs in a category as the benchmark does Good news: USPSTF A’s and B’s must be covered

  28. Timeline Benchmark plan confirmed December 26, 2012 2013: determine which plans are in the marketplace, set up technical & consumer aspects Jan. 1, 2014: start date 2016: re-evaluation

  29. Source: http://healthreform.kff.org/en/the-states.aspx

  30. What Can You Do? • Find out what your state’s benchmark plan covers for tobacco cessation • Make contacts in Insurance Commissioner’s office – how flexible will they be with potential plans? Will they allow substitutions? • Outreach to potential state marketplace plans • Outreach to patient navigator program

  31. Prevention and Public Health Fund Started at $500 million in 2010. Increases incrementally to $2 billion in 2015. Purpose: provide vital funds for public health and wellness programs In constant danger of being raided Cut by $6.25 billion in the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act in 2012.

  32. Prevention and Public Health Fund • Quitline funding • Tips from Former Smokers Campaign (Parts 1 & 2) • Community Transformation Grants • support intensive approaches to reduce risk factors responsible for the leading causes of death and disability • prevent and control chronic diseases • Tobacco is a major focus • Also focused on health disparities, including SES

  33. Prevention and Public Health Fund Community Transformation Grants • Smokefree multi-unit housing • Smokefree community colleges • Smokefree workplaces • Reducing access to tobacco products

  34. What Can You Do? Find out quitline numbers Promote success stories Share “Tips” ads & materials Reach out to the media Find CTG projects in your state Crunch numbers Find out how your Members of Congress voted Advocate for protecting the Prevention Fund

  35. Questions about this presentation?Jennifer.Singleterry@Lung.org202-785-3355

More Related