Posts filed under ‘Health Care Reform’

Medicare Trustees Attribute Increased Medicare Solvency to Health Reform

The Medicare Trustees issued their annual report today on the program’s financial status. Good news! As a result of health care reform, the Medicare Trust Fund is now expected to remain solvent until 2029 – twelve years longer than the Trustees projected last year. As the Trustees state in their Report, “Nearly all of this improvement … is due to ACA [Affordable Care Act].”  While challenges lie ahead, if health reform is fully implemented Medicare has a rosier future and people can count on Medicare being there for them as they age.

Medicare and Medicare beneficiaries, current and future, will benefit from health reform. Now, let’s help get it implemented!

For the full report go to: http://www.kaiserhealthnews.org/Stories/2010/August/05/medicare-trustees-report.aspx

August 5, 2010 at 8:51 pm Leave a comment

Medicare’s 45th Anniversary: Promise Kept and Promises to Keep

July 30th marks the 45th anniversary of Medicare. When President Johnson signed the Medicare program into law in 1965, he ushered in an era of better health and financial security for older Americans and their families. Medicare did what private insurance failed to do – provide health coverage for people age 65 and older. Over the years Medicare was expanded to cover other people not popular with private insurance: people with disabilities, End Stage Renal Disease and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (also known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease). Today, 47 million older and disabled people receive health insurance and access to health care through Medicare.

In 2010, when President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act (ACA) into law (also known as the health care reform law), he helped ensure a brighter financial future for Medicare, better coverage for beneficiaries, and reduced costs for beneficiaries and taxpayers.  Health care reform will extend the solvency of the Medicare Trust Fund by about twelve years, add preventive benefits without cost-sharing for beneficiaries, and improve the Part D prescription drug program. It will likely result in reduced Part B premiums for most beneficiaries.  Health care reform will also slow the privatization of Medicare that over the past decade has added costs without corresponding benefit. In 2010, therefore, it’s particularly important to remember and celebrate the effect that Medicare has had on this country, and its importance to the daily lives of millions of Americans.

We forget what it was like before Medicare (and Social Security and Medicaid). Before Medicare, half of all older people had no insurance. Private insurance companies did not want to cover this population because of their age and chronic conditions. When health insurance was available, many older people could not afford it. In 1965, 25% of Medicare beneficiaries lived in poverty.  Medicare has enhanced the health and financial security of older people and their families; they no longer have to worry about paying for catastrophic medical costs.  Because of Medicare, virtually all Americans age 65 or older are insured.

Medicare has had a remarkably broad, positive impact on the country’s well-being in so many ways. Did you know, for example, that by refusing to pay for care at segregated facilities, Medicare helped desegregate hospitals and other health care institutions?

Today, traditional Medicare continues to be one of the most flexible health insurance programs available. The program covers care provided by a broad array of doctors, hospitals, home health agencies and other health care providers. The 75% of Medicare beneficiaries who are currently in the traditional Medicare program can choose virtually any doctor, hospital, or other provider that accepts Medicare, anywhere in the country.

Further, unlike people who receive health insurance through private insurance coverage, Medicare beneficiaries don’t have to worry about having their health insurance rescinded if they become sick or file “too many” claims. Nor will Medicare exclude coverage based on a pre-existing condition or impose annual or life-time payment caps.

It’s no wonder that Medicare is very popular with the people it serves. In fact, Medicare beneficiaries rate their satisfaction with Medicare much higher than workers with employer-sponsored insurance rate their health care coverage, citing access to providers in particular.[1]

Despite Medicare’s success, however, it faces serious challenges and threats – some real, some imagined, some imposed. The increased role of Medicare private plans during the last decade took a toll on Medicare’s well-being. Private plans were paid approximately 14% more on average than traditional Medicare would have been paid to cover the same services. Fortunately, these overpayments will be gradually turned back, pursuant to the health care reform law, resulting in adding about twelve years to the solvency of the Medicare Trust Fund.

Some policy-makers, however, including the bipartisan National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, are focused on reducing the federal deficit by limiting programs such as Medicare.  Others continue to call for turning Medicare into a voucher program, or increasing the age of eligibility, or continuing to income-base benefits  cost-sharing. These approaches threaten the promise of Medicare as a  program providing stable, uniform coverage to all its beneficiaries.

Indeed, Medicare’s future as a public social insurance program with a uniform benefit and cost-sharing system has been whittled away during the last ten years.  Medicare private plans (known as Medicare Advantage plans) were given increased funding and more market-share during the Bush Administration.  In 2003 the Part D prescription drug benefit was initiated only through private plans.   Part B and D cost-sharing mechanisms are increasingly based on the individual’s income.  All this has eroded the single community of interest among all beneficiaries, rich, poor, healthy, or infirm, that has kept Medicare strong. 

So, while celebrating Medicare, we also urge vigilance lest we inadvertently return to the circumstances before Medicare – when so many older and disabled people could not obtain health insurance. Our goal is to keep Medicare’s promise to provide fair access to health care through a stable, unified program. In this way we can help ensure that Medicare’s 45th anniversary will mark its grand maturity, not its mid-life crisis.

_______________

Medicare’s 45th Anniversary from President Obama and HHS Secretary Sebelius:  www.Medicare.gov;  www.whitehouse.gov !


[1] Mark Blumenthal, “Who’s Afraid of Public Insurance?” National Journal (June 29, 2009) http://www.nationaljournal.com/njonline/mp_20090629_2600.php

July 29, 2010 at 8:30 pm 2 comments

Health Care Reform and Freedom From Fear

 By Cong. Joe Courtney (2d District, Connectciut)

 No Longer Shut Out of Coverage (Roll Call Op Ed, June 21st, 2010)

I met Gloria Bitner of Marlborough, Conn., at a town hall last year. Now 63 years old, she suffered a heart attack at age 54 and fortunately was covered under her husband’s health plan at the time.

In 2008, however, he was laid off from his job at a car dealership, and their COBRA was close to the end. When I met her, Bitner described in excruciating detail how her heart attack made her family uninsurable on the individual market. After being rejected by a number of insurance providers because of her pre-existing health condition, she turned to Connecticut’s high-risk

pool program. For a basic policy for her and her husband, she was quoted an annual premium in excess of $30,000, which would have obliterated the couple’s middle-class budget.

As the Bitners quickly discovered, in the individual insurance market — where most unemployed and self-employed people and small businesses go for insurance — a heart attack is a common reason for insurance denial.

Another common reason for denial is diabetes. Since their son was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes, the Crowley family of North Stonington, Conn., has lived in fear of the unforeseen. Although the son is covered through his parent’s employer health plan, the Crowleys worry that if they lose their coverage because of a layoff or job change, his chronic condition will trigger waiting periods or outright exclusion from a new plan. Long term, they worry that he won’t be able to obtain coverage on his own after he ages out of their coverage unless he is lucky enough to find employment with a large firm. Without coverage, they fear he won’t have access to the daily insulin shots and costly glucose monitoring systems he needs to stay alive.

The Crowleys were worried because without a larger employer-sponsored plan, securing insurance coverage on the individual market is almost impossible and prohibitively expensive.

These families are not alone. According to a report released by Families USA, more than 57 million Americans younger than 65 have a pre-existing health condition that leaves them susceptible to insurance denials. For those directly affected by pre-existing condition exclusions, there are clear health and financial consequences. And for families like the Crowleys who are lucky enough to still have coverage, the fear of losing or changing plans takes a toll as well.

An insurance system that excludes people from coverage based on pre-existing conditions functions on the “actuarial rules of risk avoidance.” These rules have an internal logic, but they fail on a societal level by creating a health care system with haves and have-nots. To put it bluntly, it is medical apartheid.

The fact that Type 1 diabetes, a heart attack, high blood pressure, cancer or any other ailment caused by internal biology is used to discriminate in the insurance marketplace is fundamentally unfair.

Now consider a system in which the Crowleys wouldn’t have to think about their son’s employment prospects as a life-or-death situation. Consider a system that ensures access to affordable, meaningful coverage to millions who are susceptible to pre-existing health condition exclusions. Following passage of health care reform legislation, that is the new reality. Jim Crow laws were declared illegal and inherently unfair a generation ago, and denying insurance coverage based on an individual’s internal biology will follow them into oblivion.

Since being elected to Congress nearly four years ago, I have worked to achieve these protections for the Crowley family and for the 57 million Americans who face the crippling effects of pre-existing condition exclusions. In the 110th Congress, I introduced legislation to reduce the practice of denying coverage based on pre-existing health conditions. Then in the 111th Congress, I introduced a bill to eliminate the practice altogether. These protections were included in both the House and Senate health care reform bills and are now the law of the land.

While the new health care reform law will solidify critical insurance reforms to limit and eventually abolish pre-existing condition exclusions, it is not a silver bullet. Protections will be phased in over time. Beginning this year, a new temporary high-risk pool program with subsidized premiums will provide insurance options for those who have been denied coverage based on a pre-existing health condition. Also beginning this year, the legislation will prohibit insurance providers from denying children coverage based on pre-existing health conditions. By 2014, the health care reform package will end pre-existing condition exclusions for everyone.

Over time, these insurance protections will offer sustainable, long-term relief for families like the Crowleys and Bitners. They will eliminate unfair practices and ensure that no one is discriminated against based on his or her internal biology. These protections will put to rest the fear of the unknown. Employment decisions shouldn’t be about life or death, and no family should exhaust its savings paying for insurance. What for so long was a pipe dream is now a reality. It’s the realization of one of President Franklin Roosevelt’s four freedoms, the freedom from fear.

June 21, 2010 at 7:15 pm Leave a comment

Center for Medicare Advocacy Co-Hosts Tele-Town Hall and Local Event About Health Care Reform and Medicare With President Obama and Secretary Sebelius. Join Us on CSpan at 11am Today!

Here is a comment about today’s health care reform TeleTown Hall from the Medicare beneficiary representing the Center for Medicare Advocacy at the live Town Hall meeting:

My name is Pat Conover. I’m 69 and I have heart disease, high blood pressure, and incurable fast-growing prostate cancer. I have other chronic conditions and special concerns as a transgender person.

I’m doing the wise things to take care of myself and am still productive in several ways. One of the big reasons for my sustained good health is my primary care physician, Dr. Gail Povar. In addition to being a good doctor she is an outstanding advocate and coordinator for my sometimes complex care. She has also had to spend time advocating for me to get the kind of drugs I need, a burdensome task because I am allergic to some of the most prescribed drugs for my condition.

 I am very pleased that health care reform included many positive elements that will recruit, support, and empower more primary care physicians. I believe you and the Congress can build on your success with stage one of health care reform by saving money and improving coordination of care by reducing current programs that try to coordinate care through complex organizations. Transparency and information exchange is valuable, but care coordination is intrinsically a network kind of activity that includes attention to the idiosyncratic aspects of the health care needs of people considered one-at-a-time. You don’t need to pay for a whole football team when the basic game is archery.

 Pat Conover – Silver Spring, MD

June 8, 2010 at 2:24 pm Leave a comment

Center for Medicare Advocacy Co-Sponsors Tele-Town Hall With President Obama & Sec’y Sebelius

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

_______________________________________________________________________________________________

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 3, 2010


President Obama to Join Seniors for Tele-Town Hall Meeting on Affordable Care Act

WASHINGTON—On Tuesday morning, June 8, President Barack Obama will participate in a national tele-town hall meeting at the Holiday Park Multipurpose Senior Center in Wheaton, Maryland with senior citizens to discuss the Affordable Care Act and efforts to combat senior scams and fraud in advance of the first mailing of the $250 “donut hole” rebate checks.   In addition to attendees at the Senior Center, seniors across the country will be able to participate in the town hall meeting by phone.  The President will be joined at the town hall meeting by HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and representatives of the following organizations:

AARP

AFL-CIO

AFSCME Retirees

Alliance for Retired Americans

American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging

American Federation of Teachers Program on Retirement and Retirees

American Postal Workers Union Retirees Department

B’nai B’rith International

Center for Medicare Advocacy, Inc.

Communications Workers of American Retiree Division

Easter Seals

Families USA

International Union of Painters & Allied Trades – IUPAT

Medicare Rights Center

National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys

National Association of Area Agencies on Aging

National Association of State Units on Aging

National Association of Nutrition and Aging Services Programs

National Association of State Long Term Care Ombudsman Programs

The National Caucus and Center on Black Aged 

National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare

National Council on Aging

NCCNHR – The National Consumer Voice for Quality Long-Term Care

National Gay and Lesbian Task Force

OWL- The Voice of Midlife and Older Women

SEIU

Service and Advocacy for GLBT Elders

Workers United

These organizations – which together represent over 40 million seniors across the country — will be organizing satellite town hall meetings across the country to dial in and participate in the President’s event, which will be broadcast live on C-SPAN.  A detailed list of meeting locations will be released in the coming days.

June 3, 2010 at 9:12 pm Leave a comment

Politics Trump Health Care for People with Pre-Existing Conditions

The new health reform law encourages states to create or expand existing state high-risk pools as one of the first steps towards insurance market reform and increasing access to health care for people who would not otherwise be able to obtain health insurance.  State high risk pools can provide insurance, for example, for people who are receiving Social Security disability benefits but who are in the 24-month waiting period for Medicare.

Citing objections to a “federal takeover” of health care, Georgia’s Insurance Commissioner, John Oxendine, has announced that Georgia will not establish a high-risk pool for its residents with pre-existing conditions.  The irony is that the health reform law also provides for the establishment of a federal high risk pool for uninsured people with pre-existing conditions that live in states that don’t have their own risk pool.  So, by deciding that Georgia won’t establish its own program, Commissioner Oxendine is guaranteeing a “federal takeover” of health care – Georgia residents who can’t otherwise get insurance will only have the option of insurance through a federal, not state, program.

VG/DC

April 16, 2010 at 2:15 pm Leave a comment

A Message for President Obama, Speaker Pelosi, and Those Who Worked For and Voted For Health Care Reform

pete-souza-insurance

March 30, 2010 at 3:36 pm Leave a comment

Amen!

“We will go through the gate,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in January, at a Capitol Hill press conference.  “If the gate is closed, we will go over the fence.  If the fence is too high, we will pole vault in. If that doesn’t work, we will parachute in.  But we are going to get health care reform passed.”

Finally, the promise of equitable health care coverage and enhanced economic security that Medicare brought to older people will be available to younger people.  Because of the tenacious, courageous leadership of Speaker Pelosi, President Obama, and the Connecticut Congressional Delegation, health care reform finally passed! 

To all who helped make this happen, we send praise.  With all who will benefit from this legislation, we share joy in a brighter, healthier future.  May we all join together to ensure that the gates of justice and equity continue to open for all Americans.

March 22, 2010 at 5:07 pm Leave a comment

Flash: Health Care Reform Now

The House of Representatives is poised to vote on historic health reform legislation in the next few days. The latest non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report estimates that 32 million Americans will receive coverage if the legislation passes.  The CBO further estimates that the bill would reduce the deficit by approximately $138 billion between 2010 – 2019 and predicts continued savings in the following decade.

Many provisions, including those that will protect people from health insurance discrimination will take effect soon.  Click here to see the effective dates of some key insurance reform provisions.

Health care reform will strengthen and improve guaranteed benefits in traditional Medicare. It will protect the integrity of the Medicare program by extending the life of the Medicare Trust Fund and will reduce the outrageous overpayments to private Medicare Advantage plans.  It will improve Medicare for all beneficiaries by slowing the growth of premiums and other out-of-pocket expenses, enhancing preventive benefits, and closing the “Donut Hole” gap in prescription drug cover. Health care reform will also provide coverage to millions of currently uninsured Americans and end discriminatory practices by insurance companies. Passing this legislation will strengthen Medicare, bring a similar promise of health coverage to younger people, and increase the economic security of all Americans.

It’s time to pass health care reform – now!

March 18, 2010 at 4:09 pm Leave a comment

Seize The Day!

The Center for Medicare Advocacy urges Congress to pass health care reform now.  According to Judith Stein, the Center’s Executive Director “We are the closest we have ever been to fixing our unfair and ineffective health care system. We must seize this opportunity to pass health reform.  The status quo is not an option; we simply can’t afford to put this off yet again.”

Ms. Stein stressed that health care reform will strengthen and improve guaranteed benefits in Medicare and protect the integrity of the Medicare program by extending the life of the Medicare Trust Fund.  “More specifically, health care reform will improve the Medicare program for beneficiaries by slowing the growth of premiums and other out-of-pocket expenses, improving preventive benefits, and closing the gap in prescription drug coverage,” said Ms. Stein.

Moreover, the legislation promotes delivery system reforms to encourage high quality, coordinated health care.  “Most of the Center’s clients have chronic conditions – as do nearly all Medicare beneficiaries.  We know from experience that well coordinated care is critical to our clients’ well-being.  The Center has been advocating about this issue for many years,” said Ms. Stein.

Ms. Stein stated that the Center for Medicare Advocacy strongly supports the goals of comprehensive health reform legislation, which expands coverage to millions of Americans, helps them purchase insurance, and ends discriminatory practices by insurance companies.  “Everyone wins, including Medicare beneficiaries when all Americans have access to quality, affordable health care,” she said.

The Center for Medicare Advocacy urges Congress to pass health reform now. Passing this legislation will strengthen Medicare, bring a similar promise of health coverage to younger people, and increase the economic security of all Americans.

Judith Stein is available for comment and questions.

March 16, 2010 at 2:35 pm Leave a comment

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