There has been an email going around with a line-by-line critique of HR 3200 - the America’s Affordable Health Choices Act. Unfortunately, they are not based in truth, but designed to scare recipients. The email is quite long, so for some of the most egregious distortions of the health insurance reform legislation, please visit the Pulitzer prize-winning fact check site run by The St. Petersburg Times.
Pg 22 of the HC Bill MANDATES the Govt will audit the books of ALL EMPLOYERS that self insure!!
RESPONSES TO LINE-BY-LINE H.R. 3200 ATTACKS
Pg 22 of the HC Bill MANDATES the Govt will audit the books of ALL EMPLOYERS that self insure!!
- Page 22 of H.R. 3200 requests a study, not an audit, of the effects to which rating rules are likely to cause adverse selection in the large group market and employer self insurance market insurance market. This does not require an audit of ALL employers that self insure
- Nothing in the bill infringes upon you and your doctor’s ability to make medical decisions. The National Health Benefits Advisory Council is not a “government committee” but is made up of providers, consumer representatives, employers, labor, health insurance issuers, independent experts and representatives of government agencies. They will make recommendations about minimum standards of care and covered benefits that insurance companies have to offer- ensuring that everyone has a health plan that provides them with adequate coverage.
- This is a misreading of the text. This section limits the amount of out-of-pocket costs you will face to $5,000 for an individual and $10,000 (indexed to CPI) for a family for a basic package of care. This ensures you have access to affordable care and won’t go bankrupt paying for it.
- The Health Choices Commissioner is charged with ensuring insurance plans are meeting regulations and minimum standards as well as administering affordability credits and monitoring the exchange. Nothing in this section or in the larger bill permits the Health Choices Commissioner to choose your benefits for you
- This is blatantly false. This section prohibits insurance companies from discriminating against persons when issuing coverage, and has nothing to do with government subsidized coverage to illegal immigrants. The bill explicitly states that no Federal payments will be used for affordability credits for illegal immigrants. (P. 143, sec. 246).
- This section says nothing about a National ID health card, or accessing your personal financial information. This section promotes administrative simplification- for example being able to look up your insurance coverage and determine how much you will pay and which provider your insurance will accept, at the point of service. This saves money and gives you, the consumer, information about what you will owe at the front end, rather than being denied or getting a surprise bill from your insurance company weeks after your treatment.
- This section encourages the development of standards to encourage electronic payments between providers and insurance companies. Administrative simplification measures like these save billions of dollars. Nothing will give the government access to your bank account.
- This section provides a limited reimbursement for participating employment-based private plans for part of the cost of providing health benefits to retirees (age 55-64) and their families. People who have been forced into early retirement in this age group do not qualify for Medicare and this will help them stay on their employer provided, private insurance plan if their employer wants to participate. Participation is voluntary. This is for all early retirees, and no language targets the provision towards unions or acorn.
- The bill imposes new regulations on private health care plans that will force them to end unethical practices such as rescissions or denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions. The Exchange will improve the quality of coverage and increase the affordability of private insurers in the Exchange.
- Insurance companies in the Exchange will have to offer a basic benefit packages in every service area. This package will include basic care such as hospitalization, physician visits, medical equipment, mental health, preventative care, maternity and well baby care, and drugs – services that anyone would expect a real insurance policy to cover. Private insurers may offer a higher tier of coverage with more benefits that are not mandated by the government if they choose.
- No, this determines the minimum standards insurance companies must offer coverage for- it has nothing to do with rationing. Private plans can offer extra benefits like dental or vision coverage for adults, or other non-covered benefits that are not included in the basic level plan.
- The bill requires plans in the Exchange to offer culturally and linguistic appropriate services. The U.S. is a diverse country culturally and linguistically. Many legal residents and citizens of the U.S. speak other languages, and implying that everyone of a different culture in the U.S. is here illegally is intolerant and incorrect. The bill explicitly states that it will not subsidize coverage for illegal immigrants. (P. 143, sec. 246).
- The Health Choices Commissioner will conduct outreach and enrollment activities to educate Exchange-eligible individuals and businesses about enrollment in the new Exchange, which includes many private plans along with the public option. This includes a toll-free hotline, maintenance of a website, creation of outreach materials, and community locations for enrollment.
- This section has nothing to do with seniors or Medicare. It describes the minimum benefits insurance plans must offer under the Exchange.
PG 102 Lines 12-18 HC Bill - Medicaid Eligible Indiv. will be automat.enrolled in Medicaid. No choice
(this will kill free enterprise and drive many out of business.... less resources yet available for the boomers)
- Current law allows individuals to be auto-enrolled in Medicaid if they show up for health services and are eligible, so this is not a radical change. Only individuals that fall under 133% of the poverty level who have not had health insurance for six months will be auto-enrolled.
- There is no judicial or administrative review for the payment rates set for the public option.
- This
section outlines payment policies for physicians participating in the
public option only. No physician has to take the public option.
- No. You get to choose your health insurance from the choices your employer offers you. If you fail to do so, your employer will auto-enroll you in the lowest premium health plan (for employees) unless or until you opt into a different plan. You could not be auto-enrolled into the public option in the vast majority of cases because the public option is not even available outside the Exchange (only to individuals and small businesses). The bill specifically mandates that employers provide employees with info on how to opt out of the auto-enrollment coverage.
- Employers will only pay a proportion of what they must pay for full-time employees. There is also a tax credit equal to 50% of the amount paid by a small employer for employee health coverage available to help with these costs and other protections to ensure that new requirements don’t cause undue hardship for small businesses.
- All businesses, except some small businesses that are exempted, must contribute to their employees’ health insurance. Most employers that are required to provide coverage under this bill already provide coverage—so little will change for them under this bill. They will continue to offer the coverage that they do today, and will not pay a tax. Some employers may choose to do so through the Exchange, but no employer nor employees will be forced to choose any option. Employers that don’t contribute to employees’ health care will make a contribution to the Exchange, so their employees can access coverage there.
- All businesses, except certain small businesses that are exempted, must contribute to their employees’ health insurance. Small businesses typically pay more for the same insurance that a large employer might offer. Small businesses will benefit from this legislation, because it will help lower their administrative costs and insurance rating, and increase options available to them. The House legislation helps level the playing field between large and small businesses that want to offer health insurance.
- No, they can only collect the tax if you don’t have insurance and can afford to purchase it. Acceptable coverage includes grandfathered individual and employer coverage (ie what you have now providing your insurance company complies with new laws), certain government coverage (e.g., Medicare, Medicaid, certain coverage provided to veterans, military employees, retirees, and their families), and coverage obtained pursuant to the Exchange or an employer offer of coverage.
- Nonresident aliens and illegal aliens are not the same thing. A nonresident alien is a non-citizen in the country legally (for example on a visa) who has not resided in the country long enough to be considered a resident. This provision is consistent with current law governing tax treatment of non resident aliens.
- The
Health Choices Commissioner can receive taxpayer return information
from the Internal Revenue Service in order to assist the Exchange in
determining subsidy eligibility. This is the only allowable use for
this information.
- This is a technical wording to ensure appropriate function of the tax under the tax code.
- Completely wrong. This section adjusts the way the sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula is calculated, helping to prevent massive cuts for physicians. All physicians and AMA are in strong support of this section. Also it is for Medicare, not Medicaid.
- Again, this still is part of the SGR adjustment- which applies to all specialties. Providers and AMA very strong supporters of this.
- This section directs the Secretary to regularly review fee schedule rates for physician services paid for by Medicare. It allows the secretary to incorporate all the work that a doctor does outside of the procedure when evaluating fee schedules: such as time, mental effort and professional judgment, technical skill and physical effort, and stress due to risk, and may include validation of the pre, post, and intra-service components of work. This doesn’t have anything to do with the value of human lives.
(this will kill free enterprise and drive many out of business.... less resources yet available for the boomers)
- This is a complete misreading of what this section is. This section updates the market basket payment for hospital outpatient services. Just because the word productivity is in there doesn’t mean it is mandating productivity of industry – it just holds providers accountable to the same level of productivity as the whole economy, putting them on a level playing field.
- No, this changes the way Medicare pays for power drive wheelchairs (13 month payments vs. one lump sum). It is essentially rent-to-own for power wheelchairs, and is one of the ways that Medicare already pays for wheelchairs.
- This is the opposite of rationing. This section allows Medicare to pay cancer hospitals more if they are incurring higher costs.
- Preventable
readmissions are never desirable. Hospitals are dangerous places, and
the more time spent in one, the greater risk of infection or harm to
the patient. Right now, hospitals are paid for quantity of care, so
the more you are readmitted, the more they get paid. This provision
will help incentivize preventative measures and post-treatment
coordination of care to keep you healthier.
- Preventable readmissions are never desirable. Hospitals are dangerous places, and the more time spent in one, the greater risk of infection or harm to the patient. Right now, hospitals and doctors are paid for quantity of care, so the more you are readmitted, the more they get paid. This will help incentivize preventative measures and post treatment coordination of care to keep you healthier.
- This
prohibits expansion of physician-owned hospitals because they often
drive up costs, duplicate health services, drain resources from
community hospitals, and provide perverse incentives for doctors to
self-refer patients to hospitals they have a stake in to perform
procedures. For example, if a doctor self-refers you for a heart
operation, he makes money on the procedure and the hospital he owns
makes money too.
- Same as above.
- Physician-owned hospitals can apply for an exception to expand- and input of the community they serve is required to determine how valuable the hospital is to the patients they serve. Why does community automatically mean acorn?
- This section creates an incentive system to increase payments to high quality Medicare Advantage plans and plans that demonstrate improvement and better outcomes such as reduced readmissions, and better outcomes of its enrollees. This is about better quality care, not rationed care. A plan that cuts back on care and produces worse outcomes would not receive any extra payment.
- This only says it can disqualify participating plans from Medicare Advantage. This would not result in seniors being forced into the public option. They would remain on Medicare (which is, by the way, a government plan).
- This ensures that chronic condition special needs plans (SNPs) enroll beneficiaries only during their eligibility periods and extends the SNP program through 2012, and extends certain fully integrated dual eligible SNPs through 2015.
- Telehealth is a critical service for rural populations and the disabled who may have difficulty traveling to health centers and hospitals. A committee at HHS does not constitute a new agency. This section expands Medicare’s telehealth benefit to beneficiaries who are receiving care at freestanding dialysis centers (ie very sick patients who have difficulty traveling). It Also establishes a Telehealth Advisory Committee to provide HHS with additional expertise on the telehealth program.
- There is no mandate for this sort of counseling. The only mandate is that Medicare must pay for the consultation between patients and practitioners to discuss plans for end-of-life care. These are important individual decisions that take time and consideration, and AARP supports inclusion of this planning provision.
- Not mandatory! These are consultations between you and your provider, not the government.
- CMS will provide planning resources to discuss with your doctor about how you would like to be treated in your final days.
- You decide how your life ends- that is the whole point of an advance directive.
- Those lines don’t say that.
- No, an order from you for your doctor
- The bill specifies which categories of licensed health care professionals can write them but not which specific doctor – you can still choose your doctor.
- No, you decide with your doctor
- This section is the Medical home pilot program. This in no way refers to ACORN.
- The community based medical home, is targeted at a broader population of Medicare beneficiaries with chronic diseases and allows for State-based or non-profit entities to provide care-management supervised by a beneficiary designated primary care provider. A provision inclusive of all non-profit entities in no way targets ACORN
- Medicare will now cover state licensed marriage and family therapists. You are not forced to receive these services.
- Medicare will now cover mental health counselors. It will not ration these services.