CALIFORNIA’S ACA RATES TO RISE 8.7% NEXT YEAR

https://www.healthleadersmedia.com/finance/californias-aca-rates-rise-87-next-year

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About 10% of individual policyholders in and outside the exchange are expected to drop their coverage next year because the ACA fines were eliminated.

Premiums in California’s health insurance exchange will rise by an average of 8.7 percent next year, marking a return to more modest increases despite ongoing threats to the Affordable Care Act.

The state marketplace, Covered California, said the rate increase for 2019 would have been closer to 5 percent if the federal penalty for going without health coverage had not been repealed in last year’s Republican tax bill.

The average increase in California is smaller than the double-digit hikes expected around the nation, due largely to a healthier mix of enrollees and more competition in its marketplace. Still, health insurance prices keep growing faster than wages and general inflation as a result of rising medical costs overall, squeezing many middle-class families who are struggling to pay their household bills.

The 8.7 percent increase in California ends two consecutive years of double-digit rate increases for the state marketplace.

“It’s not great that health care costs are still increasing that much, but the individual market is not sticking out like a sore thumb like it has in other years,” said Kathy Hempstead, senior adviser at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. “It’s falling back to earth.”

The future may be less bright. An estimated 262,000 Californians, or about 10 percent of individual policyholders in and outside the exchange, are expected to drop their coverage next year because the ACA fines were eliminated, according to the state. Peter Lee, executive director of Covered California, warned that the exodus of healthier consumers will drive up insurance costs beyond 2019 — not just for individual policyholders but for California employers and their workers.

“We are paying, in essence, a surcharge for federal policies that are making coverage more expensive than it should be,” Lee said in an interview. “There will be more of the uninsured and more uncompensated costs passed along to all of us.”

Critics of the Affordable Care Act say it has failed to contain medical costs and left consumers and taxpayers with heavy tabs . Nearly 90 percent of Covered California’s 1.4 million enrollees qualify for federal subsidies to help them afford coverage.

Foiled in its attempt to repeal Obamacare outright, the Trump administration has taken to rolling back key parts of the law and has slashed federal marketing dollars intended to boost enrollment. Instead, the administration backs cheaper alternatives, such as short-term coverage or association health plans, which don’t comply fully with ACA rules and tend to offer skimpier benefits with fewer consumer protections.

Taken together, those moves are likely to draw healthier, less expensive customers out of the ACA exchanges and leave sicker ones behind.

Nationally, 2019 premiums for silver plans — the second-cheapest and most popular plans offered — are expected to jump by 15 percent, on average, according to an analysis of 10 states and the District of Columbia by the Avalere consulting firm. Prices vary widely across the country, however. Decreases are expected in Minnesota while insurers in Maryland are seeking 30 percentincreases.

In California, exchange officials emphasized, consumers who shop around could pay the same rate as this year, or even a little less.

Christy McConville of Arcadia already spends about $1,800 a month on a Blue Shield plan for her family of four, opting for “platinum” coverage, the most expensive type. Her family doesn’t qualify for federal subsidies in Covered California.

She’s worried about further increases and doesn’t want to switch plans and risk losing access to the doctors she trusts. “We’re getting right up to the limit,” McConville said.

Amanda Malachesky, a nutrition coach in the Northern California town of Petrolia, said the elimination of the penalty for being uninsured makes dropping coverage more palatable. Her family of four pays almost $400 a month for a highly subsidized Anthem Blue Cross plan that has a $5,000 deductible.

“I’ve wanted to opt out of the insurance model forever just because they provide so little value for the exorbitant amount of money that we pay,” said Malachesky, who recently paid several hundred dollars out-of-pocket for a mammogram. “I’m probably going to disenroll … and not give any more money to these big bad insurance companies.”

Covered California is aiming to stem any enrollment losses by spending more than $100 million on advertising and outreach in the coming year. In contrast, the Trump administration spent only $10 million last year for advertising the federal exchange across the 34 states that use it.

Also, California lawmakers are looking at ways to fortify the state exchange. State legislators are considering bills that would limit the sale of short-term insurance and prevent people from joining association health plans that don’t have robust consumer protections.

However, California hasn’t pursued an insurance mandate and penalty at the state level, which both health plans and consumer advocates support. New Jersey and Vermont have enacted such measures.

Lee said it’s up to lawmakers to decide whether a state mandate makes sense.

David Panush, a Sacramento health care consultant and a former Covered California official, said some lawmakers may be reluctant to push the idea, even in deep-blue California.

“The individual mandate has always been the least popular piece of the Affordable Care Act,” he said.

Despite the constant uncertainty surrounding the health law, many insurers nationally are posting profits from their ACA business and some plans are looking to expand further on the exchanges.

In California, the same 11 insurers are returning, led by Kaiser Permanente and Blue Shield of California. Together, those two insurers control two-thirds of exchange enrollment. (Kaiser Health News, which publishes California Healthline, is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.)

The Covered California rate increases are fairly uniform across the state. Premiums are climbing 9 percent across most of Southern California as well as in San Francisco. Monterey, San Benito and Santa Cruz counties faced the highest increase at 16 percent, on average.

The rates are subject to state regulatory review but are unlikely to change significantly. Open enrollment on the exchange starts Oct. 15.

The ACA’s expansion of coverage has dramatically cut the number of uninsured Californians. The proportion of Californians lacking health insurance fell to 6.8 percent at the end of last year, down from 17 percent in 2013, federal data show.

 

4 Regulations That Would Terrify U.S. Drug Companies Ahead Of The 2018 Midterms

https://www.forbes.com/sites/robertpearl/2018/07/16/drug-companies/#72ce13501e41

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If you’re a powerful American drug company, then you’ve had a strange couple of months. In that time, you’ve experienced a rainbow of emotions: fear, relief and, now, confusion and anxiety.

The roller-coaster ride, as you recall, began in mid-May when President Trump stood alongside HHS Secretary Alex M. Azar, in the Rose Garden of the White House, in front of a sign reading “Lower Drug Prices for Americans.”

As the president approached the mic, you watched with bated breath, remembering Trump’s campaign promise to drive down prescription drug prices to below a penny on the dollar. You always knew that’d be impossible but, then again, you thought, is anything really impossible?

Things started off poorly that morning. Almost immediately, Trump began denouncing the actions of drug manufacturers who, he said, were contributing to a “broken system.” He then urged all U.S. pharma companies to drop their prices, before deriding pharmacy benefits managers (PBMs) as “middlemen” who are getting “very, very rich” off the same broken system as you.

But when his speech ended, relief washed over you. After all, President Trump made no mention of his previous promise to negotiate lower drug prices for seniors enrolled in Medicare. He didn’t revive his vow to allow the importation of prescription medications, either. He didn’t discuss the popular notion of shortening pharmaceutical patents, nor that idea about requiring drug-companies to justify the price of new medications.

Granted, all these promises would be incredibly difficult to legislate. And, like most drug companies, you know that most of these ideas wouldn’t severely damage your bottom line anyway. But had the president committed to even one of them in his Rose Garden speech, he would have sent a clear message that this is not business as usual.

Instead, you and your colleagues took solace in his words. By late afternoon, the nation’s pharmaceutical, biotech and PBM stocks were up, not down. In the following weeks, drug companies interpreted Trump’s comments the same way drag-racers look at a stop signs—as more of a request than a rule.

Now, in fairness, President Trump and Secretary Azar had no intention of revealing a final, comprehensive set of proposals, rules or regulations on May 11. They set their sights on Tuesday, July 16—the official deadline for interested parties to comment on Secretary Azar’s blueprint Q&A. That’s when the real policy-making is set to begin. And, until early this month, most of the drug industry had been bracing for incremental, not radical, change.

But on July 1, Pfizer learned that it’s not safe to wake a sleeping bear. Thinking they had a clear runway, Pfizer’s corporate executives went ahead and raised list prices on more than 100 prescription drugs.

He followed that Tweet with a phone call and, within 24 hours, Pfizer had rolled back its price increases. Just like that, Trump had the drug industry’s full attention.

It stands as a public relations win for Trump in the lead up to the 2018 midterm elections. With recent polls indicating that 22% to 30% of Americans say healthcare is their top voting issue, Trump and the Republican party are wise to appear tough on rising drug prices (even if Pfizer is merely deferring its price hikes until later in the year).

Uncertainty and confusion, once again, permeate the drug industry. If the polls are even remotely accurate at predicting voter behavior this November, Trump and his cabinet will have good reason to take action.

I personally hope they have the courage to do so.

Unfortunately, the ideas Trump and Azar presented in the Rose Garden won’t be enough. They aren’t going to flatten the rapid rate of drug-price inflation or dramatically impact future price escalation.

So, alongside the administration’s proposed ideas, I offer four alternative policies that could make a real difference:

Leading idea No. 1: Take out the “middlemen”

In his May 11 address, the president went after PBMs, those insurance-company intermediaries between drug manufacturers and patients. At present, consumers know nothing about the prices these intermediaries negotiate or the size of the rebates/kickbacks they keep for themselves. Revenue for PBMs is determined as a percentage of all Rx drugs sold, which means there’s virtually no incentive to drive prices lower or replace the high-margin, brand-name drugs on PBM formularies with new, lower-cost alternatives. Federal legislation could require PBMs to operate transparently and work to lower out-of-pocket costs and drug prices for patients. However, there are way too many “ifs” with this approach to expect major change on the horizon.

A more frightening proposition for drug makers: Imagine if the U.S. government negotiated drug prices for all 55.5 million Medicare patients and made those costs publicly available so that everyone knew what price was fair and reasonable. Nearly all other nations do this. Why not the United States? Besides, Medicare already establishes prices for participating hospitals and doctors. Why not do the same for drug prices?

Leading idea No. 2: Make other nations pay more

Whether it’s NATO spending or wall-building, President Trump expects other nations to pony up for American interests. Most nations have made a habit of saying no. Now, rather than negotiating on behalf of Medicare for lower-cost medications (particularly Part B), the president has encouraged citizens of other countries to pay more for their prescriptions and, thereby, contribute an increased share of funding to drug-company R&D. Health ministers in other nations haven’t made this high priority for their 2019 healthcare agendas. They likely won’t. Even if drug prices were to rise in other countries, would drug manufacturers pass that added revenue on to American patients? Or to their shareholders? History suggests it’s the latter.

A more frightening proposition for drug makers: Require drug companies to document all the R&D dollars they spend in bringing a product to market. Further, force them to quantify and compare their drug’s efficacy to other drugs on the market. If pharmaceutical companies want generous patent protections (for products that often determine whether a patient lives or dies), their pricing can’t be capricious or simply what the market will bear. Prices should relate either to: (a) the cost of the drug’s R&D or (b) the superior clinical effectiveness of the medication.

Leading idea No. 3: Put prices in Rx ads

This is one of the most interesting concepts to come out of Trump and Azar’s blueprint. That’s because such a policy would, at least in theory, make it impossible for drug makers to hide their prices. USDA regulations already require companies to disclose possible side-effects in ads. Imagine if the administration also stipulated that pharmaceutical manufacturers must disclose their prices in ad copy, as well. For now, it’s unclear which costs the drug makers would need to disclose, given that patients and purchasers pay very different amounts for the same medications. Already, drug companies are using coupons and rebates, what critics deem to be clever schemes, to lower the advertised price for patients while simultaneously raising what they charge insurers—who ultimately pass those costs back to purchasers and patients through higher premiums.

A more frightening proposition for drug makers: Limit what U.S. pharmaceutical companies can charge. Period. American drug makers should be required to pay a penalty if they charge Americans more than 120% for the same medication as the 10 wealthiest nations pay on average. It’d be the same thing that happens when baseball teams exceed the salary cap. And when comparable medications exist at lower prices, TV ads would need to disclose that fact to viewers, as well.

Leading idea No. 4: Speed up generic medication approvals

This idea is a step in the right direction. Unfortunately, the president didn’t explain why generics currently undergo such lengthy delays for approval. The biggest hurdle is not government regulations, but drug company tactics. For most patented prescriptions, the generic versions have exactly the same chemical structure, and therefore, the same efficacy. As such, once a generic exists, there’s little or no reason to purchase the more expensive product. Knowing this, makers of the brand-name version use legal maneuvers to extend their patent protections before driving generic competitors out of business with their pricing and marketing leverage.

A more frightening proposition for drug makers: The government needs to change patent laws to protect patients first. Medications fall into two classifications. There are the small-molecule ones that often are available over-the-counter. With these, the generic version’s chemical structure is identical to that of the brand-name version. There also are the biologicals, so named because they are produced by living cells and organisms. Insulin is one example. Increasingly, this latter class of drugs has the highest price. These chemicals are too complex to be copied exactly, which is why the generic equivalents are labeled “biosimilars.” The solution here is to focus on the most expensive, large-molecule biologics first. In so doing, the government should force manufacturers to hand over drug samples to biosimilar companies 18 months before their patents end. This will speed up the development of biosimilars and fast-track the approval of lower-cost (but equally efficacious) medications. For patients with diabetes, this could lower the cost of life-saving insulin by 50% or more. Recent research from Yale shows up to 1 in 4 people with diabetes are injecting less insulin than they should simply because of the cost.

A Realistic Glimpse Into The Future Of Drug Pricing

Today, the pharmaceutical industry enjoys powerful patent protections and, thereby, monopolistic control over pricing. The consequence is that Americans are paying exorbitant prices for patented medications. The simplest solution is to strike a legislative balance that allows (a) drug companies to invent (and invest in) the next generation of breakthrough medication while (b) allowing the American people to afford the medications they need to stay healthy.

For most of the 20th century, the pharmaceutical world stayed within those guardrails. But over the past decade, profits have been way out of line with R&D and investment. The time has come to restore balance and reasonableness, regardless of what the national drug lobby wants.

Later this week, Secretary Azar will receive feedback on the administration’s blueprint and will begin drafting potential cost-cutting regulations. I encourage him and President Trump to use their authority to make drugs more affordable.

I suspect the pharmaceutical industry believes it will be business as usual, despite the campaign rhetoric and another Rose Garden event this coming fall. I hope the Secretary and the president have the courage to prove them wrong. The health of the American people depends on it.

 

 

Anthem Sued by Doctors in Dispute Over Emergency-Room Coverage

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-07-17/anthem-sued-by-doctors-in-dispute-over-emergency-room-coverage

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The health insurer Anthem Inc. was sued by doctors in Georgia for declining to pay for some emergency-room care, escalating a long-running battle over how far insurance plans can go to push patients to seek lower-cost treatment.

The American College of Emergency Physicians and the Medical Association of Georgia filed suit on Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Atlanta against Anthem’s Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Georgia unit over the denied payments. The doctors asked the court to require Anthem to halt its policy and cover the claims.

“Providers and patients alike are operating in fear of denial of payment by defendants when patients seek emergency department care,” the groups said in the filing.

It’s the latest legal challenge over a change in policy that Anthem says was designed to cut down on patients going to an emergency room in situations that don’t require it. Emergency-room care usually costs significantly more than treatment at a doctor’s office or an urgent-care clinic. Georgia’s Piedmont Hospital and five related facilities also have sued Anthem over the policy, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported in February.

Before putting the policy in place, Anthem sent letters to customers explaining the policy and urging them to use other sites for care. The insurer also held meetings with physicians, according to the suit.

Anthem didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on the suit.

Medical Records

Anthem’s strategy went beyond what’s legally allowed, the doctors say in their lawsuit. The insurer reviewed the cases of patients who went to an emergency room, and decided whether to pay for their care based on billing information or medical records related to the incident. The suit says Anthem violated legal requirements that insurers cover care in a situation where a “prudent layperson” would believe he or she was experiencing an emergency.

According to the suit, Anthem began reviewing emergency-room visits in Georgia, Kentucky and Missouri, and has also brought the policy to Ohio, New Hampshire and Indiana. Based in Indianapolis, Anthem operates under the Blue Cross and Blue Shield brand in 14 states. The company has almost 40 million health-insurance members.

Lawmakers including U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill of Missouri have criticized Anthem’s policy. McCaskill and a fellow Democrat, Senator Ben Cardin of Maryland, sent a letter in March to the Health and Human Services Department and Labor Department, asking them to investigate the payment denials.

“By denying patient claims based on the patient’s final diagnosis and ignoring the patient’s symptoms present at the time of the emergency, we believe that Anthem likely violated federal law,” the senators wrote.

 

 

 

UNITEDHEALTH SEES EARNINGS INCREASE 13% IN Q2

https://www.healthleadersmedia.com/finance/unitedhealth-sees-earnings-increase-13-q2?utm_source=silverpop&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20180718_HLM_HP_resend%20(1)&spMailingID=13896483&spUserID=MTY3ODg4NTg1MzQ4S0&spJobID=1441533371&spReportId=MTQ0MTUzMzM3MQS2

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The insurer saw solid year-over-year growth in a variety of aspects, leading the company to raise its outlook for net earnings to end the year.

UnitedHealth Group posted $4.2 billion earnings from operations, an increase of 13% year-over-year, according to its second-quarter earnings report released Tuesday.

The results marked another strong quarter for the insurer, which saw its earnings from operations grow from $3.7 billion during Q2 2017, and even increase from $4.1 billion in Q1 2018. Compared to this time last year, UnitedHealth increased its overall revenues by $6 billion, improving its net margin to 5.2%.

“Today, UnitedHealth Group delivers increasing value to more people, driven by strong execution, consistently high quality, deep relationships and our distinctive combination of clinical, technology and information capabilities. As we look ahead, we will drive our growth on the strength of practical innovations that anticipate and respond to increasing consumer expectations and clear social needs,” UnitedHealth Group CEO David Wichmann said in a statement.

UnitedHealth’s consistent, improved performance comes as insurers brace for the widespread introduction of association health plans and short-term health plans. The health plan juggernaut is so enthused by its first-half financial performance that it raised its outlook for end-of-year adjusted earnings to $12.50 to $12.75 per share. After Q1, UnitedHealth projected a range of adjusted net earnings per share from $12.40 to $12.65. Meanwhile, GAAP diluted earnings ranged between $11.80 to $12.05 per share.

Moody’s Vice President Dean Unger said in a statement Tuesday that UnitedHealth’s leverage remains high and will increase slightly after the company finalizes its acquisition of DaVita Medical Group.

“But the pharmacy benefits manager and analytics business were also solid,” Unger said. “UnitedHealth’s scale, diversity and consistent and disciplined growth continue to support our A3 long-term issuer rating.”

Below are some additional highlights from UnitedHealth’s Q2 earnings report:

  • UnitedHealth posted cash flows from operations totalling $4 billion.

  • The insurer’s adjusted net earnings per share also grew 27.6%.

  • UnitedHealthcare added 2.2 million more consumers year-over-year.

  • Optum’s earnings from operations grew by 21.5% year-over-year to $1.8 billion.

Additional information is available in UnitedHealth’s filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

 

 

HOSPITALS VOW TO REFILE AFTER 340B SUIT REJECTED ON APPEAL

https://www.healthleadersmedia.com/finance/hospitals-vow-refile-after-340b-suit-rejected-appeal?utm_source=silverpop&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20180718_HLM_HP_resend%20(1)&spMailingID=13896483&spUserID=MTY3ODg4NTg1MzQ4S0&spJobID=1441533371&spReportId=MTQ0MTUzMzM3MQS2

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An appellate court decision dealt a major setback to hospitals unhappy with planned cuts to the Medicare drug reimbursement program.


KEY TAKEAWAYS

The appellate judges affirmed the district court’s dismissal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.

The AHA failed to fulfill the legal prerequisites to judicial review, according to the ruling.

The plaintiff has seven days to file a petition for the appellate court to rehear the matter en banc.

The American Hospital Association’s attempt to block $1.6 billion in cuts to the 340 Drug Pricing Program suffered a major setback Tuesday, when the D.C. Circuit Court sided with Health and Human Services.

The three-judge panel ruled that the lower court had properly dismissed AHA’s case because the association failed to fulfill the legal prerequisites to judicial review.

More specifically, AHA failed to adequately present the matter to HHS Secretary Alex Azar. This “presentment” threshold is the obstacle that tripped up the AHA challenge at the district court level, a decision Tuesday’s appellate ruling affirmed.

“When the plaintiffs filed this lawsuit, neither the hospital plaintiffs, nor any members of the hospital-association plaintiffs, had challenged the new reimbursement regulation in the context of a specific administrative claim for payment. Nor could they have done so, for the new regulation had not yet even become effective,” the appellate judges wrote. “Therefore, they had neither presented their claim nor obtained any administrative decision at all, much less the ‘final decision’ required under [the relevant law].”

The AHA, along with fellow plaintiffs the Association of American Medical Colleges and America’s Essential Hospitals, had argued that it met the presentment requirement by opposing the policy in writing during the rulemaking process.

Because the decision was based on a lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, it did not address the merits of AHA’s claims.

“We are deeply disappointed that the courts have once again failed to rule on the merits of our case,” the hospital groups said Tuesday in a statement.

The groups emphasized that the decision does not address whether they can obtain judicial review. It simply addresses when and how that review can be obtained.

“We will continue our fight to reverse these unwarranted cuts and protect access for patients, and we expect to refile promptly in district court,” the groups added.