Trump’s Debate Claim On Health Care Costs: It Depends What You Mean By ‘Cost’

http://khn.org/news/trumps-debate-claim-on-health-care-costs-it-depends-what-you-mean-by-cost/

ST LOUIS, MO - OCTOBER 09:  Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump (L) speaks as Democratic presidential nominee former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton listens during the town hall debate at Washington University on October 9, 2016 in St Louis, Missouri. This is the second of three presidential debates scheduled prior to the November 8th election.  (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Health care finally came up as an issue in the second presidential debate in St. Louis Sunday night. But the discussion may have confused more than clarified the issue for many voters.

During the brief exchange about the potential fate of the Affordable Care Act, Republican Donald Trump said this: “Obamacare is a disaster. You know it. We all know it. It’s going up at numbers that nobody’s ever seen worldwide. Nobody’s ever seen numbers like this for health care.”

Let’s parse that discussion of costs piece by piece. Because when it comes to health care, there are many different types of costs: those for governments, employers and individuals. And those costs don’t always go up and down at the same time.

First, the federal government’s spending on the Affordable Care Act’s insurance is coming in under budget projections. According to the official scorekeeper, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), in March, the net cost of the insurance coverage provisions of the law — including tax credits to subsidize some lower-income customers’ premiums and costs for adding people to Medicaid — “is lower by $157 billion, or 25 percent” than the estimate when the law was enacted in 2010.

Much of that is because CBO originally estimated that large numbers of employers would stop providing insurance to workers and send them to the law’s online marketplaces, where many of them would get federal subsidies. That didn’t happen. Medicaid spending increased more than CBO projected, but that was more than offset by the lower spending on tax credits.

Hennepin Health: A Care Delivery Paradigm for New Medicaid Beneficiaries

http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/case-studies/2016/oct/hennepin-health

On Lok Header

This case study is one in an ongoing series examining programs that aim to improve outcomes and reduce costs of care for patients with complex needs, who account for a large share of U.S. health care spending.

What Would A Public Insurance Option Look Like In California?

What Would A Public Insurance Option Look Like In California?

Image result for Health Insurance California Public OptionImage result for Health Insurance California Public Option

The “public option,” which stoked fierce debate in the run-up to the Affordable Care Act, is making a comeback — at least among Democratic politicians.

The proposal to create a government-funded health plan, one that might look like Medicare or Medicaid but would be open to everyone, is being reconsidered at both the federal and state levels.

Amid news that two major insurers were pulling out of Affordable Care Act exchanges, 33 U.S. Senators recently renewed the call for a public option. The idea was first floated, then rejected, during the drafting of the federal health reform law, which took effect in 2010.

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton includes a public option in her campaign platform, and President Barack Obama urged Congress to revisit the idea in a JAMA article published in August.

Dave Jones, the elected regulator of California’s private insurance industry, endorsed the idea of a state-specific public option in an interview last month with California Healthline, though he did not specify how it might work.
“It would look just like an insurance plan,” except that the state would pay for medical care, potentially set up the network of doctors and hospitals, and make rules about paying providers, Kominski said. Private industry could be involved in these or other aspects of running the health plan, much as they do in Medicare Advantage and managed care Medi-Cal.California may be uniquely poised for a public plan — but the state may not need one, according to Gerald Kominski, Director of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

Creating a public option in California may not be necessary at present, since the state currently has sufficient competition in the private insurance market, Kominski said. But he said policymakers could choose to implement a public option now as a backstop against a potential future scenario in which private insurers scaled back their California plan offerings.

IRS taking harder look at non-profit hospitals

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/finance/irs-taking-harder-look-at-non-profit-hospitals?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mrkid=959610&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTWpobE5XSmlZemMyWkRjMCIsInQiOiJpQXhSN0R1K3dBWmdacXFyRjlRTXM0RlptYlJFeFo3WitQNUg4U0lOaHUrWmJMWFdnVHZiRkxndDRnVUhXUWtDc1BXQTJ3dWREUGhrYVRkd3VHTjRJYmNlMndwYkllakN3U1FmS25icFllVT0ifQ%3D%3D

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The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is ratcheting up surveillance of non-profit hospitals regarding their levels of community benefits and patient financial assistance.

The IRS reviewed 692 hospitals in fiscal 2016, which ended late last month, Bloomberg BNA has reported. Of those, 166 were referred for a closer “field examination.” The increased scrutiny is specific to 501(r) requirements under the Affordable Care Act, which mandate that hospitals formulate clear written financial assistance policies for patients and make reasonable efforts to determine if patients are eligible for assistance prior to taking any collection actions. The IRS is supposed to review each hospital every three years.

The U.S. Treasury Department issued regulations as to how the rules are to be enforced in 2014. Penalties for non-compliance include being subject to an excise tax or even losing a tax exemption entirely.

“We’ve entered into the enforcement phase now,” Donald B. Stuart, a partner with the law firm Waller Lansden Dortch & Davis LLP told Bloomberg BNA. “We’ve just moved into this new phase and new stage of 501(r), which is going to be a little bit of a wake-up call for a lot of people.”

The hospital sector has pushed back on enforcement, saying that some of the requirements were too burdensome.

Red flags included a hospital’s lack of a community health needs assessment or financial assistance guidelines. Hospitals that are out of compliance risk being audited, which can lead to other issues, such as scrutiny of unrelated business income.

The case of the disappearing hospital beds

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/the-case-of-the-disappearing-hospital-beds/427211/

Click to access 2016chartbook.pdf

Healthcare is leaving the traditional four walls of hospitals. As patients, payers, and providers seek to reduce costs and improve quality, they are relying less on inpatient stays and more on outpatient services. A growing reliance on outpatient services could drive healthcare costs down as costly inpatient services are increasingly reserved for patients who truly need them.

U.S. Uninsured Rate at New Low of 10.9% in Third Quarter

http://www.gallup.com/poll/196193/uninsured-rate-new-low-third-quarter.aspx

Uninsured by Quarter Q3 2016

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Uninsured rate reaches nine-year low
  • Rate down 6.2 points since individual mandate took effect
  • Uninsured rate has dropped most among low-income households, Hispanics

In the third quarter of 2016, 10.9% of U.S. adults were without health insurance, representing a new low in Gallup’s and Healthways’ nearly nine years of trending the rate of uninsured. This is down from 11.9% in the fourth quarter of 2015, before the 2016 open enrollment period that allowed U.S. adults to obtain insurance through the government health insurance exchanges.

The uninsured rate has declined 6.2 percentage points from 17.1% in the fourth quarter of 2013, right before the Affordable Care Act’s requirement that Americans carry health insurance took effect in early 2014.

Results for the third quarter are based on approximately 44,000 interviews with U.S. adults aged 18 and older from July 1- Sept. 30, 2016, conducted as part of the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index. Gallup asks 500 U.S. adults each day whether they have health insurance, which, on an aggregated basis, allows for precise and ongoing measurement of the percentage of Americans with and without health insurance.

 

Transgender man’s suit is latest clash over hospital chain’s Catholic ethics

http://www.scpr.org/news/2016/10/07/65331/transgender-man-s-suit-is-latest-clash-over-cathol/

Image result for ethical and religious directives for catholic health care services

Josef Robinson was born a woman; he started the process of becoming a man about two and a half years ago. He began hormone therapy and planned to undergo a bilateral mastectomy as well.

But Robinson, a registered nurse at a Dignity Health facility in Arizona, got some surprising news: His San Francisco-based employer, which describes itself as being “rooted in the Catholic tradition,” refused to cover any of his transition-related care under its employee health insurance plan. His policy excludes all coverage related to sex transformation surgery.

That “was totally shocking to me,” said Robinson. “I never would have thought in a million years that that would happen.”

Robinson sued Dignity, alleging that its refusal to cover transition-related care qualifies as sex discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Affordable Care Act.

Title VII forbids discrimination on the basis of sex. The Affordable Care Act prohibits discrimination based on sex in health insurance and health care. Section 1557 of the law, which the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services finalized in May, says categorical exclusions related to gender transitions are discriminatory.

“I work for a hospital who treats all kinds of people – doesn’t matter race, religion, whatever – yet they have an insurance policy that has an exclusion for transgender individuals,” Robinson said. “It just doesn’t add up for me.”

Everything You Wanted To Know About Your Health Plan (But Were Afraid To Ask)

Everything You Wanted To Know About Your Health Plan (But Were Afraid To Ask)

EL SEGUNDO,  CA - OCTOBER 14, 2014:  Pro Proposition 45 supporters delivered a wheelbarrow full of steer manure to the Blue Shield office on Sepulveda in El Segundo to protest ads against the proposition on OCTOBER 14, 2014.  (Photo by Bob Chamberlin/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

It can be well worth the effort to go up against your health plan if it denies you treatment you think you need.

That’s just one of the many lessons consumers can glean by using a new online tool unveiled today by the Department of Managed Health Care.

It shows that last year, nearly two-thirds of Anthem Blue Cross enrollees who filed an appeal with the department to challenge a denial of-care ended up getting the medical services they requested. The same was true in well over half of the appeals filed by people with Blue Shield of California coverage and 45 percent of cases involving members of Kaiser Permanente, the state’s largest insurer. In some of those cases, the insurer itself decided to reverse its decision.

The department’s “health plan dashboard,” which can be found on its website, contains information pertaining only to the plans it regulates. But those plans cover 25 million Californians — nearly three-quarters of the state’s insured population.

There are many other sources consumers can use to educate themselves about insurance plans, but the Department of Managed Health Care has a wealth of data that probably exceeds any other organization’s, said Betsy Imholz, director of special projects at Consumers Union, an advocacy group.

Imholz noted that many consumers are unaware of all the information available, and it is often difficult to understand. Reporting on quality and other aspects of health care is still in a developmental stage, she said. “But our hope is that data will become better and more accessible. “This [dashboard] is a good step.”

Bundled payments: What healthcare leaders need to know

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/healthcare/keckley-what-healthcare-leaders-must-know-bundled-payments

How Health Care Battles of the Past Shape the Candidates’ Positions Today

http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/in-brief/2016/oct/past-as-prologue-presidential-politics-health-policy?omnicid=EALERT1108988&mid=henrykotula@yahoo.com

Despite the singular nature of this year’s presidential campaign, there is plenty of continuity with past elections when it comes to health care, argue David Blumenthal, M.D., and James A. Morone in their New England Journal of Medicine “Perspective.”

In “Past as Prologue—Presidential Politics and Health Policy,” Blumenthal, The Commonwealth Fund’s president, and Morone, director of Brown University’s Taubman Center for American Politics and Policy, discuss the “deep underlying political forces and historical experiences with health care politics and policy” that are reflected in the platforms of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.

The authors previously collaborated on the book The Heart of Power: Health and Politics in the Oval Office (University of California Press, 2009).