Monday, July 7, 2008

S 2785 Bill Federal


S. 2785, The Save Medicare Act of 2008, has been introduced in the Senate. This bill would stop the Medicare physician payment cuts for 18 months, long enough to begin working on a long-term solution to the broken payment system. In addition, the bill will not increase the cost of permanently fixing the fatally flawed Medicare physician payment system. Urge your U.S. senators to co-sponsor this legislation and tell all your representatives in Congress to stop doctor payment cuts.
Posted by marine41 at 12:49 PM 0 comments Links to this post
Annual Medicare Part D enrollment


Annual enrollment for Medicare's medical and prescription drug plans—and officials are scrambling to stop deceptive and fraudulent tactics some salespeople have used to sell beneficiaries Medicare Advantage (MA) plans they don’t want or understand.
1. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the federal agency that oversees the private insurers offering the plans, has issued new rules aimed at ensuring that salespeople give honest, accurate information so enrollees know what they're signing up for.
Many consumer advocates say, however, that while the rules will help reduce marketing abuse, they don't address underlying issues in the 2003 Medicare legislation that gave rise to it in the first place. An AARP Bulletin investigation, based on complaints from readers, bears out that conclusion. It also shows that many beneficiaries are baffled about the differences between the kinds of Medicare insurance and need a better grasp of how private Medicare Advantage plans work and how to avoid a hard sell. [see "How Do Medicare Plans Differ?"] and how to avoid a hard sell [see "Don't Get Tricked or Pressured"]
The scale of abuse came to light earlier this year when the insurance commissioners of 37 states reported that thousands of beneficiaries had fallen victim to illegal or unethical hard-sell tactics used to sign them up for Medicare Advantage plans, which cover everything the original Medicare plan covers and often cost less but have more restrictions on access to doctors and hospitals.
"In the most troubling of these cases, unscrupulous agents have enrolled beneficiaries with dementia into an inappropriate plan," Wisconsin insurance commissioner Sean Dilweg told Congress in May.
Some people said insurance agents told them original Medicare was "closing down," so they should join an MA plan to keep coverage. Others thought they were buying medigap supplementary insurance or a drug plan but found later they'd been enrolled in an MA plan covering all their medical care. That meant they were automatically moved out of original Medicare and, in some cases, lost their retiree health benefits.
About 7 million of Medicare's 43 million beneficiaries are in MA plans. Dilweg and other experts emphasize that most people are not tricked into buying such plans, and that enrollees pleased with their care need not be alarmed. But when abuse does occur, the consequences can be devastating.
Bobby Box, 76, a retired construction worker in Chickasha, Okla., was content with coverage from original Medicare and his veterans benefits. But last December a saleswoman sold him a plan for a Medicare HMO that he didn't want. "She said it was a supplementary insurance that paid what Medicare didn't," he says. "She lied to me."
Soon afterward, Box was rushed to the hospital in a coma, running up a $45,000 bill during a 10-day stay. Only when the plan refused to pay did Box realize he was in an HMO, which limits treatment to doctors and hospitals in its network. In fact, all MA plans are obliged to cover emergency care, and Box's plan eventually did so—but only after his state insurance office intervened.
In addition, while still believing he was in original Medicare and able to use any hospital, Box had begun radiation treatment for prostate cancer at a facility outside the HMO's network. "Now I'm still stuck with a $16,000 bill," he said in August, four months after disenrolling from the HMO.
Evan Edwards, of Ruby, Mich., has been dunned by a debt collection agency for over $800 in bills run up after being enrolled in an HMO by a saleswoman who told him it was a special MA plan for veterans that would cost him nothing. No such plan exists. The actual plan she enrolled him into had all the usual HMO charges.
CMS officials say that Box, Edwards and others who incur expenses after enrolling in an MA plan under false pretenses or because of confusion over its terms won't have to pay those bills. "They need to contact us and ask for a retroactive reenrollment into original Medicare," says Abby Block, director of CMS's Center for Beneficiary Choices. "Their bills will be paid by Medicare."
In July, in response to the crescendo of complaints, CMS also decreed that beneficiaries who believe they've been misled into joining an MA plan have the right to apply for a special enrollment period in which they can return to original Medicare (and their supplementary medigap policy if they had one) or switch to another MA plan.
Beneficiaries who are aware of this new policy could be saved from the hassles others have had in trying to disengage from an offending plan. Elinor Hogan, a retired nurse in Sarasota, Fla., knew she didn't want the HMO plan that the "pushy" saleswoman was trying to sell her. "But I was recently widowed, grieving and stressed in the aftermath of caring for my husband, who died of cancer," she says. "I signed just to get her out of the house."
A few days later, after finding that none of her doctors or the local hospital accepted the plan, Hogan withdrew her enrollment, as the agent told her she could, thinking that was the end of it. It wasn't. It took six months of phone calls to finally disenroll and get back onto original Medicare.
"I should never have had to go through this nightmare," Hogan says, "all because of that insensitive, fraudulent agent." The vast majority of complaints about marketing abuses, according to CMS and state insurance commissioners, are directed at a new Medicare Advantage product, private fee-for-service (PFFS) plans, which now have 1.5 million enrollees. The main sales pitch for these plans is that enrollees can go to any doctor or hospital they choose, anywhere in the country. But in practice, many people have found that the providers they want won't accept PFFS plans.
The plans "are now required to have a disclaimer in all of their marketing materials saying that not all providers will accept a PFFS plan," says Block of CMS, and that enrollees will be covered only if the providers agree to the plan's terms and conditions.
Physician groups and consumer advocates say, however, that this requirement will not change a fundamental problem: that by law PFFS plans (unlike MA managed care plans) do not have to contract with any providers before policies are sold. Instead, a doctor or hospital that treats an enrollee is automatically "deemed" to have agreed to the plan's terms and payment conditions—without any negotiation between the provider and the plan having taken place.
Consequently, says Elizabeth McNeil, vice president of the California Medical Association, many doctors will have nothing to do with PFFS plans. "It isn’t a good arrangement," she says. "PFFS plans must have to adhere to the rules that other [MA] plans must adhere to or they should be eliminated."
It can be difficult if not impossible for beneficiaries to know in advance whether a doctor or hospital will accept a PFFS plan. Moreover, the law allows providers to decide if they will accept the plan each time the patient seeks treatment. People enrolled in a PFFS plan sponsored by employers or unions may be stuck with it, like an 80-year-old former teacher near Phoenix (who doesn't want her name used). A breast cancer survivor who needs an annual mammogram and has an ailing husband who can't be left alone, she was horrified to find that the nearest hospital that would accept her PFFS plan was 70 miles away.
Her retirement system switched its enrollees from supplementary insurance to a PFFS plan this year. "They've put me in a position where I'm paying my monthly dues for health insurance and I'm unable to use it," she says. Her only option, she adds, is to cancel the benefits she worked for and paid into for 35 years.
Only about 15 percent, or 225,000, of PFFS enrollees are in employer-sponsored plans, but this is a new market that could rapidly expand. The plans' sales pitch that enrollees can see any provider is attractive to employers or unions with retirees scattered all over the country.
Block of CMS acknowledges a lack of providers in some areas. But she says that educating providers and PFFS plans to become "more comfortable" with each other will change that. "If providers better understand the [PFFS] product and the payment mechanisms and get appropriate assurances that this is something they can work with…we will see very different attitudes in the provider community," she says. "So I think the situation will get a lot better."
David Lipschutz, staff attorney for California Health Advocates, who has studied PFFS plans, disagrees. "Unless there's a fundamental sea change in providers' attitudes toward these plans and the way the plans operate," he says, "they will continue to cause problems for people."
As for marketing abuses, the American Health Insurance Plans trade group has "zero tolerance" toward them, says spokesman Mohit Ghose. Earlier this year the major insurers that sell PFFS plans—BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, Coventry, Humana, Sterling, United HealthCare, Universal American Financial Corp. and Wellcare—voluntarily agreed to suspend marketing while drawing up a new code of conduct to curb abuse. CMS has since made these practices the rule.
But this doesn't satisfy state insurance commissioners who complain that federal law doesn't allow them to pursue Medicare Advantage plans for fraud or head off some abuses in advance, as they can in other insurance markets. "Our hands are tied," says commissioner Dilweg, who has 22 companies offering 92 Medicare plans in his state and received more than 700 complaints about them in a single year.
Nor does the insurers' new code of conduct change the fact that agents are paid much higher commissions for selling MA plans (especially PFFS plans) than for drug plans or medigap insurance—a practice that critics say only encourages hard-sell sign-ups.
By way of full disclosure, AARP is making available in 2008 a Medicare Advantage managed care plan underwritten by United HealthCare.

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Posted by marine41 at 11:54 AM 0 comments Links to this post
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Medicare and Low Income Seniors

Medicare

By ROBERT PEAR
Published: June 20, 2008
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration promised on Thursday to provide new protections for low-income Medicare beneficiaries to ensure they can get prescription drugs promptly, at minimal cost.

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The promise came in the proposed settlement of a nationwide class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of hundreds of thousands of people who have had difficulty getting the medicines they need.

Under the 2003 Medicare law, more than six million people eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid are entitled to extra help with their drug costs. But in many cases, they could not get the assistance, so they did not receive the drugs they needed, or they experienced long delays.

In early 2006, low-income beneficiaries were often overcharged, and some were turned away from pharmacies without getting their medications. Several states declared public health emergencies, and many stepped in to pay for prescriptions that should have been covered by the federal Medicare program.

Under the proposed settlement, filed Thursday with the United States District Court in San Francisco, federal Medicare officials promised to speed up the process of providing extra help to low-income people, who now could qualify within days, rather than weeks or months.

Drug benefits are delivered by private insurers under contract to Medicare. Under the settlement, these insurers will have to provide medications at minimal cost for any Medicare recipients who prove they have low incomes and qualify for extra help.

For most people with incomes less than the poverty level ($10,400 a year for an individual), the maximum co-payment is $1.05 for a generic or preferred brand-name drug and $3.10 for other prescription drugs.

But many beneficiaries have been asked to pay much higher amounts, from $30 to $75 or more, because the evidence of their low-income status was not properly shared among federal and state agencies, insurance companies and pharmacies.

“This settlement agreement is a victory for many of the nation’s most vulnerable citizens, who have faced life-threatening delays in obtaining vital medications,” said Kevin Prindiville, a lawyer at the National Senior Citizens Law Center, which filed the lawsuit with another nonprofit group, the Center for Medicare Advocacy.

Gill Deford, a lawyer at the Center for Medicare Advocacy, said the settlement would “help hundreds of thousands of people a year get their prescription drugs more quickly, at nominal cost.”

Jeff Nelligan, a spokesman for the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said federal officials had “worked tirelessly” to ensure that Medicare recipients could fill their prescriptions. He refused to comment on the substance of the settlement, noting that it was subject to approval by Judge Thelton E. Henderson of Federal District Court in California.

States administer the Medicaid program. They have crucial information showing whether Medicare beneficiaries are also enrolled in Medicaid and therefore eligible for extra help with their drug costs.

Under the settlement, if a beneficiary claims to be eligible for the low-income subsidy but does not have the documents to prove it, and if the person is about to run out of a medication, federal officials would immediately contact the state Medicaid agency to check whether the person had been on Medicaid.

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Posted by marine41 at 7:30 AM 1 comments Links to this post
Labels: medicare.medicaid.low income
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Hard Sell to Medicare Insurance Buyers Would Get Softer Under New Rules

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By ROBERT PEAR
Published: May 9, 2008
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration proposed on Thursday to crack down on the aggressive marketing of private Medicare insurance plans by outlawing unsolicited visits and telephone calls to beneficiaries, regulating commissions paid to sales agents and increasing the fines that could be imposed on insurers.

Medicare “should not be undermined by the actions of a limited number of unscrupulous sales agents,” said Kerry N. Weems, the acting administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

In the last two years, Medicare beneficiaries and state officials have often complained that high-pressure sales tactics led some people to sign up for unsuitable policies.

After reviewing comments from the public, federal officials intend to issue final rules before the marketing of plans for 2009 begins this October.

The proposed rules respond to pleas by consumers, Congress and state officials, but do not go as far as they wanted. In particular, the proposal affirms the Bush administration’s view that “states do not have the authority to regulate the marketing” of private Medicare plans.

Paul Precht, policy director of the Medicare Rights Center, a group that counsels beneficiaries, said: “We need Congress to give the states a greater role in enforcement. The federal government does not have the manpower.”

Senator Max Baucus, the Montana Democrat who is chairman of the Finance Committee, praised the Bush proposals as a good first step. But Mr. Baucus said, “These protections are so important that they need to be codified in law.” He promised to push for passage of a bill in the next few months.

The Bush proposal would prohibit door-to-door marketing of private Medicare plans. Agents could not accost beneficiaries in the parking lot of a center for the elderly, a clinic or an apartment building. Agents could respond to telephone inquiries, but they could not make “cold calls” to beneficiaries.

Karen M. Ignagni, president of America’s Health Insurance Plans, a trade group, said she welcomed the proposals, though they go further than the industry had recommended in a few areas like cold calls.

The rules would set a $15 limit on the value of gifts and promotional items offered to potential customers. Insurance companies could offer coffee, soft drinks, snacks, pill dispensers and water bottles worth less than $15. But insurers could not offer free meals, whatever their value.

This proposal would end a common practice. Insurers like Humana have signed up many beneficiaries at family restaurants where the companies provide sales presentations and meals.

“Have Lunch on Us!” said fliers and advertisements inviting Medicare beneficiaries to Humana events last fall.

The proposed rules would also prohibit agents from offering annuities, life insurance and other “non-health care related products” while selling private Medicare plans.

Under current rules, the government can impose a civil fine up to $25,000 for each serious violation. The proposed rule would allow larger fines, up to $25,000 for each beneficiary who was “directly adversely affected.”

The Bush administration also wants to regulate sales commissions, to discourage agents from switching people inappropriately from one Medicare plan to another. Under the proposal, the commission paid for the initial sale and first year of coverage could not exceed the commission paid for renewal of coverage in a subsequent year.

Many carriers now pay higher commissions in the first year. Some pay only for the first year, with no commission in later years. This creates a “financial incentive for agents to encourage beneficiaries to change plans each year,” the administration said.

Of the 44 million Medicare beneficiaries, at least 25 million are in some type of private plan — either a Medicare Advantage plan, which provides a wide range of health services, or a free-standing prescription drug plan, which covers just medicines.

Under the proposal, an insurer would have to pay the same commission for all its Medicare Advantage plans and a uniform amount for all its drug plans. An insurer could still encourage sales of the more profitable products by paying higher commissions — $200 a year for sale of a Medicare Advantage plan and $50 a year for a drug plan, for example.

Jessica F. Waltman, a vice president of the National Association of Health Underwriters, which represents agents and brokers, said, “We agree that insurers should eliminate financial incentives for agents to make quick sales and shift beneficiaries from one plan to another without regard to their health care needs.”

But, Ms. Waltman added, small differences in commissions in the first and subsequent years may be justified.
Posted by marine41 at 8:36 AM 0 comments Links to this post
Thursday, April 24, 2008
KEEP MEDICARE FAIR

We must assure everyone whho wishes to remain on Medicare are give a FAIR OPPORTUNITY TO remain on Traditional Medicare and not forced into HMO's
Posted by marine41 at 9:46 AM 0 comments Links to this post
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Medicare Doctor Payment Cuts
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Hard Sell to Medicare Insurance Buyers Would Get S...
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KEEP MEDICARE FAIR

long term care bill


1. Sen. Boxer Introduces Health and Long-Term Care Workforce Bill
Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) introduced S. 2708, the Caring for an Aging America Act, on March 5. The bill would address the emerging gap between the increasing number of older Americans and the serious lack of providers trained in caring for their medical, health, and social support needs. NCOA supports the proposal.
The bill would provide $130 million over five years to recruit and retain trained healthcare professionals and direct-care workers by providing them with loan forgiveness and career advancement opportunities. Specifically, the legislation would:
• Establish a Geriatric and Gerontology Loan Repayment Program for health professionals who complete specialty training in geriatrics or gerontology and agree to provide full-time clinical practice and service to older adults for a minimum of two years.
• Expand eligibility for the Nursing Education Loan Repayment Program to include registered nurses who complete specialty training and provide nursing services to older adults in long-term care settings.
• Offer specialty training in long-term care services through the existing Career Ladders Grants Program.
• Create a Health and Long-Term Care Workforce Advisory Panel for an Aging America to identify incentives for recruitment and retention of new populations of clinicians and providers to serve vulnerable older adults

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Boxer Bill S 2798

CARING FOR AN AGING AMERICA
Caring for an aging america act

1. Sen. Boxer Introduces Health and Long-Term Care Workforce Bill
Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) introduced S. 2708, the Caring for an Aging America Act, on March 5. The bill would address the emerging gap between the increasing number of older Americans and the serious lack of providers trained in caring for their medical, health, and social support needs. NCOA supports the proposal.
The bill would provide $130 million over five years to recruit and retain trained healthcare professionals and direct-care workers by providing them with loan forgiveness and career advancement opportunities. Specifically, the legislation would:
• Establish a Geriatric and Gerontology Loan Repayment Program for health professionals who complete specialty training in geriatrics or gerontology and agree to provide full-time clinical practice and service to older adults for a minimum of two years.
• Expand eligibility for the Nursing Education Loan Repayment Program to include registered nurses who complete specialty training and provide nursing services to older adults in long-term care settings.
• Offer specialty training in long-term care services through the existing Career Ladders Grants Program.
• Create a Health and Long-Term Care Workforce Advisory Panel for an Aging America to identify incentives for recruitment and retention of new populations of clinicians and providers to serve vulnerable older adults
Posted by Malden Senior