Wednesday, September 5, 2012

CONTROLCOST OF HEALTH CARE MASSACHUSETTS

You are correct in singling out Massachusetts as a national leader in working to control the rising cost of health care (“Massachusetts Takes On Health Costs,” editorial, Aug. 5). Massachusetts was the first in the country to greatly expand access to health care to our citizens. As we always planned, we are tackling the next great challenge: rising costs. Our office has identified one of the single greatest drivers of health care costs as the prices negotiated because of the market leverage of providers rather than the quality of services offered. Our new law establishes additional tools to scrutinize market behavior without impeding it, but also allows us to monitor market activity in real time for potential negative impact and then to take necessary actions. By striking the right balance, this law will help slow the spiraling health care costs faced by businesses and consumers while also allowing the marketplace to innovate and grow. MARTHA COAKLEY Attorney General of Massachusetts Boston, Aug. 7, 2012

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

MEDICARE SAVINGS HEALTH CARE LAW

For Immediate Release:Thursday, May 24, 2012
Contact:CMS Office of Public Affairs
202-690-6145


HEALTH CARE LAW SAVED PEOPLE WITH MEDICARE OVER $3.5 BILLION ON PRESCRIPTION DRUGS
IN THE FIRST FOUR MONTHS OF 2012, MORE THAN 416,000 PEOPLE WITH MEDICARE SAVED AN AVERAGE OF $724 ON PRESCRIPTION DRUGS AND 12.1 MILLION USED A FREE PREVENTIVE SERVICE
Under the new health care law – the Affordable Care Act -- seniors and people with disabilities in Medicare have saved a total of $3.5 billion on prescription drugs in the Medicare drug benefit coverage gap or “donut hole” from the enactment of the law in March 2010 through April of 2012. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released data today showing that, in the first four months of 2012 alone, more than 416,000 people saved an average of $724 on the prescription drugs they purchased after they hit the prescription drug coverage gap or “donut hole,” for a total of $301.5 million in savings. These savings build on the law’s success in 2010 and 2011, when more than 5.1 million people with Medicare saved over $3.2 billion on prescription drugs.
In addition, CMS announced that this year, from January through April, 12.1 million people in traditional Medicare received at least one preventive service at no cost to them – including over 856,000 who have taken advantage of the Annual Wellness Visit provided in the Affordable Care Act. In 2011, over 26 million people in traditional Medicare received one or more preventive benefits free of charge.
“Thanks to the health care law, millions of people with Medicare have paid less for health care and prescription drugs,” said CMS Acting Administrator Marilyn Tavenner. “The law is helping people with Medicare lower their medical costs, and giving them more resources to stay healthy.”
People with Medicare who hit the coverage gap “donut hole” in 2010 received a one-time $250 rebate. In 2011, people with Medicare began receiving a 50 percent discount on covered brand name drugs and 7 percent coverage of generic drugs in the “donut hole.” This year, Medicare coverage for generic drugs in the coverage gap has risen to 14 percent. Coverage for both brand name and generic drugs in the gap will continue to increase over time until 2020, when the coverage gap will no longer exist.
For more information on how the Affordable Care Act closes the Medicare drug benefit coverage gap “donut hole,” please visit: http://www.healthcare.gov/law/features/65-older/drug-discounts/index.html.
Prior to 2011, people with Medicare faced cost-sharing for many preventive benefits like cancer screenings and smoking cessation counseling. Now, many of these benefits are offered free of charge to beneficiaries, with no deductible or co-pay, so that cost is no longer a barrier for seniors who want to find and treat problems early.
For more information on Medicare-covered preventive services, many of which are now provided without charge to beneficiaries thanks to the Affordable Care Act, please visit: http://www.healthcare.gov/law/features/65-older/medicare-preventive-services/index.html.
To learn what screenings, vaccinations and other preventive services doctors recommend for you and those you care about, please visit the myhealthfinder tool at www.healthfinder.gov.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Thanks to the Affordable Care Act:



  • Millions of uninsured Americans will gain access to quality,
  •  affordable health coverage;
  • No American will be denied health coverage simply
  •  because they have a "pre-existing" condition;
  • Insurers will no longer be able to drop an American
  • from health coverage, simply because he or she got sick;
  • Insurers will no longer have free rein to raise premiums without limits and accountability;
  • Every insurance plan must be described in clear, factual, and transparent terms so consumers can understand
  •  what they are getting for their premium dollars;
  • Families can rest easy knowing young adults can stay on their family plan until age 26;
  • All Americans will have no-cost access to vital preventive
  • check-ups and care;
  • Seniors stuck in the "doughnut hole" will get much-needed help affording their prescription drugs;
  • Small businesses will get tax credits to help extend coverage to their employees; and
  • Community health centers will be able to expand the number of patients they serve in states across the country.

These vital protections will make a difference for millions of American families. Don't take away our health care!

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

ACO program Health Care Reform

The effects of healthcare reform will become increasingly apparent in 2012, and senior care providers may find themselves—and their marketing strategies—particularly impacted by Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) as they line up to partner with hospitals and other healthcare providers.
ACOs are groups of doctors, hospitals, and other healthcare providers that work together to give coordinated care to their Medicare patients to improve care quality, ensure best outcomes, and thereby reduce Medicare costs.
Although some aspects of healthcare reform, such as expanded Medicaid eligibility, won’t kick in until 2014, providers are gearing up for a playing field that’s going to get larger, and looking for ways to reduce costs.
“Providers of all types are being more strategic of who they choose to serve under what type of model,” said Dr. Russ Richmond, the CEO of Objective Health, a McKinsey Solution for Healthcare Providers. “They’ll be focusing on how they can have sustainable enterprises on what’s probably likely to be, on average, a lower reimbursement level.”
What’s happening is that providers along the continuum of care—and that includes senior care—will seek to coordinate and integrate for best outcomes, and senior living providers may find hospitals to be a valuable referral base.
“With a lot of that care, the focus is shifted from procedure based fee-for-service care to outcome measurements,” Richmond says. “There’s a shifting in mindsets around how the formula is going to be measured, how you want to integrate or pair up.”
This is significant, as currently, healthcare providers generally make money based off of volume of care, not care quality. Conversely, ACOs offer incentives to avoid hospital readmissions by penalizing high rehospitalization rates through reduced reimbursements. Research from 2009 shows that 20% of Medicare patients end up being readmitted to hospitals within 30 days of being discharged, at a cost of billions of dollars to the benefits program ($17.4 billion in 2009, to be exact).
Richmond says he’s seeing some interesting technology and focus coming up around the transition between the hospital setting and getting into the right post-acute setting, such as skilled nursing, longer-term acute care, or assisted living environments.
“If you accept that one of the goals is cost-management, and that hospitals are one of the most expensive [environments], I think we’re gonna see in the next few years a tremendous focus on improving that focus from discharge into the right level of care,” he told SHN. “Once these organizations are partnered in terms of their care, you’re going to see real focus on getting folks to the right level of care.”
Basically, partnerships between hospitals and post-acute care providers are going to spring up, and it’s likely that large, multi-organization partnerships will dominate the scene. Richmond says he wouldn’t be surprised to see more M&A activity in that space, as there will be “more risk and more reward.”
For senior living facilities, outcomes will be crucial.
“From a hospital’s point of view, the most important criteria are outcomes measured from that organization and their record in terms of those organizations helping minimize bouncebacks into the hospital,” Richmond says. “One thing acute care providers are looking at is more evidence around who in the community is able to take patients when they’re ready to discharge, and partner with the hospital to make sure that the discharge instructions and the right transitions are made so that the patients aren’t readmitted within 30 days or more.”
Where they end up sending their patients is going to be “quite strategic,” he continues.
Despite the business opportunity for healthcare providers, not everyone is keen on the idea of participating in the Medicare Shared Savings Program, according to a poll conducted by an audit, tax and advisory firm along with a healthcare legal firm, Epstein Becker Green, and consulting firm JHD Group.
“Our survey findings indicate that healthcare leaders are still trying to get their hands around the opportunity and the risks associated with these programs,” Ed Giniat, partner and sector leader for KPMG Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals, said in a statement. “Clearly, the priority for executives is to rapidly increase their knowledge about payment model reform and to accelerate their organizations movement toward new business models.”
Many survey respondents indicated that they didn’t fully understand the ACO program and their financial implications, even after the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare posted final rules. Following the publication of the final rules, 57% of hospital and health system respondents still didn’t know how the rules would affect them, and half said they don’t know if their organization will participate in the program.
Ultimately, says Richmond, hospitals are going to look to partner with the facilities that are optimal for them, and their set of criteria for which facility to choose may differ from those that consumers may use.
“It’s undoubtedly true that a more integrated environment where there’s more risk sharing across the continuum, that there’s much more skin in the game for the hospital about where these patients go,” he says. “That harsh lens of performance in those markets shows a high degree of variability on some of those metrics, in every market, and I wouldn’t be surprised if everyone’s rushing to the same dance partner in these markets.”
Written by Alyssa Gerace

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Health Reform Provision Cuts Red Tape—and Costs—for Senior Care Providers

some standards that have recently been introduced for electronic funds transfers in healthcare through the Obama Administration’s Affordable Care Act will reduce up to $4.5 billion off administrative costs for healthcare providers, including doctors and hospitals and private and government health plans, says the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

This cost reduction is according to estimates included in new rules that the HHS published on Jan. 5, 2011, and the two regulations that implement the Administrative Simplification provisions of the ACA and the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act are projected to save the healthcare industry more than $16 billion in the next decade.
“Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, health care professionals will spend less time filling out paperwork and more time focusing on delivering the best care for patients,” said HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius in a statement.
Last year, a study published in the Health Affairs journal found that for every dollar a physician receives from patients, 12% goes to cover the costs of filling out forms and performing other “excessively complex administrative tasks,” reports the HHS. However, simplifying these systems could save four hours per week of professional time for each physician, along with five hours of support staff time, the study found.
The rule, “Adoption of Standards for Health Care Electronic Funds Transfers and Remittance Advice,” adopts “streamlined standards for the format and data content of the transmission a health plan sends to its bank when it wants to pay a claim to a provider electronically and to issue a Remittance Advice notice,” says HHS.
Sometimes, the Remittance Advice (a notice of payment sent to providers) doesn’t accompany the payment the provider receives, and in instances where it’s separate from the Electronic Funds Transfers payment, the disconnect makes it difficult for the provider to match up the bill and the corresponding payment.
“Today’s rule addresses this by requiring the use of a trace number that automatically matches the two,” says HHS. “The new tracking system will allow healthcare providers to eliminate costly manual reconciliation that must currently be done.”
Interim Final Regulations can be viewed here.
Written by Alyssa Gerace

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Health Care Law ruling

 U.S. Supreme Court rules on the health care law sometime between the end of March, when arguments are scheduled over three days, and June, when the court typically issues its final opinions for each term.   w