Texas Health Insurance Texas Health Insurance Texas Health Insurance Texas Health Insurance Texas Health Insurance Texas Health Insurance Texas Health Insurance
Texas Health Insurance
Call Now To Speak With a Texas Health Insurance Advisor
800-371-2015

Archive for April, 2010

UNICARE life and health leaving Texas

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Are you one of the many Texans affected by UNICARE leaving the Texas health insurance market?

Did you not make the conversion to the Blue Cross Blue Shield plan that was offered by UNICARE and now you have to make a change because your UNICARE plan will cancel in June?

Visit us at www.texashealthandlife.com or call us at 800-371-2015 or 512-246-9955 to find a new plan similar to the plan you had with UNICARE.

Our agency had several clients with UNICARE so we know the plan design most customers were on and can assist you in finding the best plan for your budget and your needs.

We look forward to working with you!

Stay Well!

Health care reform: What will it mean to employers and employees?

Friday, April 9th, 2010

We’ve updated earlier estimates of how the various subsidies in the health reform law affect the insurance market for both employers and workers. And the results remain quite dramatic: It appears that the new law will make it beneficial for many employers to drop their insurance coverage. In 2014 and beyond, once federal money is available through the insurance exchanges, switching from employer coverage to the exchanges may benefit both employers and workers in a wide range of income levels.

The employer-provided system subsidizes health insurance mainly by exempting from tax the health benefits offered by employers. Before reform, unless you were elderly, disabled, or poor, this exclusion was probably the only health care subsidy available. But under the new law, the subsidy tied to the insurance exchanges will significantly exceed the tax benefit that low- and middle-income households get now. Our analysis does not consider the implications for Medicaid, which creates a third subsidy system at the low-income end of the exchange.

How will the new law work? A worker whose household cash income is $60,000 in 2016 and who gets no health benefits from her employer would receive a subsidy equal to approximately $9,000. Because the firm provides no health insurance, it must pay a $2,200 penalty, leaving a net gain of about $6,800. By contrast, a worker earning equal compensation who receives employer-provided insurance would receive a subsidy around $3,500 from the exclusion of health benefits from his taxable wages, leaving him more than $3,000 worse off than his counterpart whose employer offers no insurance. This pattern holds until compensation reaches about $84,000, at which point the two subsidies are about the same. Workers earning more than $84,000 do better under the current employer-provided system than they will under the new system.

Except for the employer penalty for larger firms mentioned above, there are only limited mechanisms to stop employers from dropping coverage and allowing their employees to enter the exchange. Of course, some firms may be reluctant to switch because they are uncertain about changes to the health law or because some workers will insist on keeping their existing plans, at least until they see how the new exchanges work. But new firms, which over time grow and absorb larger shares of the labor force, will not face the demands posed by longtime employees. And the exchange doesn’t fully go into effect until 2014.

Congress could have avoided many of the problems that will result from this shift from employer-sponsored insurance to the exchanges by providing the same subsidy to all households with equal incomes. Perhaps it will move in this direction as the law is refined over time.

By Gene Steuerle, Guest blogger / April 8, 2010

The Massachusetts Insurance Blackout – Our Model When It Came To Reform,A Sign of Things to Come?

Friday, April 9th, 2010

This week it became impossible in Massachusetts for small businesses and individuals to buy health-care coverage after Governor Deval Patrick imposed price controls on premiums. Read on, because under ObamaCare this kind of political showdown will soon be coming to an insurance market near you.

The Massachusetts small-group market that serves about 800,000 residents shut down after Mr. Patrick kicked off his re-election campaign by presumptively rejecting about 90% of the premium increases the state’s insurers had asked regulators to approve. Health costs have run off the rails since former GOP Governor Mitt Romney and Beacon Hill passed universal coverage in 2006, and Mr. Patrick now claims price controls are the sensible response to this ostensibly industry greed.

Yet all of the major Massachusetts insurers are nonprofits. Three of largest four—Blue Cross Blue Shield, Tufts Health Plan and Fallon Community Health—posted operating losses in 2009. In an emergency suit heard in Boston superior court yesterday, they argued that the arbitrary rate cap will result in another $100 million in collective losses this year and make it impossible to pay the anticipated cost of claims. It may even threaten the near-term solvency of some companies. So until the matter is resolved, the insurers have simply stopped selling new policies.

A court decision is expected by Monday, but state officials have demanded that the insurers—under the threat of fines and other regulatory punishments—resume offering quotes by today and to revert to year-old base premiums. Let that one sink in: Mr. Patrick has made the health insurance business so painful the government actually has to order private companies to sell their products (albeit at sub-market costs).

One irony is that Mr. Patrick’s own Attorney General and his insurance regulators have concluded—to their apparent surprise—that the reason Massachusetts premiums are the highest in the nation is the underlying cost of health care, not the supposed industry abuses that Mr. Patrick and his political mentor President Obama like to cite.

On top of that, like ObamaCare, integral to the Massachusetts overhaul are mandates that require insurers to cover anyone who applies regardless of health status or pre-existing conditions and to charge everyone about the same rates. This allows people to wait until they’re about to incur major medical expenses before buying insurance and transfer the costs to everyone else. This week Blue Cross Blue Shield reported a big uptick in short-term customers who ran up costs more than four times the average, only to drop the coverage within three months.

Last July, Charlie Baker detailed similar gaming at Harvard Pilgrim, the health plan he used to run. Between April 2008 and March 2009, about 40% of its new enrollees stayed with it for fewer than five months and on average incurred costs about 600% higher than the company would have otherwise expected.

Mr. Baker is almost certain to be Mr. Patrick’s GOP opponent in the fall election. The Governor’s lurch toward price controls is obviously part of a bid to tar the former CEO as an industry villain. David Plouffe, the architect of Mr. Obama’s Presidential campaign, has signed on as a Patrick 2010 consultant. These kinds of collisions between politics and health care are going to occur constantly across the country as ObamaCare kicks in. ~ Wall Street Journal 4/09/2010

Summary of New Healthcare Reform Law

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

For A PDF Summary: http://www.kff.org/healthreform/upload/8061.pdf

HEALTH REFORM IMPLEMENTATION TIMELINE

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

On March 23, 2010, President Obama signed comprehensive health reform, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,into law. The following timeline provides implementation dates for key provisions. It reflects provisions in the new law andincorporates modifications to the law included in the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 passed by theHouse and the Senate.

 

 

2010

Insurance Reforms

• Establish a temporary national high-risk pool to provide health coverage to individuals with pre-existing medical conditions. (Effective 90 days following enactment until January 1, 2014)

• Provide dependent coverage for adult children up to age 26 for all individual and group policies.

• Prohibit individual and group health plans from placing lifetime limits on the dollar value of coverage and prior to 2014, plans may only impose annual limits on coverage as determined by the Secretary. Prohibit insurers from rescinding coverage except in cases of fraud and prohibit pre-existing condition exclusions for children.

• Require qualified health plans to provide at a minimum coverage without cost-sharing for preventive services rated A or B by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, recommended immunizations, preventive care for infants, children, and adolescents, and additional preventive care and screenings for

women.• Provide tax credits to small employers with no more than 25 employees and average annual wages of less than $50,000 that provide health insurance for employees.

• Create a temporary reinsurance program for employers providing health insurance coverage to retirees over age 55 who are not eligible for Medicare.(Effective 90 days following enactment until January 1, 2014)

• Require health plans to report the proportion of premium dollars spent on clinical services, quality, and other costs and provide rebates to consumersfor the amount of the premium spent on clinical services and quality that is less than 85% for plans in the large group market and 80% for plans in theindividual and small group markets. (Requirement to report medical loss ratio effective plan year 2010; requirement to provide rebates effective January 1, 2011)

• Establish a process for reviewing increases in health plan premiums and require plans to justify increases. Require states to report on trends in premium increases and recommend whether certain plans should be excluded from the Exchange based on unjustified premium increases.

Medicare

• Provide a $250 rebate to Medicare beneficiaries who reach the Part D coverage gap in 2010 and gradually eliminate the Medicare Part D coverage gap by 2020.

• Expand Medicare coverage to individuals who have been exposed to environmental health hazards from living in an area subject to an emergencydeclaration made as of June 17, 2009 and have developed certain health conditions as a result.

• Improve care coordination for dual eligibles by creating a new office within the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid services, the Federal CoordinatedHealth Care Office.

• Reduce annual market basket updates for inpatient hospital, home health, skilled nursing facility, hospice and other Medicare providers, and adjust for productivity.

• Ban new physician-owned hospitals in Medicare, requiring hospitals to have a provider agreement in effect by December 31; limit the growth of certain grandfathered physician-owned hospitals.

 

Medicaid

• Creates a state option to cover childless adults though a Medicaid State Plan Amendment.

• Creates a state option to provide Medicaid coverage for family planning services to certain low-income individuals through a Medicaid State Plan Amendment up to the highest level of eligibility for pregnant women.

• Creates a new option for states to provide CHIP coverage to children of state employees eligible for health benefits if certain conditions are met.

• Increase the Medicaid drug rebate percentage for brand name drugs to 23.1% (except the rebate for clotting factors and drugs approved exclusively for pediatric use increases to 17.1%); increase the Medicaid rebate for non-innovator, multiple source drugs to 13% of average manufacturer price; and extend the drug rebate to Medicaid managed care plans.

• Provide funding for and expand the role of the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission to include assessments of adult services (includingthose dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid).

• Require the Secretary of HHS to issue regulations to establish a process for public notice and comment for section 1115 waivers in Medicaid and CHIP.

Prescription Drugs

• Authorize the Food and Drug Administration to approve generic versions of biologic drugs and grant biologics manufacturers 12 years of exclusive usebefore generics can be developed.

Quality Improvement

• Support comparative effectiveness research by establishing a non-profit Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.

• Establish a commissioned Regular Corps and a Ready Reserve Corps for service in time of a national emergency.

• Reauthorize and amend the Indian Health Care Improvement Act.

Workforce

• Establish the Workforce Advisory Committee to develop a national workforce strategy.

• Increase workforce supply and support training of health professionals through scholarships and loans.

• Establish Teaching Health Centers to provide Medicare payments for primary care residency programs in federally qualified health centers.

Tax Changes

• Impose additional requirements on non-profit hospitals. Impose a tax of $50,000 per year for failure to meet these requirements.

• Limit the deductibility of executive and employee compensation to $500,000 per applicable individual for health insurance providers.

• Impose a tax of 10% on the amount paid for indoor tanning services.

• Exclude unprocessed fuels from the definition of cellulosic biofuel for purposes of applying the cellulosic biofuel producer credit.

• Clarify application of the economic substance doctrine and increase penalties for underpayments attributable to a transaction lacking economic substance.

 

2011

Long-term Care

• Establish a national, voluntary insurance program for purchasing community living assistance services and supports (CLASS program).

Medical Malpractice

• Award five-year demonstration grants to states to develop, implement, and evaluate alternatives to current tort litigations.

Prevention/Wellness

• Improve prevention by covering only proven preventive services and eliminating cost-sharing for preventive services in Medicare; increase Medicare payments for certain preventive services to 100% of actual charges or fee schedule rates. For states that provide Medicaid coverage for and remove cost-sharing for preventive services recommended by the US Preventive Services Task Force and recommended immunizations, provide a one percentage point increase in the FMAP for these services.

• Provide Medicare beneficiaries access to a comprehensive health risk assessment and creation of a personalized prevention plan and provide incentives to Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries to complete behavior modification programs.

• Provide grants for up to five years to small employers that establish wellness programs.

• Establish the National Prevention, Health Promotion and Public Health Council to develop a national strategy to improve the nation’s health.

• Require chain restaurants and food sold from vending machines to disclose the nutritional content of each item.

Medicare

• Require pharmaceutical manufacturers to provide a 50% discount on brand-name prescriptions filled in the Medicare Part D coverage gap beginning in 2011 and begin phasing-in federal subsidies for generic prescriptions filled in the Medicare Part D coverage gap.

• Provide a 10% Medicare bonus payment to primary care physicians and to general surgeons practicing in health professional shortage areas. (Effective 2011 through 2015)

• Restructure payments to Medicare Advantage (MA) plans by setting payments to different percentages of Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) rates.

• Prohibit Medicare Advantage plans from imposing higher cost-sharing requirements for some Medicare covered benefits than is required under the traditional fee-for-service program.

• Reduce annual market basket updates for Medicare providers beginning in 2011.

• Provide Medicare payments to qualifying hospitals in counties with the lowest quartile Medicare spending for 2011 and 2012.

• Freeze the income threshold for income-related Medicare Part B premiums for 2011 through 2019 at 2010 levels, and reduce the Medicare Part D premium subsidy for those with incomes above $85,000/individual and $170,000/couple.

• Create an Innovation Center within the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Medicaid

• Prohibit federal payments to states for Medicaid services related to health care acquired conditions.

• Create a new Medicaid state plan option to permit Medicaid enrollees with at least two chronic conditions, one condition and risk of developing another,

or at least one serious and persistent mental health condition to designate a provider as a health home. Provide states taking up the option with 90% FMAP for two years for health home related services including care management, care coordination and health promotion.

• Create the State Balancing Incentive Program in Medicaid to provide enhanced federal matching payments to increase non-institutionally based longterm care services.

• Establish the Community First Choice Option in Medicaid to provide community-based attendant support services to certain people with disabilities.

Quality Improvement

• Develop a national quality improvement strategy that includes priorities to improve the delivery of health care services, patient health outcomes, and population health.

• Establish the Community-based Collaborative Care Network Program to support consortiums of health care providers to coordinate and integrate health care services, for low-income uninsured and underinsured populations.

• Establish a new trauma center program to strengthen emergency department and trauma center capacity.

• Improve access to care by increasing funding by $11 billion for community health centers and the National Health Service Corps over five years; establishn ew programs to support school-based health centers and nurse-managed health clinics.

 

Tax Changes

• Exclude the costs for over-the-counter drugs not prescribed by a doctor from being reimbursed through an HRA or health FSA and from being reimbursed on a tax-free basis through an HSA or Archer Medical Savings Account.

• Increase the tax on distributions from a health savings account or an Archer MSA that are not used for qualified medical expenses to 20% of the disbursed amount.

• Impose new annual fees on the pharmaceutical manufacturing sector.

20

 

12

Medicare

• Make Part D cost-sharing for full-benefit dual eligible beneficiaries receiving home and community-based care services equal to the cost-sharing for those who receive institutional care.

• Allow providers organized as accountable care organizations (ACOs) that voluntarily meet quality thresholds to share in the cost savings they achieve for the Medicare program.

• Reduce Medicare payments that would otherwise be made to hospitals by specified percentages to account for excess (preventable) hospital readmissions.

• Create the Medicare Independence at Home demonstration program.

• Establish a hospital value-based purchasing program in Medicare and develop plans to implement value-based purchasing programs for skilled nursing facilities, home health agencies, and ambulatory surgical centers.

• Provide bonus payments to high–quality Medicare Advantage plans.

• Reduce rebates for Medicare Advantage plans.

Medicaid

• Create new demonstration projects in Medicaid to pay bundled payments for episodes of care that include hospitalizations (effective January 1, 2012 through December 31, 2016); to make global capitated payments to safety net hospital systems (effective fiscal years 2010 through 2012); to allow pediatric medical providers organized as accountable care organizations to share in cost-savings (effective January 1, 2012 through December 31, 2016);

and to provide Medicaid payments to institutions of mental disease for adult enrollees who require stabilization of an emergency condition (effective October 1, 2011 through December 31, 2015).

Quality Improvement

• Require enhanced collection and reporting of data on race, ethnicity, sex, primary language, disability status, and for underserved rural and frontier populations.

2013

Insurance Reforms

• Create the Consumer Operated and Oriented Plan (CO-OP) program to foster the creation of non-profit, member-run health insurance companies in all 50 states and the District of Columbia to offer qualified health plans. (Appropriate $6 billion to finance the program and award loans and grants to establish CO-OPs by July 1, 2013)

• Simplify health insurance administration by adopting a single set of operating rules for eligibility verification and claims status (rules adopted July 1, 2011; effective January 1, 2013), electronic funds transfers and health care payment and remittance (rules adopted July 1, 2012; effective January 1, 2014), and health claims or equivalent encounter information, enrollment and disenrollment in a health plan, health plan premium payments, and referral certification and authorization (rules adopted July 1, 2014; effective January 1, 2016). Health plans must document compliance with these standards or face a penalty of no more than $1 per covered life. (Effective April 1, 2014)

Medicare

• Begin phasing-in federal subsidies for brand-name prescriptions filled in the Medicare Part D coverage gap (to 25% in 2020, in addition to the 50% manufacturer brand-name discount).

• Establish a national Medicare pilot program to develop and evaluate paying a bundled payment for acute, inpatient hospital services, physician services, Outpatient hospital services, and post-acute care services for an episode of care.

Medicaid

• Increase Medicaid payments for primary care services provided by primary care doctors for 2013 and 2014 with 100% federal funding.

Quality Improvement

• Require disclosure of financial relationships between health entities, including physicians, hospitals, pharmacists, other providers, and manufacturers and distributors of covered drugs, devices, biologicals, and medical supplies.

Tax Changes

• Increase the threshold for the itemized deduction for unreimbursed medical expenses from 7.5% of adjusted gross income to 10% of adjusted gross income for regular tax purposes; waive the increase for individuals age 65 and older for tax years 2013 through 2016.

• Increase the Medicare Part A (hospital insurance) tax rate on wages by 0.9% (from 1.45% to 2.35%) on earnings over $200,000 for individual taxpayers and $250,000 for married couples filing jointly and impose a 3.8% assessment on unearned income for higher-income taxpayers.

• Limit the amount of contributions to a flexible spending account for medical expenses to $2,500 per year increased annually by the cost of livingadjustment.

• Impose an excise tax of 2.3% on the sale of any taxable medical device.

• Eliminate the tax-deduction for employers who receive Medicare Part D retiree drug subsidy payments.

2014

Individual and Employer Requirements

 

 

• Require U.S. citizens and legal residents to have qualifying health coverage (phase-in tax penalty for those without coverage).

• Assess employers with more than 50 employees that do not offer coverage and have at least one full-time employee who receives a premium tax credit a fee of $2,000 per full-time employee, excluding the first 30 employees from the assessment. Employers with more than 50 employees that offer coverage but have at least one full-time employee receiving a premium tax credit, will pay the lesser of $3,000 for each employee receiving a premium credit or $2,000 for each full-time employee. Require employers with more than 200 employees to automatically enroll employees into health insurance plans offered by the employer. Employees may opt out of coverage.

Insurance Reforms

• Create state-based American Health Benefit Exchanges and Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) Exchanges, administered by a governmental agency or non-profit organization, through which individuals and small businesses with up to 100 employees can purchase qualified coverage.

• Require guarantee issue and renewability and allow rating variation based only on age (limited to 3 to 1 ratio), premium rating area, family composition, and tobacco use (limited to 1.5. to 1 ratio) in the individual and the small group market and the Exchanges.

• Reduce the out-of-pocket limits for those with incomes up to 400% FPL to the following levels:

o 100-200% FPL: one-third of the HSA limits ($1,983/individual and $3,967/family);

o 200-300% FPL: one-half of the HSA limits ($2,975/individual and $5,950/family);

o 300-400% FPL: two-thirds of the HSA limits ($3,987/individual and $7,973/family).

• Limit deductibles for health plans in the small group market to $2,000 for individuals and $4,000 for families unless contributions are offered that offset deductible amounts above these limits.

• Limit any waiting periods for coverage to 90 days.

• Create an essential health benefits package that provides a comprehensive set of services, covers at least 60% of the actuarial value of the covered benefits, limits annual cost-sharing to the current law HSA limits ($5,950/individual and $11,900/family in 2010), and is not more extensive than the typical employer plan.

• Require the Office of Personnel Management to contract with insurers to offer at least two multi-state plans in each Exchange. At least one plan must be offered by a non-profit entity and at least one plan must not provide coverage for abortions beyond those permitted by federal law.

• Permit states the option to create a Basic Health Plan for uninsured individuals with incomes between 133-200% FPL who would otherwise be eligible to receive premium subsidies in the Exchange.

• Allow states the option of merging the individual and small group markets. (Effective January 1, 2014)

• Create a temporary reinsurance program to collect payments from health insurers in the individual and group markets to provide payments to plans in the individual market that cover high-risk individuals.

• Require qualified health plans to meet new operating standards and reporting requirements.

Premium Subsidies

• Provide refundable and advanceable premium credits and cost sharing subsidies to eligible individuals and families with incomes between 133-400% FPL to purchase insurance through the Exchanges.

Medicare

• Reduce the out-of-pocket amount that qualifies an enrollee for catastrophic coverage in Medicare Part D (effective through 2019);

• Establish an Independent Payment Advisory Board comprised of 15 members to submit legislative proposals containing recommendations to reduce the per capita rate of growth in Medicare spending if spending exceeds a target growth rate. (Issue recommendations beginning January 2014)

• Reduce Medicare Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) payments initially by 75% and subsequently increase payments based on the percent of the population uninsured and the amount of uncompensated care provided.

• Require Medicare Advantage plans to have medical loss ratios no lower than 85%.

Medicaid

• Expand Medicaid to all non-Medicare eligible individuals under age 65 (children, pregnant women, parents, and adults without dependent children) with incomes up to 133% FPL based on modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) and provides enhanced federal matching for new eligibles.

• Reduce states’ Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) allotments.

• Increase spending caps for the territories.

Prevention/Wellness

• Permit employers to offer employees rewards of up to 30%, increasing to 50% if appropriate, of the cost of coverage for participating in a wellness program and meeting certain health-related standards. Establish 10-state pilot programs to permit participating states to apply similar rewards forparticipating in wellness programs in the individual market.

Tax Changes

• Impose fees on the health insurance sector.

2015 or Later

Insurance Reforms

 

 

• Permit states to form health care choice compacts and allow insurers to sell policies in any state participating in the compact. (Compacts may not take effect before January 1, 2016)

Medicare

• Reduce Medicare payments to certain hospitals for hospital-acquired conditions by 1%. (Effective fiscal year 2015)

Tax Changes

• Impose an excise tax on insurers of employer-sponsored health plans with aggregate values that exceed $10,200 for individual coverage and $27,500 for Family coverage. (Effective January 1, 2018)

Pro Texas Insurance on Facebook   Pro Texas Insurance on You Tube   Pro Texas Insurance on Twitter
Privacy Policy by TRUSTe