Guest guest Posted November 27, 2007 Report Share Posted November 27, 2007 FYI " WE WILL WIN " Love Ya'll " NEVER FIGHT FAIR " Bob & Carole Dad & Mom Panama City, FL 32404 Please visit the International Stills Disease Foundation Web Site at: www stillsdisease.org/. Please make Tax Deductible Donations to the all volunteer, International Stills Disease Foundation Inc., 1123 S. Kimbrel Ave Panama City, FL 32404. Thanks! -- Issue 24, November 27, 2007 Welcome to MEDICARE WATCH, a biweekly electronic newsletter of the Medicare Rights Center Vol. 10, No. 24: November 27, 2007 Contents: FAST FACT MEDPAC: PRIVATE PLAN ENROLLEES IN POORER HEALTH RISING HEALTH CARE COSTS THREAT TO MEDICARE CALIFORNIA-BASED INSURANCE PLAN FINED $1 MILLION CASE FLASH: NETWORK EXCEPTIONS 1. FAST FACT The proportion of small companies offering employer-based health insurance fell to 61 percent this year, down from 63 percent in 2006, according to a recent report released by Mercer, a human resources firm (“U.S. Employers' Health Benefit Cost Continues to Rise at Twice Inflation Rate, Mercer Survey Finds,” Mercer, November 19, 2007). 2. MEDPAC: PRIVATE PLAN ENROLLEES IN POORER HEALTH Health outcomes for Medicare private health plan enrollees are at their lowest levels since quality reporting began in 1998, according to Zarabozo, a researcher for the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) sparking concern among commission members that private plans are providing substandard care to people with Medicare. Zarabozo, who presented the data at a November 9 MedPAC meeting, provided figures on the health status of plan enrollees from the most recent two-year period available (2004-2006). During that period, 13 plans reported enrollees' physical health as worse than expected, the most recorded in any reporting period available. In the previous two reporting periods (2002-2004 and 2003-2005), no plans reported the physical health status of enrollees as “worse” than national plan averages. Mental health care fared no better. Only five plans reported enrollees' mental health as “better than expected,” in contrast to 18 plans in 2003-2005. Seven plans reported mental health outcomes as significantly poorer than the national average, the highest since plan performance data was first gathered in 1998, when 15 plans reported substandard mental health outcomes. Medicare private plans also performed poorer than commercial or Medicaid private plans on performance measures and health outcomes. According to data collected by the National Committee for Quality Assurance, from 2005 to 2006 Medicare plans improved in only 7 of 38 reporting measures. During the same period, commercial plans improved in 30 of 44 measures, and Medicaid private plans improved in 34 of 43 measures. Several MedPAC commissioners expressed concern over Medicare private health plan performance, in part because private plans cost more than Original Medicare. Commissioner Dr. Wolter summed up the group's reactions by stating, “If we're going to pay for Medicare Advantage, we really want not only reporting, but performance.” Commissioners discussed a number of recommendations, such as linking plan payments to performance results, providing performance data from Original Medicare to aid consumers in plan choices, and extracting region-specific data for more detailed analyses. The recommendations will be put to a vote next month, when MedPAC will make formal recommendations to Congress. 3. RISING HEALTH CARE COSTS THREAT TO MEDICARE The increasing cost of health care, driven primarily by the cost of emerging medical technologies, is a greater threat to the financial sustainability of Medicare than the aging of baby boomers, according to a recent Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report. The Long-Term Outlook for Health Care Spending, released this month by the CBO, projects that medical coverage for a growing aged population will account for only 25 percent of Medicare spending growth through 2030. On the other hand, the rapid growth of health care spending, rooted in the rising cost of medical technology and increased use of services, will account for 75 percent of Medicare spending increases through 2030, and 90 percent through 2082. The CBO predicts that by 2082 spending on Medicare and Medicaid alone could account for one-fifth of the nation's gross domestic product. The projections, which were 50 percent higher than those released by the Medicare trustees, left federal regulations unchanged to demonstrate the long-term fiscal effects of current Medicare and Medicaid policy, which the report describes as “unsustainable.” The CBO recommends expanding research on cost-effective care and reimbursement methods that provide incentives for low-cost interventions and penalize providers who opt for high-cost and unnecessary care. According to Orszag, director of the CBO, between 5 and 50 percent of health care spending could be eliminated without harming health outcomes, with 30 percent given as a common estimate. In response to the report, Senator Max Baucus, Democrat of Montana, and chairman of the Finance Committee, vowed to jump-start hearings on health care costs and methods to overhauling the health system. He concluded that “finding ways to make the health care system more efficient and cost-effective will reduce costs for all health care users, public and private, and . . . will pave the way toward getting Federal spending truly under control.” 4. CALIFORNIA-BASED INSURANCE PLAN FINED $1 MILLION On November 15, the California Department of Managed Health Care (DMHC) fined Health Net, a California-based insurance company that covers nearly 240,000 people through Medicare Advantage plans, $1 million for linking staff bonuses to terminating coverage for enrollees in its commercial plans. According to recently released court documents, Health Net compensated Barbara Fowler, a senior analyst, with $20,000 in bonuses for retroactively rescinding individual and family health policies. Between 2000 and 2006, Fowler personally cancelled 1,600 policies, exceeding monthly targets and saving the company $35.5 million in medical expenses. Although Health Net strove to keep the details of the bonuses confidential to protect “proprietary information,” state documents were released as the result of a recent court case. Patsy Gates, a former Health Net enrollee, is suing the plan for $6 million in compensation and damages after her individual policy was rescinded during post-surgery chemotherapy sessions. Health Net claimed Gates, who suffers from breast cancer, provided an incorrect weight on her application and did not disclose a heart problem relating to prior use of Fen-Phen, a weight-loss drug linked to heart disease and pulmonary hypertension. Gates claimed that a lackadaisical broker, who performed an interview in the hair salon where she worked, caused her to give incorrect or incomplete information. Health Net's policy termination has left Gates with $200,000 in unpaid medical bills, as well as a catheter in her chest from the interrupted chemotherapy sessions. The DMHC fine is not the first action taken by the state for inappropriate plan termination. The department recently fined Blue Cross of California $1 million and Kaiser Permanente $325,000 for illegally terminating individual health insurance policies, and it continues to investigate Health Net, as well as three additional companies that offer individual health policies in the state—WellPoint, UnitedHealth, and Blue Shield of California. 5. CASE FLASH: NETWORK EXCEPTIONS Mrs. L was enrolled in a Medicare private health plan. She had a severe form of breast cancer and was receiving treatment from an oncologist who was in her plan's network. In October, Mrs. L received a letter from her Medicare private health plan informing her that starting November 1, the plan would no longer consider her oncologist in network. Mrs. L knew that she could change plans during the Annual Coordinated Election Period (ACEP), which runs every year from November 15 through December 31. However, if she changed plans her new coverage would not begin until January 1. Mrs. L needed coverage for her oncology treatment through the remainder of the year. Mrs. L called the Medicare Rights Center and spoke with a hotline counselor. The counselor explained that Medicare private health plans are allowed to make changes to their network of doctors throughout the year. However, plan enrollees also have a right to request an exception to the network restriction. The counselor told Mrs. L to ask for an “expedited review” by writing a letter to the plan, requesting that it allows her to continue getting her cancer treatment from the same oncologist at the in-network rate for the rest of the year. The counselor also told Mrs. L to have her doctor write a letter stating why continuity of care was important. A few days after Mrs. L sent the letters to her private health plan, the company agreed to allow her to continue to see her oncologist at the in-network rate through the end of the year. Since the exception was only for the remainder of the year, Mrs. L found a different Medicare private health plan that would consider her oncologist in network for the following year and enrolled in that plan during the ACEP. This message was generated by the Medicare Rights Center list-serve. If you have trouble (un)subscribing or have questions about Medicare Watch, please send an e-mail to medicarewatch@.... To sign up for additional newsletters, please visit our online registration form at http://www.medicarerights.org/subscribeframeset.html. If you want more information about the Medicare Rights Center, send an e-mail to info@.... Medicare Rights Center 520 Eighth Avenue, North Wing, 3rd Floor New York, NY 10018 Telephone: Fax: Web site: www.medicarerights.org Medicare Watch is MRC's fortnightly newsletter, established to strengthen communication with national and community-based organizations and professional agencies about current Medicare policy and consumer issues. Each edition contains news of recent policy developments affecting Medicare and health care generally and a case story from our hotline that illustrates steps professionals can take to get older adults and people with disabilities the health care they need. The Medicare Rights Center (MRC) is the largest independent source of Medicare information and assistance in the United States. Founded in 1989, MRC helps older adults and people with disabilities get good, affordable health care. Unsubscribe from this mailing. Modify your profile and subscription preferences. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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