Health Care Act: Immediate Benefits for New York

The Affordable Care Act: Immediate Benefits for New York

Small business tax credits. 340,000 small businesses in New York could be helped by a new small business tax credit that makes it easier for businesses to provide coverage to their workers and makes premiums more affordable.1 Small businesses pay, on average, 18 percent more than large businesses for the same coverage, and health insurance premiums have gone up three times faster than wages in the past 10 years. This tax credit is just the first step towards bringing those costs down and making coverage affordable for small businesses.

Closing the Medicare Part D donut hole. Last year, roughly 246,000 Medicare beneficiaries in New York hit the donut hole, or gap in Medicare Part D drug coverage, and received no extra help to defray the cost of their prescription drugs.2 Medicare beneficiaries in New York who hit the gap this year will automatically be mailed a one-time $250 rebate check. These checks will begin to be mailed to beneficiaries in mid-June and will be mailed monthly throughout the year as new beneficiaries hit the donut hole. The new law continues to provide additional discounts for seniors on Medicare in the years ahead and completely closes the donut hole by 2020.

Support for health coverage for early retirees. An estimated 283,000 people from New York retired before they were eligible for Medicare and have health coverage through their former employers. Unfortunately, the number of firms that provide health coverage to their retirees has decreased over time.3 Beginning June 1, 2010, a $5 billion temporary early retiree reinsurance program will help stabilize early retiree coverage and help ensure that firms continue to provide health coverage to their early retirees. Companies, unions, and state and local governments are eligible for these benefits.

New consumer protections in the insurance market beginning on or after September 23, 2010.

1. Insurance companies will no longer be able to place lifetime limits on the coverage they provide, ensuring that the 10 million New York residents with private insurance coverage never have to worry about their coverage running out and facing catastrophic out-of-pocket costs.

2. Insurance companies will be banned from dropping people from coverage when they get sick, protecting the 734,000 individuals who purchase insurance in the individual market from dishonest insurance practices.

3. Insurance companies will not be able to exclude children from coverage because of a pre-existing condition, giving parents across New York peace of mind.

4. Insurance plans’ use of annual limits will be tightly regulated to ensure access to needed care. This will protect the 9.3 million residents of New York with health insurance from their employer, along with anyone who signs up with a new insurance plan in New York.

5. Health insurers offering new plans will have to develop an appeals process to make it easy for enrollees to dispute the denial of a medical claim.

6. Patients’ choice of doctors will be protected by allowing plan members in new plans to pick any participating primary care provider, prohibiting insurers from requiring prior authorization before a woman sees an ob-gyn, and ensuring access to emergency care.

Extending coverage to young adults. Beginning on or after September 23, 2010, plans and issuers that offer coverage to children on their parents’ policy must allow children to remain on their parents’ policy until they turn 26, unless the adult child has another offer of job-based coverage in some cases. This provision will bring relief to roughly 77,800 individuals in New York who could now have quality affordable coverage through their parents.4 Some employers and the vast majority of insurers have agreed to cover adult children immediately.

Affordable insurance for uninsured with pre-existing conditions. $297 million federal dollars are available to New York starting July 1 to provide coverage for uninsured residents with pre-existing medical conditions through a new transitional high-risk pool program, funded entirely by the Federal government. The program is a bridge to 2014 when Americans will have access to affordable coverage options in the new health insurance exchanges and insurance companies will be prohibited from denying coverage to Americans with pre-existing conditions. If states choose not to run the program, the Federal government will administer the program for those residents.

Strengthening community health centers. Beginning October 1, 2010, increased funding for Community Health Centers will help nearly double the number of patients seen by the centers over the next five years. The funding could not only help the 508 Community Health Centers in New York but also support the construction of new centers.

More doctors where people need them. Beginning October 1, 2010, the Act will provide funding for the National Health Service Corps ($1.5 billion over five years) for scholarships and loan repayments for doctors, nurses and other health care providers who work in areas with a shortage of health professionals. This will help the 11% of New York’s population who live in an under served area.

New Medicaid options for states. For the first time, New York has the option of Federal Medicaid funding for coverage for all low-income populations, irrespective of age, disability, or family status.

From Site: Health Reform.gov         Friday 11, Jun 2010 11:47am 

Medicare: The Basics; Parts A,B,C, D

Here’s a video on the basics of Medicare:

All about Medicare Part B&Part D Plans

From post by InsureHealthOnline admin (3/29/10)

Medicare is a social insurance program defined and administered by the United States government, to provide health insurance coverage to people aged 65 and above, or who meet a few other special criteria.

The original Medicare program has two parts: Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance), and Medicare Part B (Medical Insurance). Prescription drugs are normally not covered by original Medicare. Medicare Part D plans provides more comprehensive drug coverage. Medicare Part C, also known as Medicare Advantage plan is another way for beneficiaries to receive their Medicare Part A, B, and Medicare D benefits.

More about Medicare Part B
Medicare Part B medical insurance helps pay for some services and products not covered by Part A, generally on an outpatient basis. Part B can be deferred if the beneficiary is still actively working and receiving employer healthcare benefits or is covered under spouses plan.

Initial Enrollment Period.
You can enroll in Medicare Part B with the Social Security. During this Initial Enrollment Period, there is a seven month enrollment window available to you when you first “age-in” or turn 65.  The seven month enrollment window runs three months before your birth month, the month of your birth, and three months after your birth month.  If you enroll during this period, there are no penalties and your coverage will be effective on either the date of eligibility (1st day of birth month) or the first of the month after enrolling, whichever is later.

Special Enrollment Period (SEP)
is an enrollment period available if you were covered by an employer or union group health plan and lost employer coverage.  At this time, you can enroll in Medicare Part B and there will generally will be no penalty added to the Part B premium. Keep in mind, you only have a certain window of time to enroll in Part B without incurring a late enrollment penalty.  It is advised to not wait any longer than 63 days, which is generally when insurance companies tend to use the pre-existing condition exclusion.

General Enrollment Period or Annual Enrollment Period
is available each year November 15th – December 31st. If you did NOT enroll for Part D (presciption drugs) during the Initial Enrollment Period (when you turned age 65 or “aged-in” to medicare) you can only enroll in a prescription drug or Part D plan during this Annual Enrollment Period and may pay a late enrollment penalty if you have been without a prescription drug plan.

Open Enrollment Period
is available the first three months, January 1 through March 31, of any calendar year.  During this enrollment period the only restriction is that you can NOT enroll or drop a prescription drug plan.

Medicare Part B
Medicare Part B coverage includes nursing and physician services, laboratory, x-rays, and diagnostic tests, pneumonia and influenza vaccinations, blood transfusions, renal dialysis, outpatient hospital procedures, limited ambulance transportation, immuno suppressive drugs for organ transplant recipients,chemotherapy, hormonal treatments such as Lupron, and other outpatient medical treatments administered in a doctor’s office. Medication administration gets covered under Part B if administered by the physician during an office visit.

Part B also helps with durable medical equipment (DME), including canes,walkers,wheelchairs, and mobility scooters for those with mobility impairments. Prosthetic devices like artificial limbs and breast prosthesis following mastectomy, one pair of eye glasses following a cataract surgery, and oxygen for home use is also covered. Complex rules are used to manage the benefit, and advisories are periodically issued which describe coverage criteria. On the national level these advisories are issued by CMS, and are known as National Coverage Determinations (NCD). Local Coverage Determinations apply only within a multi-state area that is managed by a Medicare Part B contractor, and Local Medical Review Policies (LMRP) were superseded by LCDs in 2003.

Medicare Part D Plans
Medicare D went into effect on January 1, 2006. Anyone with Part A or B is eligible for Medicare Part D Plans. This became possible due to the passage of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act. In order to receive this benefit, a person with Medicare must enroll in a stand-alone Prescription Drug Plan (PDP) or Medicare Advantage plan with prescription drug coverage (MA-PD). These plans are approved and regulated by the Medicare program, but are actually designed and administered by private health insurance companies. Unlike Original Medicare Part A and B, Medicare Part D Plans are not standardized. The plans choose which drugs (or even classes of drugs) they wish to cover, at what level (or tier) they wish to cover it, and are free to choose not to cover some drugs at all. As an exception, Medicare specifically excludes certain drugs from Medicare part D coverage, including but not limited to benzodiaze pines,cough suppressant and barbiturates. Plans that cover excluded drugs are not allowed to pass those costs on to Medicare D, and plans are required to repay CMS if they are found to have billed Medicare in these cases.

Note: Some of the original article’s content was edited to provide more accurate and up-to-date information.

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