Oct. 16, 2009

This Week in Health Care Reform

This week, Senate Finance Committee members voted on the committee's health care reform bill, and the conversation shifted to how to reconcile the bill with pending legislation from the House.

Senate Negotiations

Senate Finance Committee Passes Bill: On Tuesday, after months of negotiations, the Senate Finance Committee passed its $829 billion health care reform package with a 14-9 vote. One Republican, Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME) voted with Democrats on the committee. The proposal would expand coverage to 29 million uninsured Americans while reducing deficits by $81 billion over 10 years. The bill includes insurance market reforms, an individual mandate to purchase coverage that appears reduced when compared with prior versions, an expansion of Medicaid, a cut in future Medicare spending, new fees and taxes on employers, and billions in new fees on health insurance and other sectors of the health care industry. The bill also includes seed funding for state cooperative plans and subsidies for other state coverage programs.

Shortly after the vote, labor unions and large business organizations requested changes to the Finance Committee bill primarily because it omitted a public option . The swift feedback from interest groups underscores the difficult road ahead for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV), who will work to merge the Finance Committee bill with the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) bill passed last summer. Unions and lawmakers such as Sens. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) have criticized the legislation for not including a public option . At the same time, insurance companies, medical device makers and others in the health care industry are voicing strong concerns about the increased premium costs of the proposed legislation.

House Activities

Legislators Look to Reconcile Health Care Measures: House leaders indicated that negotiators have trimmed costs for its proposed health care reform bill to President Barack Obama's goal of $900 billion, down from $1.2 trillion. Aides said the final bill will include slightly lower subsidies for copayments and deductibles for people who buy coverage through the new insurance exchanges that be would established for those who can't access affordable employer coverage. A provision preventing doctors who see Medicare patients from having their fees cut was excluded, while a surcharge tax on incomes of individuals ($500,000 or more) and families ($1 million or more) was included. House members will consider including more low income families in Medicaid instead of the insurance exchange market, and adopting tax increases featured in the Senate Finance Committee bill, including a profit tax on health insurers. They have, however, rejected the tax on "Cadillac" plans.

Additional Activities

Insurance Industry Study Indicates Higher Costs: On Sunday, the insurance industry trade association, America's Health Insurance Plans, released a study indicating that the proposed Finance Committee legislation would raise the price of a typical policy. The study, completed by PricewaterhouseCoopers, projected that family premiums could be $4,000 higher and individual premiums could be $1,500 higher in 2019. The report details that a weak individual mandate, measures preventing insurers from barring people with pre-existing conditions, taxes on high-cost health care plans and new taxes on some health care industry sectors will rapidly raise costs.

On Wednesday, another study conducted by Oliver Wyman Inc. and sponsored by the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association indicated that the proposed legislation would raise premiums 50% for individual and 19% for small group policies. Premium increases would likely be a result of a weak individual insurance mandate over the next five years.

Looking Ahead

Following the Senate Finance Committee vote, health care reform legislation negotiations will continue behind closed doors. Sen. Reid will merge the Senate Finance and the HELP Committee bills. He has indicated that the full Senate will begin debating the merged legislation the week of October 26.

House leaders are expected to vote the first week of November.

CMS ends "gag order" on reform's impact on Medicare Advantage.

The Hill (10/19, Romm) reports that Republicans are celebrating the end of a CMS policy "banning Medicare providers from disseminating information to subscribers about possible cuts" to Medicare Advantage plans from healthcare reform as "a party victory" and a "total policy shift." However, the Obama Administration "insisted that its original order, issued at the end of September, was merely a legal guidance for Medicare insurers -- not a 'gag order' on plan changes, as Republicans first charged." CMS issued the order "after Humana, a leading Medicare Advantage provider, mailed its beneficiaries to inform them how the Senate Finance Committee healthcare proposal could affect their plans." Also noting Republicans' assertion that the order is "a reversal of a 'gag order' on plan communications with beneficiaries about Medicare cuts in health overhaul legislation,"

The New York Times (10/17, A10, Pear) also reported the Obama Administration "backed away" from the order, which "had prohibited insurance companies from warning Medicare recipients about the possible loss of benefits under pending legislation to overhaul the healthcare system. Medicare officials set off a political storm when they tried to stop such communications last month."

latest news pic Archives of: Past Weeks in Health Reform

10/14/09 - This week on Health Care Reform
10/09/09 - This week on Health Care Reform
10/07/09 - This week on Health Care Reform
10/02/09 - This week on Health Care Reform
  9/30/09 - This week on Health Care Reform
  9/25/09 - This week on Health Care Reform
  9/24/09 - This week on Health Care Reform
  9/18/09 - This week on Health Care Reform
  9/11/09 - This week on Health Care Reform

Home Health Insurance Seniors Health Dental Plans Group Health Online HTH Travel Health Insurance  Site Map

Dental & Vision for Everyone   Vision Only Plan  Accident/Medical Plans(CA)  Contact Us


HTH Travel Insurance logo

Important Disclaimer:  Answers and comments provided above are general information, and are not intended to substitute for informed professional medical, psychiatric, psychological, tax, legal, investment, accounting, governmental, or other professional advice. We do not endorse, and expressly disclaims liability for any product, manufacturer, distributor, service, health plan, or service provider mentioned or any opinion expressed in the website.  Replies, comments, or information gathered on barricksinsurance.com  website may not be accurate but are intended to be helpful.

Barricks Insurance Services
13900 NW Passage #302, Marina Del Rey, CA 90292
Phone:   (310) 827-7286    |   Fax:   (310) 827-0256
Toll-Free 1-877-Look4Life  (1-877-566-5454)

©1995  Barricks Insurance Services. CA License #0383850
Licensed in AL, AR, AZ, CA, CO, CT, FL, GA, IA, IL, IN, KS, KY,
                   LA, MD, MI, MO, MS, NC, NE, NH, NM, NV, NY, OH,
                   OK, OR, PA, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, WI, WV