New Federal Report Shows Impact of Federal Health Reforms on Kentucky
Nov 24th, 2009
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius released a report on November 23 that shows the impact proposed health reform would have on residents in each state. The following is a synopsis of the impact on Under reform in · 654,000 residents who do not currently have insurance and 196,000 residents who have non-group insurance could get affordable coverage through the health insurance exchange. · 444,000 residents could qualify for premium tax credits to help them purchase health coverage. · 724,000 seniors would receive free preventive services. · 129,000 seniors would have their brand-name drug costs in the Medicare Part D “doughnut hole” halved. · 44,800 small businesses could be helped by a small business tax credit to make premiums more affordable. Health Insurance Reform Provides Early Relief and Health Security. Families: The 4.3 million residents of · Ensures consumer protections in the insurance market. Insurance companies will no longer be able to place lifetime limits on the coverage they provide, use of annual limits will be restricted, and they will not be able to arbitrarily drop coverage. · Creates immediate options for people who can’t get insurance today. Ten percent of people in · Ensures free preventive services. Thirty-six percent of · Supports health coverage for early retirees. An estimated 66,800 from Seniors: · Lowers premiums by reducing Medicare’s overpayments to private plans. All Medicare beneficiaries pay the price of excessive overpayments through higher premiums – even the 87 percent of seniors in · Reduces prescription drug spending. Roughly 129,000 Medicare beneficiaries in · Covers free preventive services. Currently, seniors in Medicare must pay part of the cost of many preventive services on their own. For a colonoscopy that costs $637, this means that a senior must pay $148 – a price that can be prohibitively expensive. Under reform, a senior will not pay anything for that colonoscopy, or for any other recommended preventive service. A senior will also get free annual wellness visits to his or her provider, with a personalized prevention plan to remain in good health. Small businesses: While small businesses make up 72 percent of States: State budgets will be relieved from rising health care costs as reform: · Reduces state employee premiums. Coverage would immediately be expanded to the uninsured, decreasing the amount of uncompensated care costs that gets shifted to the premiums of state employees. For states that provide early retiree health benefits to their state employees, a reinsurance program would provide premium relief of up to $1,200 per family policy per year for all employees. · Reduces uncompensated care. Right now, providers in Health Insurance Reform Provides Stability, Security, and Choice. Provides relief from rising health care costs. · Ends the “hidden tax”. The $1.1 billion spent on uncompensated care in · Provides premium tax credits. Without reform, individuals and families in · Promotes health insurance portability and choice. Health insurance reform establishes a health insurance exchange that will provide individuals with a wide variety of choices and ensure that they will always have coverage, whether they change jobs, lose a job, move or get sick. Currently 654,000 residents of Supports long-term home and community based services: It is estimated that 65 percent of those who are 65 today will spend some time at home in need of long-term care services, which typically cost almost $18,000 per year. This means that 349,000 older residents of · Health insurance reform will create a new voluntary long-term care services insurance program, which will provide a cash benefit to help seniors and people with disabilities obtain services and supports that will enable them to remain in their homes and communities. · Reform will encourage states to expand their home and community based services through Medicaid by providing enhanced funding, and it will create a program to provide community support services for disabled Medicaid enrollees who would otherwise need to be in a nursing home. These programs could help improve care for many of the 213,000 disabled Medicaid beneficiaries in Health Insurance Reform Improves Quality and Reforms the Delivery System. · Reduces preventable readmissions. The current health care system does not place enough emphasis on improving quality of care. For example, nearly 20 percent of Medicare patients who are discharged from the hospital end up being readmitted within 30 days. For · Lessens Paperwork. Physicians spend on average about 140 hours and $68,000 a year just dealing with health insurance bureaucracy. For the 11,318 physicians in · Incentivizes primary care. Roughly 4,400 doctors in · Invests in the health primary care. Approximately 480,000 people, or 11 percent of Kentucky’s population, cannot access a primary care provider due to shortages in their communities. Health insurance reform will expand and improve programs to increase the number of health care providers, including doctors, nurses, and dentists, especially in rural and other underserved areas.
Proposals implemented in 2010 and 2011 will produce real benefits for: