Tag Archives: HealthCare Reform

How A Bill Could Dismantle California’s HealthCare System

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 Healthcare and Insurance

Healthcare and Health Insurance are directly linked, both the subject of contentious debate, as the costs for healthcare and insurance continue to spiral at rates that are unsustainable.

No doubt, given the unlikely chance that anything further will come from Washington on a National level, states will attempt to force changes to try and improve the system.

So, Here’s The Rundown

California Assembly Bill 3087, introduced by Assemblyman Ash Kalra, D-San Jose, would create a government-run rate-setting process that would unilaterally cap payments to doctors, dentists, hospitals and other clinicians for the health care services they provide to people with commercial health insurance.

While we aren’t sure exactly HOW the state proposes to regulate the free market, nonetheless, there is interest and momentum to do something and so it’s an interesting bill to look at.

Because AB 3087 does nothing to address the underlying causes for rising health care costs, this legislation would mean that hospitals and doctors will be paid less, regardless of what it actually costs to provide care.

That is like telling your local coffee shop that you are only going to pay them $2 for a $3 cup of coffee. Just because you have decided to “pay” less doesn’t mean that the actual cost of that cup of coffee has dropped. The coffee shop would lose money since the price it charges includes not only the cost of the coffee itself but also the costs for labor, materials and rent.

The same would be true for hospitals if AB 3087 is enacted. The bill would not regulate the prices a hospital would pay for a new imaging equipment, medical devices or life-saving drugs. Nor would it solve the chronic payment shortfalls that plague the Medicare and Medi-Cal programs.

For more than two decades, these government-sponsored programs have paid hospitals, doctors and other providers far less than the actual cost of care. (For example, Medi-Cal only pays hospitals about 68 cents for every dollar of care provided to a Medi-Cal patient.)

According to an analysis by the California Hospital Association, AB 3087 would cut $18 billion every year from hospitals throughout the state. Cuts this deep will result in devastating impacts on your ability to get the health care services you need, when you need them. Many hospitals could be forced to cut vital programs or even close altogether. Even getting a doctor’s appointment could be in jeopardy as many established doctors cut back or retire early, and newer physicians decide to flee the state.

Ultimately, whether AB3807 passes or fails, we will watch and see how each attempt to change the status – quo impacts the pricing, quality, and ultimately the delivery of healthcare and insurance. One thing for sure: no change to the system will come easily.

Ensure That Your California Business Is Compliant

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Proposed HR Compliance Laws

California law makers are currently reviewing several proposed laws that effect employers of all sizes (and not necessarily in a good way.)  The following laws are likely to become effective within the next 12 months.


  • Paid Sick Leave Expansion (AB 2841) – This bill would expand the current paid sick leave law on the books per county to 10 days (80 hours) of paid sick leave.
  • Employment Protection for Medical Marijuana Users (AB 2069) – This bill would amend the Fair Employment and Housing Act to make it an unlawful employment practice for an employer to take adverse action against an applicant or employee. All because of a positive drug test for marijuana (by a medical marijuana cold holder) or because of one’s status as a medical marijuana card holder.

[An employer may still discipline an employee for being under the influence while working or being on the employer’s property. Key change relates to the area of employee accommodations. Exceptions would be made from employers who would lose a license or monetary benefit under federal law.]

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Get Informed on Rising Health Care Costs

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 Association Based Health Insurance – A Cure For Small Group?

Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), employers that do not meet the 50 or more full-time or full-time equivalent employee threshold to be Applicable Large Employers (ALEs), are not required to offer health coverage. Nor do they face penalties. Not surprisingly, as a result, smaller businesses often do not offer coverage.

New regulations proposed by the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) want to change that dynamic. And in a thriving economy, where unemployment means retention is key, health insurance is a key driver in employee acquisition and retention.

Up to 11 million Americans working for small businesses or who are sole proprietors and their families lack employer-sponsored insurance. The DOL hopes new rules on HOW healthcare plans are purchased will close the gap of uninsured Americans; without eliminating options available in the healthcare marketplace.

New Rules

The proposed regulations will allow small business health plans—known as Association Health Plans (AHP)—to expand under The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA). This may allow the self-employed and other small businesses to band together to form their own associations for the purposes of providing healthcare coverage.

AHPs would be required to accept all applicants and could not deny individuals with pre-existing conditions or charge more for people who are sick. However, they could reduce prescription drug coverage and increase coverage in other categories to compensate for the reduction, the effect of which would be to increase costs for chronic care patients.

The employer members of these plans would need to be in the same trade, industry, line of business, profession, or to have their principal place of business in the same state, or, if in multiple states, in the same metropolitan area.

Under the current regulations, an AHP is considered a single plan only if the association has a purpose or function unrelated to offering healthcare benefits and the employer members have a common economic interest. So, few options exist and all have to comply with the ACA’s “essential benefit rules”.

The end result of these new rules, or so the thinking goes, is that this will make premiums more affordable. The trade-off is that these health insurance plans would be less extensive then what is usually required by health insurance plans offered by the current marketplace. Lots of review and legislation await the proposed offering of new association plans. However, they offer a glimmer of home to the problem of rising health insurance costs.

CVS to Buy Aetna for $69 Billion in a Deal That May Reshape the Health Industry

December 5, 2017
 

Source: The New York Times

CVS Health said on Sunday that it had agreed to buy Aetna for about $69 billion in a deal that would combine the drugstore giant with one of the biggest health insurers in the United States and has the potential to reshape the nation’s health care industry.

The transaction, one of the largest of the year, reflects the increasingly blurred lines between the traditionally separate spheres of a rapidly changing industry. It represents an effort to make both companies more appealing to consumers as health care that was once delivered in a doctor’s office more often reaches consumers over the phone, at a retail clinic or via an app.

The merger comes at a time of turbulent transformation in health care. Insurers, hospitals and pharmacy companies are bracing for a possible disruption in government programs like Medicare as a result of the Republicans’ plan to cut taxes. Congress remains at an impasse over the future of the Affordable Care Act, while employers and consumers are struggling under the weight of rising medical costs, including the soaring price of prescription drugs. And rapid changes in technology have raised the specter of new competitors — most notably Amazon.

A combined CVS-Aetna could position itself as a formidable figure in this changing landscape. Together, the companies touch most of the basic health services that people regularly use, providing an opportunity to benefit consumers. CVS operates a chain of pharmacies and retail clinics that could be used by Aetna to provide care directly to patients, while the merged company could be better able to offer employers one-stop shopping for health insurance for their workers.

But critics worry that customers could also find their choices sharply limited. The deal risks leaving patients with less choice of where to get care or fill a prescription if those with Aetna insurance are forced to go to CVS for much of their care.

On Sunday, the two companies emphasized their ability to transform CVS’s 10,000 pharmacy and clinic locations into community-based sites of care that would be far less expensive for patients.

“We think of it as creating a new front door to health care in America,” CVS Health’s chief executive, Larry J. Merlo, said in an interview.

The merger would establish a new way of delivering care, with nurses, pharmacists and others available to counsel people about their diabetes or do the lab work necessary to diagnose a condition, Mr. Merlo said. “We know we can make health care more affordable and less expensive.”

Mark T. Bertolini, Aetna’s chief executive, said that by using CVS’s locations, the company can provide people with a better way of accessing medical care.

“It’s in their community. It’s in their home,” he said. He added, “CVS has the draw. People trust their pharmacist.”

It is the development of community-based clinics — capable of delivering care with the technology and health information available from both parties — that could prove to be the biggest change brought about the deal.

The hope would be that consumers would not only be able to see savings by going to a retail store to treat a sore throat but also have better oversight of a chronic illness, such as diabetes or heart disease. They could get advice on how to lose weight, or undergo tests to monitor their health.

“If they can drive the adoption of the care delivery model, that’s a big deal,” said Ana Gupte, a senior health care analyst for Leerink Partners.

The merger agreement came as another factor weighs on the minds of all in the health care industry: Amazon, which has been rumored to be preparingfor an entry into the pharmacy business. Jeff Bezos, the Amazon chief executive, and his e-commerce juggernaut have already overturned many industries: book buying, retail shopping, groceries and Hollywood, using fierce customer loyalty and enormous reach as cudgels against incumbent players.

But CVS and Aetna have had a business partnership dating back seven years, and have steadily converged into similar visions of how the health care industry was evolving. Conversations about a deeper bond eventually crystallized into deal talks within the last two months, according to a person with direct knowledge of the discussions.

Although neither chief executive mentioned Amazon by name, both said that what they were creating was a compelling opportunity in and of itself.

“Chasing our competitors has never been a solution,” Mr. Bertolini said. He added, “Our competitors will do what they do.”

Many companies are seeking shelter in the arms of their former adversaries, with well-known medical groups like the Cleveland Clinic joining with Oscar Health, an insurer. With federal officials blocking traditional mergers — like the megadeal that featured Anthem and Cigna, the nation’s largest insurers, and one involving Aetna and its rival Humana — companies are looking at combinations that take them beyond their traditional lines of business.

Many analysts view the combination of CVS and Aetna as a defensive move by the companies. CVS Health, which also recently signed an agreement with Anthem to help the insurer start its own internal pharmacy benefit manager, is looking to protect its business with Aetna as it fends off rivals like UnitedHealth Group’s OptumRx and others. Aetna, foiled in its attempt to buy Humana, is searching for new ways to expand its business.

The merger could also fundamentally reshape the business of overseeing drug coverage for insurers, an industry that is dominated by three large players and that has increasingly come under scrutiny over the past year as public anger over high drug prices has expanded beyond the usual culprits — most notably the pharmaceutical industry — to lesser-known players like pharmacy benefit managers.

Under the terms of the deal, CVS will pay about $207 a share, based on Friday’s closing prices. Roughly $145 a share of that would be in cash, with the remainder in newly issued CVS stock. The deal is expected to close in the second half of next year, subject to approval by shareholders of both companies as well as regulators.

Antitrust approval has become an interesting question in the Trump administration, which bankers and lawyers had thought would be more tolerant of consolidation than its predecessor.

A combination of a drugstore company and an insurer is considered less problematic than a merger of two players in the same business, which could reduce competition and hurt consumers. Such concerns ultimately sank Aetna’s efforts to buy Humana, and Anthem’s push to buy Cigna, when the Obama administration signaled its opposition to such consolidation.

CVS’s proposed takeover of Aetna is a so-called vertical merger, combining companies in two different industries. But while such deals have traditionally met little opposition in Washington, the Justice Department has sued to block AT&T’s $85.4 billion takeover of Time Warner on the grounds that it would create too powerful of a content company.

Both CVS and Aetna played down the prospects of regulators moving to block their deal. The breakup fee for the transaction is not especially large, reflecting that belief.

Mr. Bertolini asserted that the companies would not raise prices for consumers. “It doesn’t make sense for us to charge people more when we want more people in the store,” he said.

But analysts and other merger experts warn that the deal could be blocked by federal antitrust officials who worry that it could lessen competition. One area of focus may be Medicare; both companies are significant players in offering prescription drug plans to Medicare beneficiaries.

While the companies said they want to lower costs, CVS also makes money on rebates from drug makers and on filling prescriptions through its pharmacies.

David A. Balto, an antitrust lawyer who has been sharply critical of combinations among insurers and pharmacy benefit managers, said that he was wary of having retailers in charge of people’s health. He argued that doctors may be in a better position to treat illness than retail executives.

“Who do you want to run the health care system?” he said.

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HHS Rules on Wellness Incentives for 2014

Final Regulation on Wellness Released May 29, 2013 The Obama Administration released a final regulation this week about changes to employer-sponsored wellness programs. The final rule is remarkably similar to the proposed rule released

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this past winter and increases the maximum allowable reward for a health-contingent bona fide wellness program from 20% of premium value to 30%. Furthermore, for wellness programs designed to prevent tobacco use, the maximum allowable reward value is now 50%. One concern that the Administration has struggled with in the development of the final rule was that some voluntary health organizations and consumer groups have charged that health-contingent wellness programs are discriminatory. To address this issue, the final rule clarifies a requirement that has already existing under federal wellness program rules: If a person cannot physically meet health-contingent wellness program goals, the employer-sponsored plan “must provide a reasonable alternative standard that accommodates the recommendations of the individual’s personal physician.” Furthermore, employers still have

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to abide by other laws intended to prevent discrimination, like the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. The final rule will be published in the Federal Register on June 3 and will become

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effective 60 days later; however, it impacts group wellness programs on or after January 1, 2014. The Administration stated when it released the final rule that it anticipates issuing further guidance on wellness programs, either in the form of sub-regulatory guidance, such as a frequently asked questions document, or, if needed, via minor changes to the actual final rule.

In addition to the regulation, the Administration released the text of a wellness program report to Congress. It was conducted by the RAND Corporation for the Department of Labor and was required by the health reform law. The report states: “Most employers who offer workplace wellness programs regard them as a viable strategy to contain healthcare costs. A review of the literature identified randomized controlled trials that found workplace wellness programs did result in significant decreases in healthcare costs, including a savings in medical costs ranging from $11 to $626 per year. The employer survey found that 60 percent of employers offering a wellness program stated that their programs reduced healthcare costs, and around four-fifths reported that they decreased absenteeism and increased productivity.” However, the study also notes that most employers do not formally evaluate the effectiveness of their wellness programs, and that overall cost savings may not be statistically significant.

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