Transcript Document

Implications of Insurance and Health Reform
for Mississippi Hospitals – As Employers and
as Health Care Providers
The Mississippi Bar – Joint Session of Business Law and Health
Law Sections
Thursday, July 8, 2010
The Sandestin Hilton
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Healthcare and Insurance Reform:
A Big Deal
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Goals of Health Insurance Reform
• Where We Were
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46 Million uninsured
25 million underinsured
Insureds bear cost of uninsured
Providers and suppliers cost shift to accommodate treating
of uninsured
- Insureds pay higher premiums
- Small group and individual coverage expensive/not available
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Goals of Health Insurance Reform
• Where Health Insurance Reform Proposes to Take
Us
– Affordable commercial insurance
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Continuation of employer-sponsored group market
Subsidies for individuals and small businesses
Subsidies for 55-64 age group
Premium regulation
– Coverage for U.S. residents
• Minimum essential coverage
• New individual and group plans: qualified plans
• Rights for patients
– More competitive insurance market
• The Exchanges
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Mandated Changes in States’ Regulation of
Individual and Group Insurance Markets
• Insurance Market Reform
– Effective for plan years beginning on/after 9/23/10
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Elimination of lifetime benefit caps
Restrictions on plan rescission
Coverage of preventive care
Extension of coverage for children through age 25 and up to the age 26
Standards for preparing summaries of plan benefits
– Effective for plan years beginning on/after 1/1/14
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Guaranteed issue and renewal
Elimination of annual benefit caps
Premium rating reforms
Elimination of pre-existing condition exclusions
Minimum coverage and cost-sharing design standards for
individual/small group markets
• Restrictions on coverage waiting periods in excess of 90 days
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Medical Loss Ratio
• Starting in 2011:
– Large group plans that spend less than 85 percent
of premium revenue and small group and
individual market plans that spend less than 80
percent of premium revenue on clinical services
and quality must provide a rebate to enrollees
• National Association of Insurance
Commissioners missed its June 1, 2010
deadline and will complete definitions and
standardized methodologies sometime before
December 31, 2010
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Coverage Expansion
• 95% of legal U.S. residents will have health insurance by 2019,
up from 83% today
• Health insurance exchanges and federal affordability subsidies
• Provision to allow young adults to stay on their parents’
• insurance until age 26
• Medicaid
• Employer responsibility and small business tax credits
• Health coverage will be extended to 32 million Americans
– 16 million through Medicaid expansions
• 23 million will remain uninsured; one-third are illegal immigrants
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Medicaid Expansion - 2014
• Expansion of Coverage
– Up to 133% of Federal Poverty Level for working
adults
• $14,404 for individual and $29,326 for family of four in
2009
– Employees eligible for Medicaid are not eligible for
Exchange-based subsidy
– Mississippi Medicaid enrollees will increase by
400,000
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Medicare Payment Revisions
• Reductions in Payment for Inpatient/ Outpatient,
Psychiatric, Rehabilitation Hospital Care
• Focus on Preventive Care to Reduce Expensive
Procedures
• Implement Innovative Systems to Deliver Healthcare
– ACOs, Medical Homes, Community-Based Services
• Adjust Hospital/Other Healthcare Payments to
Reduce Costs
– Value-based purchasing, Hospital Readmission adjustments,
Hospital Acquired Conditions adjustments, Post-acute care
demonstration project
• Reduce Payments to Disproportionate Share
Hospitals
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Comments From Panel Members
• Tammra Cascio
• Chadwick W. Russell
• Gary G. Marchand
• Gerald D. Wages
• Wallace Strickland
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IMPACT ON MISSISSIPPI HOSPITALS
“It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but
the one most responsive to change.”
- Author Unknown
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HOSPITALS AS EMPLOYERS
• The Administration recently released preliminary rules for
grandfathering existing health insurance plans. Do you think
that the rules will allow you to preserve your current plans?
• What are most important challenges facing hospitals as
sponsors of employee health insurance? How will the reform
legislation make it easier or harder for hospitals to meet those
challenges?
• Will hospitals continue to provide employee coverage?
• Health insurance reform limits annual coverage caps and
prohibits lifetime caps for plan years beginning in September. It
also allows dependent coverage until the age 26. What impact
will these immediate health insurance reform measures have on
Mississippi hospitals?
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HOSPITALS AS HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS
• Impact of Increased Insurance Coverage:
– As of 2014, the health care bills mandate
individual insurance coverage and increase
Medicaid eligibility for individuals whose income is
133% of the federal poverty level or below.
– Do you perceive that this increase in the numbers
of insureds will significantly impact emergency
room registrations? What about overall hospital
admissions and length of stay?
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HOSPITALS AS HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS
• Payment Increases:
– Several healthcare reform measures offer increased
reimbursement mechanisms for rural hospitals and hospitals
qualifying as 340B hospitals.
– Do you anticipate that these payment increases will replace
reimbursement lost through various Medicare payment
reductions?
• Payment Reductions:
– What do hospitals perceive as the impact of the revised
payment mechanisms including productivity adjustments to
annual market basket calculations, bundled post-acute care
program, hospital acquired conditions and hospital
readmission program adjustments; reductions in
disproportionate share payments (both Medicare and
Medicaid)?
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HOSPITALS AS HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS
• Impact/Import of Innovative Delivery and
Payment Systems on Mississippi Hospitals
– The new legislation offers a number of new
opportunities and challenges to hospitals and other
providers including value-based purchasing,
accountable care organizations, medical homes and
other community-based Medicare and Medicaid
initiatives.
– Does your hospital and/or health system have plans
to take advantage of these programs?
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Health Care Workforce Initiatives
• National commission to review health care workforce
and projected needs
• Competitive grants for state workforce development
(eff. 2010)
• Improved federally supported student loans
– Better terms for medical students in primary care
– Increased loan amounts for nurses
• New loan program for pediatric subspecialists and
pediatric/adolescent mental health providers working
in underserved areas
• Grants for increased primary care training; increased
funding for geriatric education centers; primary care
extension programs
• Will these initiatives solve the physician shortage?
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HOSPITALS AS HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS
• Impact on Physician/Hospital Relationships
– One of the themes of the reform legislation is
improved care coordination among providers.
– Do you think that this will encourage closer
hospital-physician integration?
– What do you anticipate are physician
expectations?
– How will continued uncertainty about permanent
physician Medicare payment reform affect
integration opportunities?
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HOSPITALS AS HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS
• HITECH EHR Incentives
– Both the ARRA incentives for eligible hospitals and eligible
professionals to adopt electronic health records through the
offering of incentive payments and the various healthcare
reform measures appear to encourage and/or rely on health
informatics and electronic health records for implementation.
– What steps are your facilities taking to position yourselves to
qualify for EHR incentives and to be able to meet quality
standards and report those standards as required by multiple
healthcare reform measures?
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HOSPITALS AS CHARITABLE
ORGANIZATIONS
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Healthcare reform measures include certain
requirements for 501(c)(3) entities through
the new section 501(r).
Requires that charitable organizations:
– Prepare community health needs assessments
every three years
– Maintain financial assistance policies among
other requirements.
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How will hospitals meet these requirements
and what additional resources will be
required?
THANK YOU!!!
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Dinetia M. Newman
Balch & Bingham, LLP
401 East Capital Street, Suite 200
Jackson, MS 39201
601-965-8169
[email protected]
Gary G. Marchand
Gulfport Memorial Hospital
4500 Thirteenth Street
Gulfport, MS 39501
228-865-3071
[email protected]
Gerald D. Wages
North Mississippi Medical Center
830 South Gloster Street
Tupelo, MS 38801
662-377-3141
[email protected]
Chadwick W. Russell
Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company
1401 Livingston Lane
Jackson, MS 39213
601-981-5332 ext 1834
[email protected]
Wallace Strickland
Rush Health Systems, Inc.
1314 19th Avenue
Meridian, MS 39301
601-703-9618
[email protected]
Tammra Cascio
Gulf Guaranty Life Insurance Company
4785 Interstate 55 North, Suite 200
Jackson, MS 39206
1-800-248-3146
[email protected]