Transcript Document
The Affordable Care Act
and LGBT Older Adults
Discussion Guide
Introduction: The Affordable Care Act
and LGBT Older Adults
“The Affordable Care Act may represent
the strongest foundation we have ever
created to begin closing LGBT health
disparities.” –U.S. Secretary of Health and
Human Services Kathleen Sebelius
Introduction: The Affordable Care Act
and LGBT Older Adults
On Wednesday, May 22, Pfizer and SAGE (Services and Advocacy for GLBT
Elders) co-hosted a panel discussion on the Affordable Care Act (ACA)
and its impact on older Americans, in particular LGBT older adults. The
ACA has the potential to dramatically improve health care for LGBT older
people by expanding coverage, strengthening consumer rights and
protections, improving data collection efforts and more. The panel
featured:
Catherine Thurston, Senior Director of Programs, SAGE (moderator)
Raul Damas, Senior Director of US Policy, Pfizer
Joe Baker, President, Medicare Rights Center
Jay Laudato, Executive Director, Callen-Lorde Community Health Center
Presentation and Discussion Flow
Next up we have three videos from the panel
followed by a set of suggested discussion questions.
We will watch each video and then have a short group
discussion followed by the next video and more
discussion and so on. The last video is the question
and answer from the live event.
What is one thing you keep hearing
about the Affordable Care Act
that interests or concerns you?
Welcome from Ken Cole
Video 1 Discussion Questions
Ken makes the statement, “By taking charge of the
inevitable process of getting older, we can get old on
our own terms.”
What does getting older on your own terms mean
to you?
What empowers you about getting older?
Panel Discussion on ACA
Video 2 Discussion Questions: Part 1
Overview of the ACA—Raul Damas, Pfizer
Raul mentions the following goals of the ACA:
1) Increase coverage
2) Improve quality
3) Reduce cost
Based on what you know about the ACA, do the goals Raul Damas
mentions seem achievable? Will you be pleasantly surprised?
From what you have gathered from the news, is your state doing a
good job providing information about state and federal health
exchanges or a poor job? How could they improve their outreach
to the LGBT community?
Video 2 Discussion Questions: Part 2
Medicaid—Joe Baker, Medicare Rights Center
Joe said primarily poorer folks will be covered under the
Affordable Care Act’s Medicare provision. Is this a goal that we as
a society should support? Why or why not?
Are you surprised to learn that Medicare is not significantly
altered by the ACA?
Video 2 Discussion Questions: Part 3
Medicaid—Joe Baker, Medicare Rights Center (cont.)
For people over 65, the Medicare donut hole (the gap in
Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage) is closing by 2020. Is
this significant to you or anyone you know?
What about the added benefit of a covered wellness visit? Will
this motivate you to get more regular care? What would keep you
from taking advantage of a covered wellness visit?
Video 2 Discussion Questions: Part 4
LGBT Community—Jay Laudato, Callen-Lorde Community
Health Center
Jay notes that for a person with $20,000 in yearly income, the cost
sharing could amount to $3,000. Does this seem like a lot, a little or
about right?
How can our LGBT community advocate for HIV coverage and
transgender health coverage? Who would you talk to? What would
you say?
Audience Q&A
Video 3 Discussion Questions
Were you surprised to hear that 10-20 million Americans will be
uninsured even after the ACA is implemented?
Jay says he is very excited about the ACA. Based on this
webinar, why do you think he is excited?
Final Discussion Questions:
Choosing a Plan
What do you think about Joe’s suggestion to ask your doctor, “Is there
a plan for me?” Is that a comfortable question for you to ask?
Jay says to think about how much health care you use. How do you
begin to decide how much health care you use? Would you count cost
or number of visits or something else? Is it a relief to learn that you can
change health care plans after a year?
Raul notes that the success of the ACA depends in part on people
signing up for health insurance who are the least likely to use it. What
would you say to a person who does not currently need health
insurance to convince them to get it?
Resources Referenced in Videos:
Part 1
Pfizer Helpful Answers— Pfizer Patient Assistance Program
www.phahelps.com
For Additional Support: 1-866-706-2400
Helpline—Medicare Rights Center
http://www.medicarerights.org/
1-800-333-4114
Consumer Assistance Program—The Center for Consumer Information &
Insurance Oversight
Listings by state: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Consumer-Assistance-Grants/
1-866-444-3272
Health Insurance Marketplace— U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
www.healthcare.gov
1-800-318-2596
Resources Referenced in Videos:
Part 2
Medicare Compare—Medicare
www.medicare.gov/quality-care-finder
1-800-633-4227
Medicare Interactive—Center for Medicare Rights
www.medicareinteractive.org
Health Care Subsidy Calculator—Kaiser Family Foundation
http://kff.org/interactive/subsidy-calculator/
Speaker Bios
Catherine Thurston (moderator)
Catherine Thurston, LCSW, is the Senior Director for Programs at
Services & Advocacy for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Elders
(SAGE), where she oversees all social services and community-based
programming. Since coming to SAGE, Catherine has overseen the
launches of both the nation’s first federally-funded National
Resource Center on LGBT Aging as well as the nation’s first senior
center devoted to LGBT older adults. Catherine holds a Masters in
Social Work from Hunter College.
Raul Damas, Senior Director of US Policy, Pfizer
Raul Damas is the Senior Director of US Policy at Pfizer, where he
leads the development of policy initiatives that advance public
health alongside Pfizer’s commercial objectives. He is an
experienced public affairs professional with a background that
includes public policy, lobbying, grassroots advocacy, political
campaigns, and public relations. Raul is a graduate of Villanova
University, holds an MPM from the George Washington University
and an MBA from Columbia University.
Joe Baker, President, Medicare Rights Center
Joe Baker has been President of the Medicare Rights Center since
June 2009. Mr. Baker is a member of the Institute of Medicine’s
Board on Health Care Services and Committee on Geographic
Variation in Health Care Spending and Promotion of High-Value Care.
He also serves on the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Advisory Panel
on Outreach and Education. He is an adjunct professor at the New
York University School of Law, where he teaches a class on
implementation of the Affordable Care Act. He is a graduate of the
University of Virginia School of Law.
Jay Laudato, Executive Director, Callen-Lorde Community
Health Center
Jay Laudato has nearly 30 years of non-profit healthcare
administration experience. He is currently serving his second time as
the Executive Director of Callen-Lorde Community Health Center,
New York City’s largest LGBT-focused health center. Prior to this,
Jay held the positions of Director of Managed Care and Assistant
Director in the Division of Financial Planning and Policy at the New
York State Department of Health. Jay’s first tenure as Callen-Lorde’s
Executive Director from 2000–2007 saw the center’s patient base
and services provided greatly expanded and solidified its reputation
for providing quality, sensitive healthcare to those most in need. Jay
holds a Master's degree in Social Work.
Thank you for attending!
For more information, visit:
sageusa.org
GetOld.com