Archive for the ‘medicare’ Category

Aetna Insurance Expanding Medicare Supplement Biz

June 15th, 2011 by Iris | Comments Off | Filed in health insurance, medicare

Earlier this week, Aetna announced a deal to acquire the Medicare supplement insurance business and related business units from Genworth Financial for $290 million.

Pending approval from federal and state regulators, the deal should close in the fourth quarter of this year, Aetna representatives said in a press release issued from their Hartford, CT headquarters.

As part of the transaction, Aetna will acquire the Continental Life Insurance Co., and will also reinsure other insurance businesses. The Medical supplemental business being acquired from Genworth Financial includes roughly 145,000 members and operations that brought in approximately $317 million of net earned premiums last year.

This acquisition isn’t Aetna’s first foray into Medicare supplement insurance, but it will expand the company’s operations significantly.

Medicare supplement insurance is an important product for seniors who face gaps between what Medicare will cover, and their total health care needs. It often provides coverage for regular office visits and health-maintenance regimens which aren’t in the scope of regular Medicare plans.

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Friday Filmstrips: Prescription Drug Plan “Donut Holes”

October 22nd, 2010 by Iris | Comments Off | Filed in friday filmstrips, insurance facts, medicare

If you have a prescription drug plan, there’s a coverage gap or “donut hole” you may encounter. This video talks provides some insight and information.

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Feds Announce Largest Healthcare Fraud Takedown Ever

July 19th, 2010 by Iris | Comments Off | Filed in health insurance, insurance fraud, insurance news, medicare

Anyone who is, or has a parent who is, covered by medicare knows that healthcare fraud is a tangible risk. Some good news, then, on this Monday, is that Attorney General Eric Holder and HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced last Friday at a healthcare fraud summit in Miami, that the feds are in the process of the largest fraud takedown ever, with 94 defendants charged in five different cities (Baton Rouge, LA, Detroit, MI, Houston, TX, Miami FL, and New York, NY)

Also in conjunction with the Miami summit, which gathered together insurance providers, consumer advocates, and patients as well as federal, state, and local authorities, came the announcement from HHS that the state of Florida has been granted a Medicaid waiver which will help fund a program allowing the state’s Medicaid Fraid Control Unit to scan insurance claims for patterns that are red flags for insurance scams. Currently, Federal law prohibits federal matching funds from being used in such fraud control efforts.

As of Friday morning, 36 alleged participants had been arrested in connections with schemes involving over $250 million in fraudulent claims, according to the Justice Department. The suspects include insurance company owners, medical assistants, and doctors, and the allegations against them fit the profile of the kind of healthcare fraud typical of South Florida over the last several years – fraud that is now spreading across the country, with scammers filing false claims for HIV infusion services, home healthcare, durable medical equipment, and physical therapy, and beneficiaries getting monetary kickbacks for their Medicare numbers.

There are plans for additional, similar healthcare fraud summits to be held in Boston, Detroit, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York, and Philadelphia.

Source: Modern Healthcare

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Hospital Cost Shifting Not a New Trend

April 21st, 2010 by Iris | Comments Off | Filed in auto insurance, health insurance, insurance news, medicare

The Insurance Journal is reporting on an alarming change within the hospital industry, one that has been going on since long before the passage of the healthcare reform bill last month: Because they get lower reimbursements from public health insurance services like Medicaid and Medicare, many hospitals are trying to find new ways of making money, and some are doing that by shifting costs away from conventional insurance and toward car insurance companies. How? By raising auto accident injury claim costs, and forcing those insurers to take more careful looks at their hospital bills prior to payment.

In a recent study released by the Insurance Research Council (IRC), it was estimated that in 38 tort and add-on states, cost shifting for bodily injury (BI) claims resulted in $1.2 billion in excess hospital charges in the 2007. That’s a fairly large number, but the study also says that the full impact of hospital cost shifting, especially when other states and other kinds of coverage are factored in, is likely to be much greater.

According to Elizabeth Sprinkel, senior vice president of the IRC, “The conventional wisdom is that hospitals aggressively seek to shift costs from public insurance programs to private payers such as auto insurance companies. With this study, we now have information on the magnitude of cost shifting and a better understanding of the need for supportive state laws and effective tools that will enable auto insurers to pay hospitals appropriately and help control auto injury claim costs.”

Sprinkel also said that hospital cost shifting to auto injury claims .”…illustrates the complex relationship between property/casualty insurance and the broader healthcare and insurance system.” She went on to add, “Healthcare legislation enacted by Congress last month underscores the complexity of this relationship. It will take months, if not years, to understand the full impact of the reforms on hospital cost shifting and the auto insurance system.”

In order to analyze the relationship between health system features and automobile injury hospital costs, the IRC had to develop a statistical model of average hospital charges for injury claims in different states. The model then confirmed key predictors of the average hospital charges, which were the percentages of a given state’s population without health insurance, and with Medicaid coverage.

Excess hospital charges due to cost shifting were estimated by comparing average BI liability claims charges in Maryland with average charges in 38 other tort and add-on states. Maryland was used because it received a government waiver in the 1970′s which allows it to regulate hospital reimbursement rates for all “purchasers of hospital services,”and which means there are almost no hospital cost shifting in that state. Maryland, therefore, makes an excellent “control” state, and in all cases, IRC found that average hospital charges for auto injury were substantially lower there than in most other states. Likewise, the costs of expensive diagnostic procedures performed in Maryland hospitals were lower than in other states, but, when performed outside a hospital, the costs were much more similar to those in other states.

The IRC study, Hospital Cost Shifting and Auto Injury Insurance Claims, is based on data from more than 42,000 auto injury claims closed with payment under the five principal private passenger coverages. Twenty-two insurers, representing 58 percent of the private passenger auto insurance market in the Unites Sates in 2006, participated in the study.

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Planning for Retirement? Pay Attention to Health Care

February 2nd, 2010 by admin | Comments Off | Filed in advice and how-tos, health insurance, medicare

If you’re planning for retirement pay close attention to your health care options. Why? Because according to financial journal MarketWatch, this is likely to be one of the biggest costs you’ll have to absorb once you leave the workplace, even with the federal Medicare program providing your basic coverage.

Why is health care so expensive for seniors? There are several reasons, including:

  • You must often pay substantial out-of-pocket fees and costs
  • Medicare doesn’t cover long-term care, beyond a brief transition period
  • There are multiple parts to the Medicare plan that cover different aspects of care (hospital stays, regular doctor visits, prescription drugs)
  • Even above the three main parts to Medicare, you’ll have to make many, many choices about which benefits to choose and when they should begin, which is especially difficult if you have continuing health coverage from your union or employment when you enter retirement.

So what should you do to help keep your financial future easy to navigate? Charles Ellis, co-author of The Elements of Investing advises that simplicity is the key.

While keeping it simple may be wise, the advice is a bit vague. Here’s some that isn’t: you should know that you have the option of choosing to buy Medigap or a Medicare Advantage plan – both are supplemental policies that extend your health coverage. As well, you can choose to purchase private long-term-care insurance, in case you ever need ongoing nursing home care, or home health care, later on in life.

But how do you know what’s essential to saving money on health care in retirement, and how do you know what you can live without, and what must be purchased immediately? For that matter, how do you even know when the window for Medicare eligibility even begins?

One invaluable source is the Medicare Rights Center, they’re a non-profit consumer advocacy group with a mission to help senior citizens and those nearing retirement age in understanding how Medicare works, how to apply, and what changes may be occurring as health care reform moves closer to actuality.

Health care may be one of the biggest expenses of retirement, but it doesn’t have to be the most confusing. Get informed now, so you can be confident in your coverage later.

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