Posts Tagged ‘health care’

49% Of People with Pre-Existing Conditions Denied Health Insurance, Report Says

October 13th, 2010 by Iris | Comments Off | Filed in health care reform, health insurance, insurance news

One of the larger elements of the health insurance reform laws that were passed earlier this year was a ban on coverage denials for people with pre-existing health conditions. However, that part of the legislation is not yet in force and, perhaps in anticipation of times to come, the top for-profit health insurers in the country have increased their denials based on medical history by roughly 50% over the last few years.

According to Reuters, a report released on Tuesday by the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s top Democrats, the number of people who have been refused health insurance plans for pre-existing conditions by Aetna, Humana, United Health Group, and WellPoint has risen by 49 percent in the past three years. These denials have affected thousands of individuals trying to buy their own insurance. In 2009, for example, 257,100 people were denied coverage, up from 172,400 in 2007.

Overall, said committee members, insurance companies refused to sell plans to one in every seven applicants, or more than 651,000 people.

While the health care reforms passed last March would make such denials illegal, those protections don’t kick in until 2014. Until then, only children have guaranteed coverage – and, speaking of children – all four of those insurance consider pregnancy to be a pre-existing condition, which triggers automatic denials. As well, most of them won’t cover maternity care under policies issued to women who are not already pregnant, though some do offer additional pregnancy “rider” policies.

The result? According to the report, “…women who are pregnant, expectant fathers, and families attempting to adopt children are generally unable to obtain health insurance in the individual market.” As with other pre-existing conditions, changes to maternity coverage don’t come into force until 2014.

Currently, consumers can apply for coverage through a temporary national program that functions as a stop-gap.

With these results coming out just weeks before the mid-term congressional elections, Democrats are using them to tout the health laws passed last spring. Even so, consumer advocates say there is precious little relief available to those who are not insured through an employer or government program.

Steven Findlay, a senior health policy analyst with consumers Untion explained to the press, “We will continue to see an insurance market that does not allow people to get in. Some companies may try to clean up their act a little bit.”

The America’s Health Insurance Plans, an organization which represents American health insurers and largely fought against the health care reform law passed this year, has said that companies must determine a potential customer’s health beforehand to prevent individuals from seeking coverage only after they get sick. “Health plans recognize that individuals with pre-existing medical conditions have difficulty obtaining coverage,” AHIP spokesman Robert Zirkelbach said.

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Most Americans Feel Healthcare Reform Didn’t Go Far Enough

September 27th, 2010 by Iris | Comments Off | Filed in health insurance, insurance news

ModernHealthcare.com reported over the weekend that, despite a lot of controversy about the health care reform legislation passed last spring, most Americans don’t want less reform; they want more.

A new poll from the AP found that U.S. citizens who feel the health care reform law should have greater scope outnumber those who think government involvement in healthcare is wrong by 2-1.

When the reforms passed in March, 2010 finally complete their phase in in 2019, more than 30 million people who currently don’t have insurance, will, but, that will still leave another 20 million (give or take) without coverage. The AP poll found that 40% of adults think the new legislation didn’t go far enough to really change the state of the healthcare system, no matter whether they support or oppose the law, in theory. On the other hand roughly 20% of those polled oppose healthcare reform because they feel the government shouldn’t be involved in it at all. Overall, 30% of those polled were for the law, 40% opposed it, and another 30% were essentially neutral.

The survey in question involved interviews with about 1250 randomly chosen adults from across the country, conducted from August 31st – September 7th. There is a margin of error in the results of plus/minus 3.9 percent.

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Health Care Reform = Tax Credits for Many

September 16th, 2010 by Iris | Comments Off | Filed in health insurance

A study released by Families USA, according to Modern Healthcare, says that as a result of this year’s healthcare reform law, almost 29 million Americans will be eligible for new tax credits in 2014. The total tax break, researchers estimate, will reduce family income taxes by more than $110 billion in just the first year.

In a teleconference with the press, Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA said that the healthcare reform measures amounted to, “…one of the largest middle-income tax cuts in history…” and that it will enable many U.S. citizens to “…afford premiums that stretch family budgets….”

The study that found these results, called Lower Taxes, Lower Premiums, found that most of the families that will be eligible for these tax credits will employed mainly by small businesses, and will have annual incomes between $44,100 and $88,200 for families of four, or two to four times the the 2010 federal poverty level. “However,” the report said, “because the size of the tax credits will be determined on a sliding scale based on income, those with the lowest incomes will receive the largest tax credit, which will ensure that the assistance is targeted to those who need it the most.” Under these guidelines, a four-person family with annual income of $60,000 that purchases a $15,000 family insurance plan in 2014 would receive tax relief of about $10,200, while a four-person family with annual income of $35,000 would receive tax relief totaling about $13,600.

The roughly 13.8 million people who have no insurance coverage will be eligible for a premium tax credit, and about 14.8 million people with insurance coverage will qualify for the credit, the study said.

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West Virginians Have Poor Health Habits, Senator Says

September 9th, 2010 by Iris | Comments Off | Filed in health insurance, insurance news, insurance specialists, life insurance

Health insurance examiners probably won’t find much shocking in this, but the Charleston Daily Mail is reporting that state Senator Dan Foster (D-Kanawha) is blaming West Virginia’s higher-than-average rate of workers on disability to poor health habits like smoking.

In an interview with the Daily Mail Foster said that his state’s high obesity and smoking rates exacerbate other health issues, including cancer, chronic lung disease, congestive heart failure, and diabetes. but A state lawmaker attributes West Virginia’s high rate of disabled workers to smoking and other poor health habits.

Sen. Dan Foster, D-Kanawha, told the Charleston Daily Mail that the state’s high smoking and obesity rates contribute to other health issues, including diabetes, chronic lung disease, congestive heart failure and cancer. His statement comes on the heels of last month’s report from the Social Security Administration that more than five percent of West Virginia’s population – the greatest percentage in the United States – is considered to be disabled workers.

Foster elaborated, “We have an unhealthy population. We have the highest percentage of people with chronic disabilities, whether that’s disabilities that are incurred in the workplace or related to chronic diseases that have occurred because of unhealthy habits of one sort or another.”

Senator Foster allowed that changing ingrained behaviors can be difficult, but suggested that the state could help improve residents’ health by increasing the tax on cigarettes, and disseminating better information about exercise and nutrition.

Bad health habits are not the only factor in West Virginia’s alarming numbers, however. The economy is also to blame. The Congressional Budget Office released a report last July which said that when employment is easily attainable many technically-disabled people choose to work, but when employment is scarce they turn to disability programs.

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California Takes Steps to Create Insurance Exhange

August 25th, 2010 by Iris | Comments Off | Filed in health insurance, insurance news

Modern Healthcare reported today on the state of health care reform in California. It seems the Golden State is taking steps toward the establishment of a health insurance exchange, as is required in order to be in compliance with federal health care reform law.

The California Senate passed two bills which provide the functions and mechanisms of the exchange. One, which is waiting for the governor’s approval, sets up an online exchange where consumers will be able to compare participating insurance plans. The exchange will be operated by a state-appointed five-member board.

The second bill, which has been sent back to the state Assembly for its approval, details the exchange’s role in health care insurance, and creates a California Health Trust Fund which would finance the exchange.

Unsurprisingly, both bills passed along party lines, with Democrats approving, and Republicans opposing the initiatives.

According to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, state-based exchanges for both small businesses and individuals to purchase health care insurance must be up and running by January 1, 2014, though either non-profit groups or government agencies may administer them.

While Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger announced in April that we would support health care reform, stating he would “…work with the federal government to get this done…” he has not stated whether or not he would be signing either of these bills.

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Foreign-Trained and Domestically-Trained Physicians Offer Essentially the Same Care, Survey Says

August 3rd, 2010 by Iris | Comments Off | Filed in health insurance, insurance news

According to a recent article in Modern Healthcare, roughly a quarter of all physicians currently practicing medicine in the United States completed their medical studies in some other country. A recent survey of the quality of care shows that patients receive essentially the same care no matter where their doctors trained, but a deeper look at data suggests that doctors who were not U.S. citizens at the time they started medical school have slightly better results.

The Foundation for Advancement of International Medical Education and Research, based in Philadelphia, had a team, including the Foundation’s president and CEO John Norcini, examine records for 244, 253 hospitalizations of patients with either acute heart attacks or congestive heart failure at 184 different Pennsylvania hospitals. These patients were seen between January 1, 2003, and December 31, 2006, by a total of 6,1113 cardiologists, family physicians, and internists. 75.5% (4,616) were trained in American medical schools while the other 1,497 trained at 391 different schools in 79 countries. Of the foreign-educated physicians, 374 of them were U.S. citizens studying abroad, while the other 1,123 (75%) were not U.S. citizens when they began medical school.

According to the patient files, the percentage of in-hospital deaths due to congestive heart failure was 3.1% for internationally trained doctors, and 3.4 percent for those who studied here in the States. Among the foreign trained physicians, the percentage of deaths was 3% for those who were not U.S. citizens during medical school, and 3.5% for those who were. For heart attack patients, the in-hospital death rate was 12.7% for internationally trained doctors and 13.1% for those who trained domestically, and the split in foreign-trained doctors was 12.2% for non-U.S. citizens and 14.4% for citizens.

In noting the statistics for U.S. citizens trained at foreign medical schools, the study concluded that it “suggests the importance of further research to clarify whether their performance is a result of their medical education experiences or their ability.”

In a press release, Norcini said, “Despite a rigorous U.S. certification process for international graduates, the quality of care provided by doctors educated abroad has been an ongoing concern. It is reassuring to know that patients of these doctors receive the same quality of care that they would receive from a physician trained in the United States.” He also said, “These findings bring attention to foreign-trained doctors and the valuable role they have played in responding to the nation’s physician shortage.”

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Missouri Files Suit Against Federal Health Care Plan

July 7th, 2010 by Iris | Comments Off | Filed in health insurance

Lieutenant Governor Peter Kinder of Missouri filed a lawsuit today to block federally mandated health insurance in his state, claiming that Congress’s health care overhaul has overstepped governmental authority, and infringed upon state sovereignty. Kinder’s suit, filed by himself and three other Missouri residents, asserted that the federal government may not force people to purchase a product nor can it require state officials to participate in enforcing a “federal scheme.”

Missouri is not the first state to challenge the federal health care plan since it was signed into law in March.

In a written statement, Kinder, a Republican said, “Many Missourians will lose the options for health insurance they currently enjoy. Missourians have less health care coverage after the federal law was passed than they did before it was passed.”

Insurance changes sparked by the new federal health care law include the expansion of health insurance coverage, so that thirty million people currently without insurance will be covered. Parents will be able to keep dependent children on their policies to the age of 26, and Medicaid coverage will be expanded. There is a period of roughly four years before insurance is required or tax penalties will be levied.

In other lawsuits, the Justice Department has maintained that the federal health care law fits within Congress’s authority over the regulation of interstate commerce and providing for the general welfare of the American people. Further, it argued, the choice to opt out of health insurance affects everyone, insured or not.

On Wednesday, U.S. Department of Justice spokeswoman Tracy Schmaler said that it will defend the federal health care law from challenges over constitutional or other grounds.

“We are confident that this statute is constitutional and that we will prevail,” Schmaler said.

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