The View From Capitol Hill

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The View From Capitol Hill

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... Prescription Drugs ... Interim prescription drug discount card in 2004-2005 with, ... Talk of Ending up with Discount Drug Card plus High/Low Income Provisions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The View From Capitol Hill


1
The View From Capitol Hill
Electricity or Drugs?
  • Todd Ketch and Mark Boesen
  • Directors of Government Affairs
  • AHQA Annual Session
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Todd Ketch and Mark Boesen
  • AHQA Annual Session
  • Kansas City, MO

Disclaimer This is not an actual image of the
Blackout of 2003. This image is provided for
illustrative purposed only.
2
The Legislative Environment
  • Current congressional lineup
  • House of Representatives
  • 230 Republicans,
  • 204 Democrats,
  • 1 Independent
  • Senate
  • 51 Republicans,
  • 48 Democrats,
  • 1 Independent

3
The Political Landscape
  • Senate Forced to Be More Bipartisan Due to Close
    Margin
  • House More Ideological and Votes are Close
  • Medicare reform passed by one vote
  • Republican Leadership Under Pressure
  • Downside to controlling both ends of Penn. Ave.
  • Election Year Rapidly Approaching
  • Which party gets credit for action/ blame for
    inaction?
  • Will Democrats really help Bush succeed in areas
    that yield biggest election issues?

4
Major Health Care Issues Tracked by AHQA This Year
  • Medicare Reform
  • Bills include
  • New Benefit Structure Private Plan Options
  • Coverage of Outpatient Prescription Drugs
  • Contractor, Regulatory and Appeals Reform,
    including EMTALA Reform
  • Patient Safety/Medical Errors
  • Electronic Health Records

5
Other Health Care Issues
  • Drug Re-importation
  • House passed bill in July Senate rolled into
    Medicare Rx
  • Very different approaches conferees will
    discuss
  • Provider Payments (included in both Medicare
    bills)
  • About 25 million for rural 5-7 million for
    physicians
  • Could be divided amongst various providers
  • Medical Liability Reform
  • House passed HR 5 Senate no Motion to Proceed
  • Rumor of limited bill for obstetrics and rural
    providers
  • HHS Appropriations (all discretionary for 2004)
  • House passed Senate to consider

6
Medicare Name That Year
  • President outlines a first step toward
    addressing a growing problem
  • I will order a comprehensive study by the
    Department of Health, Education, and Welfare of
    the problem of including the cost of prescription
    drugs under Medicare.

7
Answer
  • 1967
  • From President Lyndon B. Johnsons State of Union
    Address delivered January 10, 1967.

8
New Medicare Benefit Structure
  • H.R.1 and S.1 passed in June
  • Currently in conference committee
  • Both create new private plan options for seniors
  • HR1 FFS, Enhanced FFS (PPO), Medicare Advantage
    (formerly MC), Medicare Savings Accounts,
  • S1 FFS, MedicareAdvantage (PPO and MC)
  • Biggest disagreement Level of competition
    between options to be included in the system.

9
Medicare Outpatient Prescription Drugs Name
That Year
  • In what year was the following forwarded by a
    candidate for President of the USA
  • We willstrengthenMedicare, and help finance
    prescription drugs under Medicare.

10
Was it
  • 2003
  • 1991
  • 1975
  • 1968

11
Answer
  • 1968, Presidential Candidate Hubert H. Humphrey
  • Source Humphrey-Muskie Campaign Brochure

12
Outpatient Prescription Drug Coverage
  • House (H.R. 1) and Senate (S. 1)
  • Create new voluntary FFS drug benefit options
    starting in 2006 administered by a new DHHS
    agency.
  • Govt. contracts with private risk-bearing
    entities known as PBMs to provide drug coverage.
  • Interim prescription drug discount card in
    2004-2005 with, perhaps, a federal subsidy for
    low-income seniors.
  • Allow PBMs to use their own formularies, but
    beneficiaries can appeal for non-formulary
    drugs.
  • Bills differ in beneficiary deductible, copays
    and catastrophic limits.

13
Outpatient Prescription Drugs
  • Differences between H.R. 1 and S. 1
  • FFS Drug Premium H.R. 135.50, S. 134.00
  • Deductible H.R. 1250, S. 1275
  • Beneficiary Out-of-Pocket
  • H.R. 1 20 up to 2000, 100 from 2001-3500,
    then 0 after 3500
  • S. 1 50 up to 4500, 100 from 4501-7400, 10
    after 7401

14
AHQA Provisions in Drug Bills
  • Senate (S. 1)
  • QIO role described in statutory language.
  • Section 225. Expanding the work of Medicare
    Quality Improvement Organizations to include
    Parts C and D.
  • Adds new authority for QIOs to work with new
    private plans/PBMs.
  • Directs QIOs to offer QI assistance pertaining to
    Rx drug therapy to plans/PBMs, providers and
    practitioners.
  • House (H.R. 1)
  • QIO role described in report language.
  • Energy and Commerce Committee Report 108-178 Pt1
  • Ways and Means Committee Report 108-178 Pt 2
  • AHQA working to assure new plans/PBMs share
    appropriate data for QIO work.

15
AHQA Provisions in House Reports
  • Ways and Means (excerpt)
  • the Committee believes the existing experience
    of the Medicare Quality Improvement Organizations
    (QIOs) would be employed to offer assistance to
    beneficiaries, providers and plans operating in
    Parts C, D and E, particularly as it relates to
    quality improvement
  • Energy and Commerce (excerpt)
  • The Committee believes that expanding the QIOs
    work to include the new entities and benefits
    created in this legislation will help improve the
    quality of care for all Medicare beneficiaries
    across the entire continuum of the care.

16
Contractor, Regulatory and Appeals Reform
  • Provisions included in H.R. 1 S. 1. Conference
    committee has completed negotiations on this
    section and it could be passed separately if
    other Medicare reforms falter.
  • Provisions include
  • EMTALA Reform
  • Appeals Changes
  • Split-up of FI Carrier Functions, creation of
    new Medicare Administrative Contractors and
    reform of contracting process to promote
    competition
  • Regulatory Process Changes

17
AHQA Successful in EMTALA Reform
  • AHQA Workgroup on EMTALA Policy Recommendations
    Included in Conference Report
  • Makes mandatory early QIO review of all EMTALA
    complaints alleged to involve a medical quality
    of care concern.
  • Requires CMS to inform providers and
    practitioners about the findings of an EMTALA
    investigation.
  • Establishes an EMTALA regulatory reform task
    force to standardize EMTALA enforcement across
    all CMS Regional Offices.

18
AHQA Successful in Appeals Reform Without
Legislation
  • CMS published proposed rule for BIPA that
    satisfies all of AHQAs requests (FR, Nov. 14,
    2002)
  • CMS plans to implement the new appeals (both for
    fee-for-service- and MC) through the QIOs
    without publishing a final regulation.
  • President requested 129 million for implementing
    Medicare appeals changes (including QICs) in the
    FY 2004 Budget.
  • QIOs eligible to apply for QIC contracts.

19
The Medicare Conference
  • Need to Appeal to Middle
  • Dueling Visions of Competition
  • Effect on the Budget Deficit
  • Call for Greater White House Involvement
  • Time Could Run Short
  • Talk of Ending up with Discount Drug Card plus
    High/Low Income Provisions

20
Patient Safety/Medical Errors Name That Year
  • When was the following recommendation made
  • Congress should pass legislation to extend peer
    review protections to data related to patient
    safety and quality improvement that are collected
    and analyzed by health care organizations for
    internal use or shared with others solely for
    purposes of improving safety and quality.

21
Answer
  • 1999 To Err is Human Building a Safer Health
    System
  • Report of the Institute of Medicine Committee on
    Quality of Health Care in America

22
Patient Safety/Medical Errors
  • Nearly 4 years since IOM report, To Err is Human
  • House bill (H.R. 663) passed in March
  • Senate bill (S. 720) passed HELP Committee in
    July
  • Both create Patient Safety Organizations (PSOs)
    to collect voluntary reports from providers,
    promote best practices, improve care.
  • New federal confidentiality protections apply to
    patient safety data submitted to PSOs.

23
AHQA Influenced Both Patient Safety Bills
  • QIOs eligible to be certified as PSOs under both
    bills (AHRQ has acknowledged to AHQA that QIOs
    will be the primary source of PSOs).
  • Three year recertification now required for PSOs.
  • PSOs can now work with all provider under the PHS
    definition, which includes pharmacists. (Social
    Security Act does not recognize RPhs as health
    care providers.)
  • DHHS Sec. now required to create national patient
    safety database for collection of PSO data

24
Electronic Medical Records Name That Year
  • When was this goal adopted
  • The committee believes that the computerized
    patient record can be well established within a
    decade in the majority of offices of physicians,
    dentists and other health care professionals and
    in clinics, hospitals, and multifacility provider
    institutions. Achieving such widespread use in
    only 10 years is an ambitious goal . . .

25
Answer
  • 1991 -- The Computerized Patient Record An
    Essential Technology for Health Care
  • Report of the Institute of Medicine Committee on
    Improving the Patient Record.

26
Electronic Health Records
  • Efforts are underway in the Administration and
    Congress to enhance the use of quality
    improvement technologies, such as Electronic
    Health Records (EHRs) to improve patient
    safety/reduce medical errors.
  • National Health Information Infrastructure (NHII)
    Act of 2003 (H.R. 2915 -- Rep. Nancy Johnson)
    requires DHHS Sec. to adopt interoperability
    standards for health information technology
    systems and appoint a National Health Information
    Officer.
  • Senate Majority Leader Frist is developing his
    own NHII bill as well.
  • There are several proposals for grant programs to
    encourage providers to implement health care
    informatics systems.

27
AHQA Helping Define QIO Role in EHR
  • AHQA participates in policy discussions with CMS,
    organized medicine (AAFP, AMA), and Congress
    about the establishment of a NHII.
  • QIOs could
  • Support data warehouse needs (regional or
    national)
  • Work directly with EHR vendors to promote the
    integration of quality indicators into their
    tools
  • Evaluate and educate providers and practitioners
    of the products available and their applications
    to their specific site

28
Important Non-Health Care Matters in the
Spotlight
Disclaimer This is not an actual image of the
Blackout of 2003. This image is provided for
illustrative purposed only.
29
Which Grid?
30
Energy Bill
  • Debate re-energized by Aug 14th blackout.
  • Power reliability provisions were obscure, now
    key.

31
Iraq
  • Recent bombings, growing U.S. casualties.
  • White House doubles current spending, seeks
    international help.

32
But Dont Worry, Theres Still Hope
33
Homeland Security U.S. Patriots Act
  • Department of Homeland Security gets mixed
    reviews
  • Emerging civil liberties concerns in Congress
  • House refused to fund portion of Patriots Act
  • Administration wants to expand it, Congress
    reticent

34
One Humorous Solution
35
The Federal Deficit
  • Current deficit projection based on current law,
    which includes 400 B tax cut package (CBO)
  • 2003 401 B
  • 2004 480 B
  • 2013 Surplus of 211 B
  • If Medicare enacted (400 B/10yrs) and current
    tax cuts extended
  • 2013 Deficit of 324 B
  • If new Iraq spending (87 B) approved (OMB)
  • In 2004, projected 475 B deficit will reach
    about 562 B or 5 of the GDP

36
Other Important Mattersin the Universe
37
Any Questions?
  • Todd Ketch
  • 202-331-5790 (ext 310)
  • Tketch_at_ahqa.org
  • Mark Boesen
  • 202-331-5790 (ext 311)
  • Mboesen_at_ahqa.org
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