WHAT WILL HEALTH REFORM MEAN FOR CALIFORNIA - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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WHAT WILL HEALTH REFORM MEAN FOR CALIFORNIA

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WHAT WILL HEALTH REFORM MEAN FOR CALIFORNIA S CHILDREN AND YOUTH WITH SPECIAL HEALTH CARE NEEDS? Edwin Park Co-Director of Health Policy Center on Budget and Policy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WHAT WILL HEALTH REFORM MEAN FOR CALIFORNIA


1
WHAT WILL HEALTH REFORM MEAN FOR CALIFORNIAS
CHILDREN AND YOUTH WITH SPECIAL HEALTH CARE
NEEDS?
Edwin Park Co-Director of Health Policy Center on
Budget and Policy Priorities park_at_cbpp.org July
7, 2010
2
Health Reform Would Significantly Expand Coverage
  • Will cover 32 million of the uninsured by 2019,
    according to the Congressional Budget Office.
  • Results in 92 of population having health
    insurance (94 of legal residents).
  • Greatest health coverage gains since enactment of
    Medicare and Medicaid 45 years ago.
  • Urban Institute estimates that roughly 3.75
    million of Californias uninsured would become
    newly eligible for Medicaid or the exchange
    subsidies. Another 1.5 million of the uninsured
    are already eligible for public programs.
  • UC Berkeley Labor Center has similar estimates
    (4.35 million of the uninsured would become newly
    eligible).

3
Key Coverage Provisions Affecting Children and
Youth with Special Health Care Needs
  • Maintenance of effort requirements and immediate
    market reforms.
  • Medicaid expansion.
  • Extension of CHIP.
  • Insurance market reforms.
  • Establishment of new health insurance exchanges
    for individuals and small employers, with
    subsidies for premiums and cost-sharing available
    to low- and moderate-income people.
  • Tax credits to small employers to offer coverage.

4
Immediate Medicaid/CHIP Maintenance of Effort
Requirement
  • States cannot reduce Medicaid or CHIP eligibility
    levels or make enrollment procedures more
    restrictive for children through September 30,
    2019.
  • Looks at eligibility and procedures in effect as
    of date of enactment of health reform (March 23,
    2010).
  • Exception for states whose CHIP programs run out
    of federal CHIP funding.
  • Similar Medicaid MOE for adults, but only through
    December 31, 2013.

5
Dependent Coverage through Age 26
  • All insurers offering plan through employers or
    in the individual market must offer dependent
    coverage through age 26. Applies to self-insured
    plans too.
  • Only applies to plans that offer dependent
    coverage. Does not require plans to cover
    families.
  • If employer plan is grandfathered than adult
    child must have no access to employer-sponsored
    coverage of their own.
  • If added to plan, insurers can only charge the
    same increase they would have charged for any
    other dependent child.
  • Takes effect start of first plan year after
    September 23, 2010.
  • Expected to cover 1.24 million young adults with
    only modest effect on premiums.

6
No Denial to Children for Pre-Existing Conditions
  • Insurers can no longer deny offer of coverage to
    children (through age 19) with pre-existing
    conditions and can no longer deny coverage of
    pre-existing conditions.
  • Takes effect start of first plan year after
    September 23, 2010.
  • Applies to all plans except grandfathered
    individual market plans.
  • Plans may charge higher premiums. Pending
    California legislation implementing this
    provision would limit how much premiums could be
    charged for adding children with pre-existing
    conditions.

7
Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plans (PCIPs)
  • 5 billion to states to finance coverage of those
    who are medically uninsurable (denied coverage by
    insurers because of their health status or
    pre-existing conditions).
  • Must be uninsured for at least 6 months and
    denied coverage because of pre-existing
    condition.
  • California has elected to operate its own pool.
  • Will be run by MRMIB. Start accepting
    applications in August and begin providing
    coverage in September.

8
No Lifetime or Restrictive Annual Limits
  • First plan year starting after September 23,
    2010, all plans can no longer impose lifetime
    dollar limits on benefits.
  • Cannot place restrictive annual dollar limits on
    benefits (defined as 750,000 rising each year to
    2 million to plan years after September 23,
    2012).
  • Plans can ask for waiver if causes reduction in
    benefits or increases in premiums (like
    mini-medical plans.
  • No annual dollar limits starting in 2014.
  • Applies to all plans except grandfathered
    individual market plans.

9
Other Immediate Reforms Affecting Children and
Youth
  • Preventive services without cost-sharing in all
    plans, including Bright Futures well-child visits
    and screenings.
  • Prohibition on rescissions except for fraud or
    intentional misrepresentations.
  • Children of state employees now eligible for CHIP.

10
Medicaid Expansion in 2014
  • Requires states to expand their Medicaid programs
    on January 1, 2014 to all non-elderly adults and
    children up to 133 of the federal poverty level
    (29,400 for a family of four). No assets test.
  • Includes childless adults (such as youth), who
    generally could not be covered under Medicaid
    beyond age 20 under prior law.
  • Includes people with disabilities.
  • States have the option to cover these populations
    at regular Medicaid match starting on April 1,
    2010.
  • Means some older children 6-18 now on Healthy
    Families will be switched to Medi-Cal and gain
    EPSDT benefits.

11
Federal Support for Medicaid Expansion
  • Federal government will pick up the overwhelming
    bulk (96) of expansion costs over next 10 years.
  • The federal matching rate for newly eligibles
    will be
  • 2014-2016 100
  • 2017 95
  • 2018 94
  • 2019 93
  • 2020 and beyond 90
  • Regular match for current eligibles who newly
    enroll. Likely CHIP match for children switched
    from CHIP to Medicaid.

12
Medicaid Benefits for the Newly Eligible
  • States are required to provide benchmark
    benefits to some of the newly eligible
    population, rather than the regular Medicaid
    package.
  • Affects primarily non-disabled adults. Children,
    however, will continue to receive full package
    including EPSDT.
  • Benchmark benefits can be as good as regular
    Medicaid package, or be less comprehensive and
    more akin to typical private insurance plans. Up
    to the state.
  • Critical that state offer full benefits package
    particularly for vulnerable populations like
    youth with special health care needs.

13
New Medicaid Options for Home and Community-Based
Care
  • Expands existing option to provide HCBS services
    without a waiver. Expands scope of services and
    states no longer permitted to cap enrollment or
    limit geographic scope. Can also be targeted to
    specific groups. Takes effect April 1, 2010.
  • New Community First Choice Option to allow
    statewide HCBS services to individuals up to 150
    of poverty meeting needs criteria. Federal
    government will pay higher Medicaid matching rate
    (6). No caps. Starts October 1, 2011.
  • Money to rebalance so at least 50 of LTC dollars
    spent on HCBS but CA already meets threshold.
  • Extension of Money Follows the Person
    Demonstration Projects through 2016. 450
    million per year. Only have to been in
    institutional care for 90 days or more.

14
2014 Medicaid Requirement to Cover Youth Formerly
in Foster Care
  • States must provide Medicaid coverage to youth
    who were previously in foster care.
  • Through age 26.
  • Must have been in foster care on the date of
    attaining 18 years of age or higher emancipation
    age elected by state and were enrolled in
    Medicaid while in foster care.
  • Takes effect January 1, 2014.

15
Medicaid Eligibility Determination and Enrollment
  • Change in how income is counted to align with
    federal income tax rules, which will be used to
    determine eligibility for the exchange subsidies.
  • Some income currently counted under Medicaid are
    not counted under income tax rules, making some
    people newly eligible.
  • Takes existing disregards into account by
    providing for 5 percentage point add-on.
    Effectively means Medicaid eligibility level will
    be 138 of poverty.
  • Extends presumptive eligibility option for
    children and pregnant women to newly eligible
    populations (and existing parents).
  • Must have coordinated procedures with exchange.

16
Primary Care Physician Rate Increases
  • Requires states to increase Medicaid primary care
    physician rates to 100 of Medicare rates in 2013
    and 2014.
  • Federal government will pick up 100 of the
    increase in costs.
  • States, however, can reduce rates after 2014.

17
Extension of CHIP through 2015
  • CHIPRA (enacted in 2009) extended CHIP through
    the end of fiscal year 2013.
  • Health reform extends CHIP through 2015 by
    providing 40 billion over 2 years.
  • 19.147 billion in 2014
  • 21.061 billion in 2015
  • Should be more than enough funding to allow
    states like California to maintain and expand
    their programs. As noted, MOE.
  • CHIP required to use new income counting rules as
    well.
  • Requires Secretary to study comparability of CHIP
    to exchange plans by 2015.

18
Adjusted Community Rating in 2014
  • Starting in 2014, insurers cannot deny coverage
    to anyone based on a pre-existing health
    condition.
  • Insurers can no longer vary premiums based on
    health status or pre-existing medical conditions.
  • Age can still be 31 and tobacco use at 15 to 1.
  • Other factors like gender and industry are no
    longer permitted.

18
19
Essential Benefits Package
  • Applies to individual and small group market
    plans.
  • Defined by Secretary of Health and Human Services
    but must include at least certain services
  • Ambulatory patient services, emergency services,
    hospital care, maternity and newborn care, mental
    health and substance abuse services, prescription
    drugs, rehabilitative and habilitative services
    and devices, lab, preventive and wellness
    services, and pediatric services.
  • Comparable to scope of services provided in
    typical employer based plan.
  • Pediatric benefits must include vision and
    dental.
  • Requires plans to have maximum out-of-pocket
    limits on in-network care. Equal to levels under
    Health Savings Accounts (currently 5,950 for
    individuals and 11,900 for families).

20
Exchange Tax Credits for Individuals and Families
  • States must set up health insurance exchanges for
    individuals and small businesses (but can expand
    to larger firms) by January 1, 2014.
  • New federal tax credits for people to purchase
    exchange plans.
  • Generally for those between 133 of the poverty
    line and 400 of poverty but legal immigrants
    with lower incomes subject to 5-year
    Medicaid/CHIP bar would be eligible.

21
Subsidy Scale
of Poverty of Family Income Annual Premium Amount for Family of Four (2010)
100 2 441
133 3 886
150 4 1,323
200 6.3 2,778
250 8.05 4,437
300 9.5 6,284
400 9.5 8,379
22
Subsidies for Cost-Sharing
  • Subsidy eligible are given subsidies to purchase
    at least a plan with an actuarial value of 70.
  • Actuarial value is a measure used to compare the
    relative value of benefits. The greater the
    benefits (and the lower the cost-sharing), the
    higher the AV.
  • Those with incomes below 250 of poverty get
    higher actuarial values.
  • Below 150 of poverty 94
  • 150-200 of poverty 87
  • 200-250 of poverty 73
  • Lower maximum OOP caps as well.

23
Small Employer Tax Credits
  • Tax credits for small employers that offer health
    coverage.
  • Employers must contribute at least 50 of the
    cost.
  • Full credit available to firms with 10 or fewer
    workers and average wages of 25,000 or less.
  • Credit phases out by size (up to 25) and by wages
    (up to 50,000.
  • Credit is 35 for 2010-2013. 50 for 2014 and
    beyond (but only for 2 years and only for
    exchange).
  • Credit is 25 and 35 respectively for
    nonprofits.

23
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