A New Plan to Replace the ACA

With the effort to amend/repeal/replace the Affordable Care Act, we are currently one plan down and one to go. The first attempt to enact a new plan failed to come to vote in the House in March. This week a modified plan has surfaced that some are saying may move closer to being approved. In the below Article you will see some of the major provisions we expect to see vetted over the coming days.

 

 Republicans have a new plan to repeal and replace Obamacare

Thursday, 20 Apr 2017 | 10:26 AM ET  by Berkeley Lovelace Jr. – CNBC

Republican lawmakers have a new plan to repeal and replace Obamacare in a bid to bridge the gap between the House Freedom Caucus and moderates, according to a document obtained by CNBC.

A Freedom Caucus source told CNBC the changes to the health bill would secure 25 to 30 “yes” votes from the Freedom Caucus, and the new bill would get “very close” to 216 votes. The source said that 18 to 20 of those “yes” votes would be new.

Here is the document:

MacArthur Amendment to the American Health Care Act – 4/13/17

Insurance Market Provisions

The MacArthur Amendment would:

  • Reinstate Essential Health Benefits as the federal standard
  • Maintain the following provisions of the AHCA:

– Prohibition on denying coverage due to preexisting medical conditions

– Prohibition on discrimination based on gender

– Guaranteed issue of coverage to all applicants

– Guaranteed renewability of coverage

– Coverage of dependents on parents’ plan up to age 26

– Community Rating Rules, except for limited waivers

Limited Waiver Option

The amendment would create an option for states to obtain Limited Waivers from certain federal standards, in the interest of lowering premium costs and expanding the number of insured persons.

States could seek Limited Waivers for:

  • Essential Health Benefits
  • Community rating rules, except for the following categories, which are not waivable:
  • Gender
  • Age (except for reductions of the 5:1 age ratio previously established)
  • Health Status (unless the state has established a high risk pool or is participating in a federal high risk pool)

Limited Waiver Requirements

States must attest that the purpose of their requested waiver is to reduce premium costs, increase the number of persons with healthcare coverage, or advance another benefit to the public interest in the state, including the guarantee of coverage for persons with pre-existing medical conditions. The Secretary shall approve applications within 90 days of determining that an application is complete.

CNBC has reached out to the office of House Speaker Paul Ryan about the document.

Earlier this month, Freedom Caucus chairman Rep. Mark Meadows said the majority of caucus members will support the new bill if changes offered by the White House are included in the legislation, such as coverage waivers related to community rating protections.

In March, House Republicans pulled their first attempt at a repeal and replacement of Obamacare, dubbed the American Health Care Act, due in large part to opposition from both conservative and moderate Republicans.

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Control of health costs up to you

By Robert Nelson WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

Medical Cost Advocate is in the news. This time CEO, Derek Fitteron talks with a reporter from the World Herald about consumer medical liabilities. Read on to learn how Medical Cost Advocate can assist you in reducing some of those large medical bills.

I recently had part of my neck rebuilt with corpse bone and titanium. A week ago, the itemized bill arrived for my surgery.

At the end of page 4, I found the “sub-total of charges”:

$48,303.44.

The only charge that seemed to have any connection to any free-market reality was about $15,000 paid to the world-class spine surgeon.

Well, OK, the nurses certainly deserved to be paid well. And the room was comfortable and modern. From arrival to departure, my stay was Nebraska-friendly with German-like precision.

And I guess the fellow who managed to keep me between oblivious and oblivion during surgery should be well compensated also.

But still, outrageous.

Especially when you start digging into the “smaller” charges.

I paid $369 for what must have been a very special dose of vitamin D. Something that covered my feet was $149.28.

I see a $16 charge for a pill I have been taking every night for several years at a cost of 8 cents per pill.

Seventy-five itemized charges.

Including $1,200 for each of six titanium screws used to bolt down two small titanium plates that cost $4,918.

Feeling disconnected from the free market, I went online, joined a medical trade organization, identified the eight pieces of medical-grade titanium alloy in my neck and then emailed one of the manufacturers of the equipment in China – Zhejiang Guangci Medical Device Co. – requesting a price quote.

I’m not a doctor, or an international importer, but I’m pretty sure my sources in China could get me identical parts to those in my neck for under $50.

It’s apples to oranges for all sorts of reasons, not the least of which are the huge costs of making sure safe objects are put in your body by the right people using the right equipment.

Still, I feel ripped off.

“A lot of what you’re seeing in that bill is you paying for all the people who can’t pay,” said Derek Fitteron, president and CEO of Medical Cost Advocate localhost/wp1, a New Jersey-based company made up of health care attorneys who negotiate with providers to lower the bills of patients they represent.

“Most of the problem really isn’t greed,” he said. “You’ve got a host of reasons that drive even those providers with only good intentions to give you bills that look outrageous.

“You might notice that some of those numbers that seem outrageous to you are even a negotiated price that your insurer has agreed to.

“That doesn’t mean a provider isn’t going to try to make you the person who covers the extra costs they’re seeing or the debts they aren’t getting paid,” he said.

His company makes its money because his staffers know the wholesale prices and going rates for all things medical.

His people argue with the provider. Then, like an attorney who wins a settlement for a client, his company takes a percentage of the money it saved the client.

Fitteron said that controlling outlandish medical costs ultimately is up to the consumer. You need to study the details of your health coverage. You also need to discuss with the provider the costs of a procedure prior to having the work done, he said.

“It’s the old adage: Five different people walk into the hospital with the same problem, and all of them pay vastly different amounts to get the problem fixed,” he said. “You have to be a smart and savvy shopper to be the one who pays less.”

Less? I asked. Seems like the wrong word choice considering the huge numbers.

“That’s a relative term,” he said. “That’s ‘less’ of an increasingly huge amount of money.”

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