Group 13 Govt. Health Care Plans In the US Flashcards
1
Q
Medicare covered services and cost sharing
Part 1 of 2
A
- Part A
- 1 HI (hospital insurance) services include
- 1.1 inpatient hospital benefits
- 1.2 skilled nursing facility (SNF)
- 1.3 home health agency following discharge from a hospital or SNF
- 1.4 hospice care is provided to terminally ill patients
- 2 there are no HI beneficiary premiums
- 3 there are cost sharing provisions and limits on coverage
- 1 HI (hospital insurance) services include
- Part B (SMI: supplementary medical insurance)
- 1 requires a monthly premium
- 2 a beneficiary can decline SMI coverage
- 3 after deductible, Coinsurance is typically 20%
- 4 covered services: outpatient hospital; medical care (physicians, diagnostic tests, supplies, etc); ambulance services; physical and occupational therapy; outpatient rehabilitation; home health care beyond part A; certain drugs; and others
- Medicare Supplements
- 1 Fills in out-of-pocket costs and benefits not covered by Medicare
- 2 10 standardized plan are available is most states
2
Q
Medicare covered services and cost sharing
Part 2 of 2
A
- Part C (aka Medicare Advantage, MA)
- 1 A MC option that substitute for HI and SMI coverage
- 2 lower OOP, increased coverage limits, some services not in traditional Medicare
- Part D
- 1 Provides coverage for prescription drugs
- 2 Prescription drug plans (PDP)
- 3 Medicare Advantage Prescription Drug plans (MA-PD)
- 4 Retiree drug subsidy (RDS)
- 5 Penalty for late enrollment
- 6 Drugs excluded from Part D: drugs covered by part A or B, over the counter, others
- Part D 2012 cost sharing
- 1 Annual Drug Cost - $0 to $320 (Deductible)
- 1.1 Medicare pays 0%; enrollee pays 100%
- 2 annual drug cost $320 to $2930
- 1.2 Medicare pays 75%f enrollee pays 25%
- 3 annual drug cost - until member true out-of-pocket costs (TrOOP) reach $4700
- 3.1 Medicare pays 14% generic, 50% brand; enrollee pays 86% generic, 50% brand
- 3.2 By 2020 will be 75% Medicare, 25% enrollee
- 4 Annual drug cost after $4700 member TrOOP
- 4.1 Medicare pays about 95%; Enrollee pays 5%
- 1 Annual Drug Cost - $0 to $320 (Deductible)
3
Q
Medicare Eligibility
A
- Persons at least 65 and eligible for Soc Sec
- Most individuals with end stage renal disease (ESRD)
- Some other ages and disabled individuals who pay mandatory premiums
4
Q
Medicare program financing
A
- HI program is financed through payroll taxes
- SMI is financed through general fund of treasury (75%) and beneficiary premium (25%)
- Part D is financed through a separate account within the SMI trust fund
- Board of trustees reports to congress on financial status each year
- 1 HI fund projected to be exhausted by 2024
- 2 Part B and D expenses are projected to grow as a percent of GDP
5
Q
Approaches to improving Medicare solvency
A
- Higher taxes
- Reduce covered services
- Increase Medicare cost sharing
- Raise the eligibility age
- Adjust reimbursement to providers
- Other initiatives such as accountable care organizations
6
Q
Medicare provider reimbursement
A
- Hospitals: reimbursed on a prospective payment system PPS
- 1 A set amount for each admission based on the DRG
- 2 Receive additional reimbursement for outlier hospital stays
- 3 adjustment depending on the portion of services delivered to uninsured and low income patients
- Physician services reimbursement
- 1 resource based relative value scale (RBRVS) elements
- 1.1 Nationwide convertion factor
- 1.2 work value, practice expense, malpractice value
- 1.3 geographic area
- 2 Physicians that are not participating may bill patients about 10% above the Medicare reimbursement amount
- 1 resource based relative value scale (RBRVS) elements
- Hospital outpatient: Ambulatory payment classification
7
Q
Medicare advantage (MA) Provider reimbursement
A
- A capitation payment
- Bidding approach
- 1 if the bid less than the bench mark, then plan keeps 75% of the difference (the rebate) to increase benefits, reduce cost sharing, or reduce prems
- 2 Government keeps the remaining amount as savings
- 3 A bid greater than bench mark results in premium by the member
- Risk adjusted payments
- 1 Capitation recognizes the health status of enrollees
- 2 considers age, sex, Medicaid eligibility, disabled status, working-aged status, and institutionalized status
- 3 A separate risk adjustment model for Part D
- The Accountable Care Act (ACA)
- 1 Modified MA payments
- 2 Plan assigned star rating from 1 to 5 based on quality measures
- 3 Bonus payments are for higher rated plans
- 4 funding cut for lower rated plan
- 5 if loss ratio less than 85%, the difference must be returned to CMS
8
Q
Medicaid Eligibility and financing
A
- Medicaid eligibility
- 1 Categorically eligible group include: children, parents or other caretakers with dependent children, pregnant women, individuals with disabilities, seniors
- 2 in addition to categorical requirements, income requirements (a percentage of FPL)
- 3 Also medically needy when medical expenses reduce income below limits
- 4 ACA expanded Medicaid eligibility beginning in 2014, up to 133% FPL
- Medicaid Financing
- 1 each state finances its Medicaid program with support from Federal
- 2 Source of Federal funding is general revenues
- 3 Financing requirements driven by number of recipients and cost of services
- 4 the lower a state’s average per capita income, the higher the federal support
- 5 Under ACA, federal govt covers 100% of cost for the new Medicaid eligible for the first 3 years. Phases down to 90%
9
Q
Medicaid
- Covered services
- Provider participation and reimbursement
A
- Covered services
- 1 inpatient and outpatient hospital, physician, lab and X-Ray, skilled nursing facility and HHC, transportation
- 2 other services: dental, drugs, prosthetics, hearing aids, glasses, physical therapy
- Provider participation and reimbursement
- 1 forbidden from withholding services if patient is unable to pay the cost sharing
- 2 access must be comparable to general population
- 3 Medicaid reimbursement