Select Page
Obamacare 2014 Deadline Nearing

Obamacare 2014 Deadline Nearing

PPACA 2014 Open-Enrollment-Deadline.jpg

Obamacare 2014 Deadline Nearing

According to a recent Kaiser Poll the majority of uninsured do not know they have until March 31st to buy health insurance or pay a penalty.  The new Kaiser  poll found 76 percent of the uninsured are unaware of the looming sign-up deadline. Only 24 percent could name the date correctly.  It is worth pointing out that the Individual Mandate has NOT been delayed.  The initial 6 month open enrollment is about to end by March 31, 2014.

This is troubling as  the first open enrollment’s generous 6 month opportunity tightens up to only 3 month for 2015.  The public has always had a weak grasp of ObamaCare’s provisions, but the administration’s tendency to shift deadlines has added to confusion about when patients must act to gain coverage. The poll found that 56 percent now view the law unfavorably while 22 percent view it favorably.

Approximately 50% of the population prefer a plan that allow stem to see more doctors even if it costs more.  The network strength is not as wide as on the better risk group marketplace.   Yet  the majority of the uninsured preferred lowers costs even if this means a smaller network.  See States Pushing Back Against Smaller Networks.

For enrollment help before the deadline  information  please contact our team at Millennium Medical Solutions Corp  (855)667-4621.   We have Spanish, Russian, and Hebrew speakers available.  Quotes can also be viewed on our site.

Resource:

Health Exchange FAQ
Click Above

Federal government health care site: www.healthcare.gov

Kaiser Health Reform Subsidy Calculator:http://healthreform.kff.org/subsidycalculator.aspx

 

PEO: Co-Employment
    First
    Last

    Licensed Brokers vs Navigators

    Licensed Brokers vs Navigators

    Licensed Brokers vs Navigators

    With less than 45 days before the first Affordable Care Act Open Enrollment set to end its important to understand the role of both Brokers and Navigators. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) requires States to establish a “Navigator” Program to help educate consumers about Health Exchange marketplace.  With the new health insurance exchanges a broker can act either as a traditional broker or a navigator (but not both). The info-graph below illustrates  how navigators will differ from brokers.

    Brokers vs NavigatorsSpecifically, agents and brokers  play a vital role in the developing health insurance exchanges nation wide. As the individuals with the education and expertise to advise and help select health insurance products for families and businesses large and small, health insurance agents, brokers and consultants occupy a unique place in the health care coverage system.

    We educate consumers on their health care coverage choices, help them select the most appropriate plans for their specific needs, and serve as their advocate if problems should arise. Subject to strict state licensing laws and education requirements, agents, brokers and consultants are critical to not only the health insurance enrollment process, but also in serving the healthinsurance coverage needs of individuals and employers after the point of sale.

    Benefit specialists design benefit plans, explain coordination issues of public and private benefits to individuals and employees, and solve complex claims and billing issues. We help design and implement cutting-edge health promotion and wellness programs and help our clients comply with state and federal laws like newly enacted PPACA, HIPAA, COBRA and ERISA.

    Professional agents, brokers and consultants continue to assist individuals and small businesses with their coverage needs long after the point of sale. Whereas a travel agent is finished with a client after the travel is completed, benefit specialists continues to serve as compliance experts, health and wellness promoters and the prominent contact for complex claims and billing issues. Health insurance coverage is a longstanding commitment for American consumers and often requires guidance from benefit specialists when dealing with a complex healthcare system.

    For more information  regarding  both Exchanges –   Individual Exchanges or SHOP  please contact our team at Millennium Medical Solutions Corp  (855)667-4621.  We work in coordination with Navigators to assist with medicaid, CHIP Child Health Plus, Family Health Plus and Medicare Dual Eligibles.   We have Spanish, Russian, and Hebrew speakers available.  Quotes can also be viewed on our site.
    See Health Reform Resource

    Losing Health Insurance

    Are You Losing Your Health Insurance?

    There have been plenty of reports in the media of employers having their group insurance plans canceled by health insurance carriers due to health care reform.  While there have been plenty of issues, complications, and confusion in regard to group health insurance plans as a result of health care reform…cancelation of group health insurance plans is not one of them.

    There are many circumstances where a specific health insurance plan design is being terminated by an insurance company and an employer’s plan is being “routed” to a new plan design.   While this may be viewed as problematic for an employer and their employees, it has been happening for years.  This issue is most likely not being caused by health care reform, but is likely being exacerbated by it.

    The reasons for these routings of plans are several and include:

    • Normal year to year changes that insurers implement based on many circumstances.
    • Restructuring of plans so that they can be classified in an appropriate Metal Level category (Platinum, Gold, Silver, Bronze).
    • Pricing – some plans were not going to be able to continue in the present format.

    Employers now have a new alternative if they are being routed to a new health insurance plan for which they are not comfortable.  The new alternative is individual health insurance.  While there are many items that need further clarity (i.e. circumstances in which an individual may enroll mid-year, pre-tax / post tax, employer deductibility, etc.), it is clear that in many situations the individual health insurance plans are comparatively priced to other small group plans. In addition, the new individual health insurance plans are now Guaranteed Acceptance with no pre-existing condition qualifications.

    We’re here to help!

    Employers should still seek qualified professional benefits guidance if they considering moving their health insurance programs to an individual platform.  Planning, implementation, and ongoing support are just as important as with a traditional group plan.  Benefit Consultants that are adapting their practices to the Health Care Reform law such as Millennium Medical Solutions Inc.  will be able to help.  For more information on individual health plans, please call us as 1-855-667-4621.

     

    PEO: Co-Employment
      First
      Last

      States Pushing Back Against Smaller Networks

      States Pushing Back Against Smaller Networks

      States Pushing Back Against Smaller Networks

      From Kaiser Health News:

      Officials in at least a half dozen states are pushing back against health plans in the new insurance markets that limit choice of doctors and hospitals in a bid to control medical costs.

      The plans don’t start offering coverage until January but they’re facing regulatory action, possible legislation, and in at least one case involving a high-profile children’s hospital, litigation.

      States Pushing Back Against “Narrow Networks

      The pushback against “narrow” provider networks recalls the backlash against managed care and health maintenance organizations  in the 1990s. Protests from consumers and hospitals eroded those attempts to restrain expenses by narrowing provider networks.

      Now criticism of limited networks has risen as consumers realize that, despite President Barack Obama’s pledge that they could keep their doctors, their Affordable Care Act insurance may not include the physicians or hospitals they’ve been seeing.

      The critique feeds into the politically damaging outcry over the millions of people whose health plans were cancelled. It’s unclear whether the limited choice of doctors and other providers will be as much of a concern to uninsured people who will be gaining subsidized coverage through the state-based marketplaces.

      Still regulators and elected officials in a few states have already forced changes. Others are weighing legislation that could expand the networks.  Legal fights are brewing. In some cases, the officials are responding to complaints of health care systems or providers that were excluded.

      In Maine, state regulators prohibited Anthem BlueCross BlueShield from switching some customers to a network sold through the Affordable Care Act’s marketplace that excluded six of the state’s hospitals.

      In Washington State, the insurance commissioner initially banned several health plans  from the online exchange for what he called inadequate caregiver networks.  Some of the plans have broadened networks; the dispute continues with others.

      In New Hampshire  Anthem’s 2014 marketplace plans exclude more than a third of the state’s hospitals. Lawmakers have written legislation that would force insurers to expand choice.

      Anthem will “use the excuse, ‘Well, we’re going to save money by having a narrow network,’” said State Rep. Bill Nelson, a Republican who sponsored the bill pendingin the New Hampshire legislature. “Sure that could happen for some people, but other people are going to be losers. Imagine having to change the doctor you’ve had for years.”

      South DakotaPennsylvania and Mississippi are discussing measures similar to Nelson’s, known as “any-willing-provider” laws that would force insurers to accept more participants in the networks.

      Broader choice comes with a price. The ability to sell less-expensive plans with limited choices of doctors and hospitals helps contain medical inflation, health economists argue. Looser networks could. mean higher prices.

      “We had narrow networks in the ‘90s. Health-care prices not only moderated, but actually there was one year where they fell,” said Northwestern University professor David Dranove, who specializes in the health care industry. “Then we had the HMO backlash and we had broad networks [again], and health care prices went through the roof.”

      In a typical narrow network, offered in many states under the new ACA rules, caregivers agree to lower prices in expectation of more patients. Insurers pass some of the savings to consumers. Done correctly, limited networks can also save money because family doctors, specialists and hospitals who are all part of the same network do a better job of coordinating care, many health policy experts believe.

      Excluding certain hospitals from Anthem’s New Hampshire narrow plan would allow premiums to be 25 percent lower than they otherwise would have been, a company spokesman said. Anthem’s narrow Maine plan would save 12 percent, he said.

      Insurers are supposed to compete side-by-side in the health law’s subsidized, online exchanges.  Under the ACA, they must all now offer certain basic health benefits and they must cover anyone, regardless of pre-existing conditions.

      On this new legal terrain, they compete by offering their best combination of price and providers directly to individuals and families who lack other coverage. Adjusting caregiver rosters is one of the few remaining ways insurers can lower costs, limited-network advocates say.

      But others argue that these narrow networks can force patients to switch doctors or drive long distances for care if a key hospital is left out of the plan, especially in states such as Maine and New Hampshire with few insurers selling through the ACA marketplace.

      “Whenever you have an extremely narrow network there are potential problems for patients with cancer and for patients with any chronic condition, particularly when it requires the patient to go out of network,” said Kirsten Sloan, senior director of policy for the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network.

      Leaving a network to seek specialized care can lead to enormous out-of-pocket bills, she said.

      In extreme cases networks could be too small to serve all the plan members they sign up.

      “It’s no good making a narrow network that nobody can get in to see,” said Sander Domaszewicz, a senior benefits consultant at Mercer.

      Insurers began unveiling ACA marketplace plans with narrow networks in recent months for coverage that starts in January 2014. Policymakers soon challenged them in several states, often pushed by excluded hospitals and their patients.

      Maine Insurance Superintendent Eric Cioppa blocked Anthem from switching several thousand existing subscribers to a plan that excluded Central Maine Medical Center and partner doctors and hospitals. Anthem argued that shrinking its network would provide less-expensive but still high-quality care.

      This summer Washington Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler blocked five insurers from selling through the exchange, in several cases because of network problems. One plan, he said, would have required people to drive nearly 50 miles to see a cardiologist and more than 100 miles to see a gastroenterologist.

      Four plans protested Kreidler’s ban. Three reached settlements, some by adjusting networks. An administrative judge ruled in favor of another, Coordinated Care, whose network doesn’t include a children’s hospital.

      Seattle Children’s Hospital, left out of networks including Coordinated Care’s, then sued Kreidler, alleging he failed to ensure adequate access to care.

      In New Hampshire, Anthem’s decision to leave hospitals out of its network has prompted at least one to threaten litigation, and Nelson to introduce his bill. Anthem’s network could force some patients in his district  to drive a dozen of miles or more to get routine care, he said

      In few places has the fight over networks been fiercer than in Mississippi. BlueCross Blue Shield of Mississippi cancelled in-network contracts over the summer with Health Management Associates, a for-profit chain with 10 hospitals in the state.

      Blue Cross isn’t selling insurance in 2014 through Mississippi’s federally run ACA marketplace, but many expect it to come on board later.

      In response HMA took to the airwaves in protest and pitted the insurance commissioner, who wanted only four hospitals reinstated, against the governor, who ordered the insurer to take back all 10.

      “I’ve been practicing law for 36 years and I have never seen as aggressive an effort to sway public opinion as these guys engaged in,” said David Kaufman, an outside lawyer for BlueCross BlueShield of Mississippi said of the hospital chain. “You could not go to your mailbox, pick up a newspaper, watch TV, listen to the radio or answer your home phone without hearing that Blue Cross is the devil.”

      Blue Cross sued Gov. Phil Bryant, arguing the order was unconstitutional, noting that his daughter works for HMA’s law firm and pointing out that HMA is one of his top campaign contributors. Bryant backed off but ordered Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney to hold hearings. He refused. Bryant and Cheney, both Republicans, have clashed repeatedly over the federal health law.

      Now Mississippi, too, is talking about an any-willing-provider law, which typically requires insurers to take any hospital, clinic or doctor under terms accepted by other participants.

      Such a rule would tell Blue Cross that “it can’t kick somebody out of the hospital of their choice,” HMA executive Paul Hurst told WFMN radio’s Paul Gallo on a show broadcast statewide.

      But in any state, making every insurer accept every hospital, “is going to throttle competition,” said Dranove, the Northwestern professor who specializes in the health industry. “And this is a healthcare reform that depends entirely on competition. So the people who are fighting for broad networks… are ultimately fighting for the demise of Obamacare.”

      Millennium Medical Solutions Inc.  will continue to monitor and report on narrow net- work plans and other efforts by insurers to control costs in the PPACA environment.

      NYS Health Exchange FAQ Jan 1 Enrollments

      NYS Health Exchange FAQ Jan 1 Enrollments

      Health Exchange FAQ

      NYS Health Exchange FAQ  Jan 1 Enrollments   FAQ Using Coverage January 1, 2014

      NYS Health Exchange FAQ Jan 1 Enrollments. NYS of Helath has provided a helpful  Frequently Asked Questions for recent enrollees. We have attached the document for your use.

      IMPORTANT:   How can I pay my premium bill for January 1st coverage?

      You need to pay your health plan – not NY State of Health – no later than 10 days after you receive your invoice (bill) from your plan. You can pay your bill by mail. Some plans may accept payment online or over the phone. Plans must accept the following forms of payment: paper checks, cashier’s checks, money orders, electronic funds transfer (EFT), and all general-purpose pre-paid debit cards. Contact your health plan for more information about payment options or if the due date is a problem for you.

      For more information  regarding  both Exchanges –   Individual Exchanges or SHOP   please contact our team at Millennium Medical Solutions Corp  (855)667-4621.   We have Spanish, Russian, and Hebrew speakers available.  Quotes can also be viewed on our site.
      FAQ Using Coverage January 1, 2014

       

      PEO: Co-Employment
        First
        Last