Archive for October 29th, 2009

Affordable Health Care For America Act “H.R. 3962″

barack-obama-5aUnveiled by Obama’s Democrats. The Affordable Health Care for America Act H.R. 3962 has been updated with three versions of previous bills passed by the House committees of jurisdiction in July.  H.R. 3962 Complete Bill (1990 Pages)

Key Provisions:

Public Health Insurance Option
The Health Insurance Marketplace
Shared Responsibility
Guaranteed Benefits
Making Coverage Affordable
Consumer Protections and Insurance Market Reforms
Employers and Health Reform
Strengthening the Nation’s Health Workforce
Lowering Health Care Costs
Prevention and Wellness
Delivery System Reforms
Preventing Waste, Fraud and Abuse
Strengthening Medicare
Improving Medicare Part D Drug Program
Maintaining and Improving Medicaid
Medicare Advantage
Health Care Surcharge and Households
Health Care Surcharge and Small Businesses
Women Have the Most to Gain
Small Businesses
A Guide for Seniors
Young Americans
Rural Communities
Health Care Disparities
Indian Health

Top 14 Provisions That Take Effect Immediately »

Top 10 Changes to the Health Insurance Reform Bill

What Health Insurance Reform Means for You

Additional Information:
Complete Bill Text »

Top Line Changes »
4 Page Bill Summary »
10 Page Bill Summary »

Click On Links:
Obama Health Reform Lies
H.R. 3962 Summary
Obama’s Health Care, A Bad Idea
Obama On Abortion
Obama’s Health Care, A Bad Idea
Obama Lies About Abortion Funding in Healthcare Bill
Obama’s Health Care Plan

Share

H.R. 3962 Summary

healthcareforbrainandspineinjuries-300x235The Affordable Health Care for America Act [H.R. 3962], which blends and updates the three versions of previous bills passed by the House committees of jurisdiction.

DETAILED SUMMARY

Insurance reforms. Prohibits insurance rating based on health status or pre-existing conditions, and limits age rating to 2:1. Prohibits annual or lifetime limits on medical spending. Grandfathers current individual policies.
Exchange.
Creates a new marketplace called the national “Health Insurance Exchange”, with an option for states that agree to meet federal standards to run their own exchange.
Eligibility.
People are eligible to enter the Exchange and purchase health insurance on their own as long as they are not enrolled in employer sponsored insurance, Medicare or Medicaid. The Exchange is also open to businesses, starting with small firms and growing over time.
Benefits.
Outlines broad categories of covered services in the law, and creates a Health Benefits Advisory Commission, with physicians and other expert members, to help the Secretary of HHS define the essential benefit package.
Public health insurance option.
The bill establishes a public health insurance option available within the Exchange to ensure choice, competition and accountability. Like other private plans, the public option must survive on its premiums.
New health insurance options.
The legislation authorizes start-up loans to assist states with the creation of health insurance co-operatives as an additional option. It also permits states to enter into agreements to allow for the sale of health insurance across state lines when the state legislatures agree to such compacts.
Repealing the antitrust exemption for insurers.
The bill promotes competition among health insurers and medical malpractice insurers by removing the antitrust exemption so that it no longer shields these insurers from liability for fixing prices, dividing up territories, or monopolizing their market.
Help for early retirees (temporary reinsurance program).
Creates a $10 billion fund to finance a temporary reinsurance program to help offset the costs of expensive health claims for employers that provide health benefits for retirees age 55-64.
Limitation on post-retirement reductions of retiree healthcare benefits.
Prohibits employers from reducing retirees‘ health benefits after those retirees have retired, unless the reduction is also made to benefits for active participants.
Employers.
Employers must either provide health insurance to their employees or make a contribution to help fund affordable health insurance. Employers that choose to offer coverage contribute at least 72.5 percent of premium for workers, 65 percent for families.
Small business protections.
Small businesses with annual payrolls below $500,000 are exempt from requirements to offer or contribute to coverage, including the 8 percent payroll contribution for failure to provide health benefits to their workers. There is also a tax credit program to help low-wage small businesses offer coverage to their employees.
Small business tax credits.
Small business tax credits are available for businesses with 10 or fewer employees and $20,000 or less in average wages. The credits phase-out if the employer has 25 or more employees or if average wages are $40,000 or more.
Individuals.
Individuals are required to obtain health insurance coverage or pay a fee equal to lower of 2.5 percent of their adjusted income above the filing threshold or the average premium on the Exchange. Individuals and families below the income tax filing are exempt.
Government responsibility.
It is the responsibility of the federal government to ensure that essential health coverage is affordable and available to all Americans by establishing consumer protections and insurance reforms, affordability credits and overseeing a fair marketplace for people to choose among options.
Affordability credits.
Provides financial assistance for premiums and cost sharing for individuals and families with incomes up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL). Affordability credits are offered on a sliding scale such that premiums range from 1.5 percent of income at the lowest tier to 12 percent at 400 percent FPL.
Eligibility
. Affordability credits are available to American citizens and legal residents whose employers do not offer coverage or whose share of employer-sponsored health insurance costs more than 12 percent of their family income.
Caps out-of-pocket spending and limits.
Helps prevent medical bankruptcy by limiting out-of pocket costs to no more than $5,000 for individuals and $10,000 for families; these levels are indexed to inflation.
Medicaid and CHIP.
Expands Medicaid coverage to everyone within income at or below 150 percent FPL ($33,100 per year for a family of 4) who is not eligible for Medicare. Eliminates assets tests for eligibility groups other than for long-term care. Requires States that now cover those above 150 percent FPL to maintain eligibility.
Revenue.
The bill would impose a surcharge on taxpayers with adjusted gross income in excess of $1 million (married filing a joint return) and $500,000 (single) at a rate of 5.4 percent. The bill also clarifies that an employee’s share of premiums for employer-provided coverage offered through the Exchange may be paid on a pre-tax basis through a cafeteria plan.
Hospitals.
Substantial delivery and payment system reforms, including productivity adjustments and reductions in market basket updates for most providers, per recommendations from MedPAC, OIG, GAO and others.
Skilled nursing facilities.
Follows recommendations from MedPAC and others to encourage payment accuracy that more accurately reflects the costs of services provided.
Medicare DSH payments.
Directs the Secretary of HHS to study Medicare DSH payments and report to Congress with recommendations on how best to ensure that DSH is properly targeted to adequately reflect the higher costs of care associated with treating low-income patients.
Graduate medical education.
Provides incentives for the training of primary care physicians. Encourages medical residency training in non-hospital settings so that the future physicians of America will be able to provide coordinated care across the spectrum of provider settings.
Hospice moratorium.
Extends a one year moratorium on regulatory changes that would phase out the budget neutrality adjustment factor for Hospice providers to ensure that hospices continue to receive the same reimbursement rate for wages for fiscal year 2010.
Reducing potentially preventable hospital readmissions.
Changes payment incentives to hospitals and post-acute care providers to discourage preventable hospital readmissions.
Post-acute care bundling.
Promotes bundled payments that encourage providers to coordinate a patient’s care across the entire spectrum, from the doctor’s office, to the hospital, through a rehabilitative or nursing facility stay, and back to home.
Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation.
Establishes a Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation to empower CMS to pursue additional payment and delivery system reforms.
Healthcare-associated infections.
Requires hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers to report public health information on healthcare-associated infections to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
IOM study of the appropriateness of Medicare payment rates based on geography.
Within one year of enactment, the Institute of Medicine is required to report to CMS on the validity of the geographic adjusters that apply to Medicare physician and hospital payments and include any recommendations for improvements.
Productivity adjustments.
Expands productivity adjustments to Medicare providers who receive CPI updates in addition to those that receive market basket updates. These providers are: ambulatory surgical centers, ambulances, clinical laboratories, and durable medical equipment not competitively bid.
Accountable Care Organization program.
Establishes a new program that allows providers to share in Medicare savings they help create through care coordination and quality improvement initiatives. Ensures that doctors can join with hospitals and others when forming these organizations.
Telehealth.
Expands Medicare’s telehealth benefit to beneficiaries who are receiving care at freestanding dialysis centers.
Quality measures.
Creates a timely process to allow for a multi-stakeholder group to provide the Secretary with input into the selection of quality measures and provides for consultation by the Secretary of a consensus-based entity in the use of quality measures.
Cost sharing for preventive services.
Eliminates deductibles and co-payments for all preventive services covered by the Medicare program.
Improved access to vaccines.
Makes it easier for Medicare beneficiaries to get access to needed vaccinations by covering all vaccines under Part B of the program rather than Part D.
Extend Qualified Individuals (QI) program.
Extends the QI program two years to help low-income beneficiaries pay their Part B premiums.
Extends months of coverage of immunosuppressive drugs for kidney transplant patients.
Lifts the current 36-month limitation on Medicare coverage of immunosuppressive drugs for kidney transplant patients who would otherwise lose this coverage on or after January 1, 2012.
Durable medical equipment in Medicare.
Provides protections for beneficiaries receiving oxygen therapy in the event an oxygen supplier goes out of business. Exempts certain pharmacies from the surety bond requirement and the need to be accredited to sell diabetic testing supplies and certain other items.
Payment for imaging services.
Instructs CMS to pay more accurately for imaging services in Medicare. Excludes lowtech imaging devices (such as ultrasound, mammograms, EKGs, and x-rays) from the adjustment in payment.
Medicare drug benefit
. Eliminates Part D donut hole over time and provides 50 percent discount in donut hole for Part D enrollees. Restores manufacturer rebate for Part D drugs used by dual eligibles, as well as low-income subsidy eligibles after 2015.
Medicare low-income subsidy.
Increases eligibility limits by raising assets test and clarifying what counts toward the asset test. Eliminates cost-sharing for certain non-institutionalized dual eligibles.
Encourage accurate dispensing of drugs.
Requires that Part D and MA-PD plans develop methods to reduce waste of drugs in the long-term care setting.
Increase use of generics.
Increases generic drug utilization by eliminating current requirements that prevent Part D and MA-PD plans from creating incentives for seniors to use lower-cost generic drugs.
Follow-on biologics.
Creates an FDA licensure pathway for “biosimilar” generic biological products, allowing these products to come to market and compete with brand name biologics. The biosimilar product must have no clinically meaningful differences in safety, purity or potency from the reference product, and may not be licensed until at least 12 years after the date that the brand-name product was licensed.
Physician Payment Sunshine.
Requires manufacturers or distributors to electronically report to the HHS OIG any payments or other transfers of value above a $5 de minimis made to a “covered recipient. Requires hospitals, manufacturers and group purchasing organizations to report the nature of ownership arrangements by physicians.
REDUCIING WASTE,, FRAUD,, AND ABUSE
Increases funding by $100 million annually for the Healthcare Fraud and Abuse Control Fund to fight Medicare and Medicaid fraud; improves provider and payment screening to prevent fraud and abuse before it occurs; creates enhanced oversight for Medicare and Medicaid programs at risk of fraud and abuse; creates new penalties for providers and suppliers that defraud federal health care programs; partners with the private sector to reduce waste and abuse by requiring that all Medicare and Medicaid providers establish compliance programs to reduce waste, fraud, and abuse.
PREVENTIION & WELLNESS
Creates a grant program to help small and mid-sized employers begin or strengthen workplace wellness programs. These grants will assist in improving the health of our nation’s workforce and will reduce employer health care costs.
Coverage for HIV-positive individuals.
Allows State Medicaid programs to cover low-income individuals who are HIV positive through December 31, 2013, after which coverage will be available through the Health Insurance Exchange or, for those with incomes at or below 133 percent of poverty, Medicaid.
Increasing prescription drug rebates.
Increases the minimum percentage rebate on brand-name drugs to 23.1 percent of average manufacturer price; extends rebates to new formulations of brand-name drugs; and extends rebate requirement to drugs prescribed by Medicaid managed care organizations.
Reductions in Medicaid DSH payments.
Directs the Secretary of HHS to reduce Medicaid DSH payments to States by a total of $10 billion using a methodology that imposes the largest reductions on states with the lowest percentages of uninsured individuals or the least effective targeting of funds on DSH hospitals.
Prohibitions on Medicaid and CHIP payment for undocumented Immigrants.
Provides that the Medicaid title does not change current prohibitions against Federal Medicaid or CHIP payments for persons not lawfully present in the U.S.
Primary care residencies in community health centers.
Establishes a new grant program to support the development and operation of primary care residency programs in community-based settings such as community health centers.
School-Based health clinics.
Establishes a new grants program to support school-based health clinics that provide health services to children and adolescents.
IHS reauthorization.
A new division is added to provide for the reauthorization of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act (IHCIA). IHCIA provides the main legal authority for the provision of health care to American Indians and Alaskan Natives.

Additional Information:
Complete Bill Text »
4 Page Bill Summary »
10 Page Bill Summary »

Click On Links:
The Votes On H.R.3962
Obama Health Reform Lies
Hillary Clinton Warned America About Obama
Obama’s Health Care, A Bad Idea
Obama On Abortion
Obama’s Health Care, A Bad Idea
Marine Vet David William Hedrick Rips Rep. Brian Baird
Obama Lies About Abortion Funding in Healthcare Bill
Obama’s Health Care Plan
Obama Say Swine Flue Is Nothing To Worry About

Share

Defacing The Flag Makes Obama’s Top 20 Picks

One of the 20 finalists in health care video contest run by Barack Obama’s campaign arm features a mural of an America flag splattered with health care graffiti until it’s covered completely by black paint. In the video you hear the sound of a heart monitor pumping and then flat-lining. Words such as “pre-existing conditions,” “homeless” and “death panel” ultimately obliterate the flag, which reappears on screen seconds later with the words “Health Will Bring Our Country Back to Life” on the blue field where the 50 stars usually are. According to the Organizing for American Web site, the 20 finalists in the “Health Reform Video Challenge” were chosen by a panel of “qualified” Democratic National Committee “employee judges.” Democrats love “defacing the flag,” Especially President Barack Hussein Obama, remember this video;

Click On Link:
White America Hate Barack Obama
You Cannot Call Obama A ‘Liar’

The Race Card
Barack Obama Said He Was Black Before The Election
Obama Kool Aid Drinkers
Swastika Next To Obama On Golf Course
Obama The Devil
Obama’s Kenyan Birth Certificate
Lockerbie Bomber Released
Barack Obama A Muslim
Osama bin Laden Calls Out Obama, Remember Your Roots

Glenn Beck calls Obama a racist
Hillary Clinton Warned America About Obama

Share

Obama’s Approval Rating

The president’s overall job approval rating was 56 percent in early October, with 34 percent disapproving, and 10 percent saying they don’t know. Approval dropped twelve points since April, when 68 percent approved. Obama has lost ground with independents and Republicans. In the October CBS News Poll, just 20 percent of Republicans approved, down from 31 percent in April. Most recently 52 percent of independents approved, down 13 points from 65 percent. 91 percent Democrats approved in April; 87 percent do so now.

OBAMA APPROVAL RATINGS BY PARTY
10/2009 4/2009
Republicans 20% 31%
Democrats 87% 91%
Independents 52% 65%

Other recent presidents have experienced drops in their approval ratings at similar points in their presidencies. There was a twelve point drop in Ronald Reagan’s approval rating by the fall of his first year in office, and he too was grappling with a bad economy. In April 1981, 67 percent approved of the job President Reagan was doing; by September approval had fallen to 55 percent, with 33 percent disapproving. President Jimmy Carter’s approval rating dropped nine points, from 64 percent in April 1977 to 55 percent by October. President Bill Clinton’s stayed about the same: 49 percent approved in May 1993, as did 48 percent in October.

Of course, other presidents have gained ground in their approval ratings during their first year in office. President George W. Bush, who has received both the highest and the lowest approval rating of any modern president, saw his approval rating soar to 90 percent in October 2001, just after the terrorist attacks.

PRESIDENTIAL APPROVAL RATINGS – FIRST TERM
Spring Fall
Barack Obama 68% 56%
George W. Bush 56% 90%
Bill Clinton 49% 48%
George H.W. Bush 61% 69%
Ronald Reagan 67% 55%
Jimmy Carter 64% 55%

Click On Links
49 Of 50 States Have Lost Jobs Under Obama
Obama Lied About Creating Jobs
Impeach Obama
Dollar Losing Value Under Obama
The Race Card
White America Hate Barack Obama
Obama’s Keeps Silent About The Afghanistan War
Obama Promised 3.5 million Jobs
Obama Ignore Soldiers Dying In Afghanistan
Obama GM Bankruptcy
Obama $3.6 Trillion Budget Proposal
Foreclosures Worst Three Months Of All Time

Share

Obama Lied About Jobs Created By Stimulus Programs


Obama overstated (Lied) about the number of jobs created or saved through the stimulus program. The $787 billion stimulus program claimed more than 30,000 positions paid for with recovery money. But that figure is overstated by least 5,000 jobs. The government has overstated by thousands the number of jobs it has created or saved with federal contracts under the president’s $787 billion recovery program. The $787 billion economic stimulus package is meant to save or create 3.5 million jobs. Obama continued putting out reports and making statements about how well the $787 billion investment is working. We see he was just misleading the country….Lying.

A Colorado company working with the Federal Communications Commission reported that stimulus money paid for 4,231 jobs, when less than 1,000 were produced. East Central Technical College in Douglas, Ga., claimed 280 stimulus jobs linked to more than $200,000 to buy trucks and trailers for commercial driving instruction, and a modular classroom and bathroom for a health education program. with recovery money, but none was created from stimulus spending. The 280 were not jobs, but the number of students who would benefit. A Florida child care center said its stimulus money saved 129 jobs but used the money on raises for existing employees. Teletech Government Solutions with a $28.3 million contract with the Federal Communications Commission for creation of a call center, reported creating 4,231 jobs. 3,000 of those workers were paid for five weeks or less. Koring Group received two FCC contracts, again for call centers. It reported hiring 26 people for each contract, or a total of 52 jobs, but cited the same workers for both contracts. The jobs only lasted about two months. Child Care Association of Brevard County in Cocoa, Fla., reported that the $98,669 saved 129 jobs. The money was used to give 129 employees a 3.9 percent cost-of-living raise. San Joaquin, Calif., Regional Rail Commission twice reported 125 jobs as part of a stimulus project to lay railroad track. As of October 29th, on its recovery.org Web site, the government was still citing 30,383 as the actual number of jobs linked so far to stimulus spending, despite the mistakes (Lies) the White House has now acknowledged and said were being corrected.

Click ON Links:
Obama Promised 3.5 million Jobs
Dollar Losing Value Under Obama
Black People Don’t Like Black Conservatives
Obama The Devil
49 Of 50 States Have Lost Jobs Under Obama
Farrakhan Said Don’t Be Pacified By Obama’s Election
Hillary Clinton Warned America About Obama
Obama GM Bankruptcy
Obama $3.6 Trillion Budget Proposal
Impeach Obama
SNL Mocks Obama’s Lack Of Accomplishments

Share

Obama Honors Fallen Soldiers

Obama joined a party of White House aides, military leaders and his attorney general, Eric Holder, on the tarmac at the Dover Air Force base in Delaware The remains of 18 US soldiers and drug enforcement agents killed in Afghanistan were unloaded from a military aircraft and returned America. The fallen troops died in two separate incidentents on Monday: a Chinook helicopter carrying seven soldiers and three drug enforcement agents crashed and eight soldiers were in a vehicle struck by an improvised explosive device in the Arghandab river valley. Obama met with the family members of the dead. Then he and his party boarded the C-17 aircraft that flew the remains home, listened as an air force chaplain said a prayer and watched six army pall-bearers offload each flag-draped “transfer case” from the plane to a waiting vehicle. Following the families’ request, news media were permitted to witness only one transfer, that of Sergeant Dale Griffin of Terre Haute, Indiana, who was the last off the plane.

Click On Links
American Soldiers Depressed Troop Morale Low
Impeach Obama
The Afghanistan War
Military Deaths In Afghanistan
Obama Repeatedly Said He Would Reinforce US Troops
Obama’s Keeps Silent About The Afghanistan War
Obama Ignore Soldiers Dying In Afghanistan
The Afghanistan Problem
U.S. Afghanistan Raid Gone Bad
Taliban Attack

Share

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.