States with
Republican governors kept up the pressure last week on Washington to
give the states greater control over health care under the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA). Twenty-one Republican
governors sent a letter to Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary
Kathleen Sebelius asking for greater authority over some provisions of
health reform, including the ability to define "essential" health
benefits and set minimum criteria for participating in insurance
exchanges. They threatened not to run their own state-based exchanges if
HHS does not act on their requests. Sebelius quickly responded with her
own letter in which she reviewed the various options states have to
reduce costs in their Medicaid programs, and she indicated she is
continuing to review what authority she may have to "waive the
maintenance of effort under current law." Senate bills have already been
introduced to address the role of the states in health care reform,
which is sure to keep the issue on the front burner. Visit Easy To
Insure ME for more info
The House
Committee on Ways & Means held a hearing last week on "The Health
Care Law's Impact on Medicare and Its Beneficiaries," featuring
testimony from CMS Administrator Donald Berwick, M.D., and CMS Chief
Actuary Richard Foster. Berwick testified that the PPACA has had a
positive impact on Medicare beneficiaries, noting that beneficiaries now
have first-dollar coverage of key preventive benefits, additional
assistance with prescription drug costs, and an annual wellness visit
with the physician of their choice. In response to concerns noted by
several committee members about the impact of funding cuts on Medicare
Advantage, Berwick indicated that Medicare Advantage enrollment
increased by 6 percent from 2010 to 2011. He suggested that the program
is healthy and offers robust choices. Foster's testimony reiterated his
prior projection that the PPACA will cause Medicare Advantage enrollment
to decline by about 50 percent by 2017 -- from a projected 14.5 million
under the pre-PPACA law to 7.3 million under the new law. His
testimony further explained that Medicare Advantage enrollees will
experience "a large increase in out-of-pocket costs" and "less generous
benefit packages" because PPACA will reduce rebates to Medicare
Advantage plans, with the reduction in rebates reaching $1,500 per
beneficiary by 2019.
blue tablets |
cetilistat 60 mg Tablet is used to deal with obesity and related infections like diabetes. It is regulated alongside a healthy low-fat nutritious eating regimen, plentiful exercise.
ReplyDelete