Easytoinsureme | Finding Your Car Insurance Deal
13
Jan

Individual Health Insurance Reform Weekly: EasyToInsureME : 08/17/09

Author: Individual Health Insurance
Source: articlesbase.com

Week of August 17, 2009 : EasyToInsureMEThe highly charged health care reform debate continues to get extensive news coverage, and Members of Congress are clearly feeling the heat. Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Senator Charles Grassley (R-IA) took the unusual step of issuing a statement last week to reassure voters that a Finance Committee bill will not have end-of-life provisions — one of the more controversial topics at town hall meetings this summer. A Finance Committee bill has yet to emerge, as Committee members search for an approach that can net bipartisan support. But Grassley provided a small glimpse of the Committee’s thinking when he disclosed that the panel “dropped end-of-life provisions from consideration entirely because of the way they could be misinterpreted and implemented incorrectly.” Distancing himself and the Finance Committee from the House bill, Grassley went on to say House legislation is “poorly cobbled together” and could invite unintended consequences.FederalWith Congress in recess, there is no federal report this week.StatesNEW JERSEY: Newly enacted legislation requires installment payment for maternity services, and it mandates the Department of Banking & Insurance to promulgate a payment schedule for provider services rendered in advance of child delivery. Through the New Jersey Association of Health Plans, Aetna and other carriers will meet with stakeholders to assist the department in implementing this statute. Also enacted into law was an autism coverage mandate. Under the new statute, insurance carriers must extend coverage for medically necessary treatment including speech, occupational, and behavioral therapy. The coverage benefit is capped at $36,000 annually. Also, the state Supreme Court has denied an appeal for stay of approved rider filings by the Small Employer Health Benefits board. A coalition of health care providers, primarily ambulatory surgery centers, sought to delay implementation of an approved rider filed by Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of NJ, which limits out-of-network ASC benefits at $2,000. The newly appointed Commissioner of Banking & Insurance denied the providers’ appeal for stay. The coalition’s emergency request for delay was denied by the Appellate Division and finally the Supreme Court upheld the denial.NORTH CAROLINA: The Governor has signed the proposed budget with no premium tax increase to insurers, thanks to the input of Aetna and many other industry leaders, business leaders and trade groups. Previous budget proposals included increases from 1.9 to 2.25 percent, effective January 2011.PENNSYLVANIA Health Insurance : Governor Ed Rendell signed a budget bill after exercising his line item veto to strike most appropriations other than those necessary to pay state employees. The bill, introduced by Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Jake Corman (R-Centre), was passed without amendment so that it could go to the Governor. The 2 percent managed care organization tax remains the big open issue for the budget. Moving the current MA MCO assessment under the sales and use tax is supported by some, but the administration is pushing the added 2 percent tax on all managed care premiums.

EasyToInsureME.com offers clients the easiest way to buy individual health insurance. Free services include instant online health insurance quotes, custom proposals for each client, free phone consultation, and 10-minute application by phone. Nobody does what we do for our clients!

08
Dec

EasyToInsureME Individual Health Insurance Reform Weekly

Author: chris walkerbr
Source: articlesbase.combr
br
Week of October 26, 2009While Aetna and the rest of the insurance industry continue to focus on important health care reform issues, some members of Congress and The White House appear unwilling to stop or even slow the political attacks against insurers. Even as yet another analysis released last week showed real concerns persist that current proposals will worsen, rather than alleviate, rising health care costs, the House Judiciary Committee used its powers last week to try to punish the industry for speaking out (see below). Actually, the industry remains committed to seeing meaningful health care reform passed this year, a view made clear in a Washington Post op-ed authored by the President of Americas Health Insurance Plans. The reactions on the Hill continue to largely side-step the specific cost concerns raised in the past two weeks. But Aetna remains hopeful that the dialogue may yet return to substantive issues before bills are brought to the floor of the House and Senate in the next several weeks. Quoting amp; Saving just got easier…EasyToInsureME Health InsuranceIndividual health insuranceHealth insurance quotesTo ease the burden of a scheduled 21-percent pay cut for Medicare doctors in 2010, Senate Democrats tried to pass a stand-alone bill that would have wiped out both next years cut and all future cuts. Eliminating the cut for one year would cost $10.9 billion — such a provision is in the Finance Committee version of health care reform and would be fully funded. To totally wipe out the fee cuts for all years would cost $245 billion. Without a pay for such a bill would add close to a quarter-trillion dollars to the deficit. This is precisely the bill Majority Leader Harry Reid brought forth. Senator Reid needed 60 votes; he got 47 as all Republicans and 13 Democrats voted against cutting off debate. Senate Democrats had hoped to gain physician support for health care reform by providing relief from the cuts. But the results should serve as a wake-up call to the Democratic leadership that health reform will not be a walk in the park. The strong vote could also embolden moderate Democrats to band together and make hard votes on health care reform as well. In the House, legislative activity for the week came down to passage in the Judiciary Committee of a bill that Democratic sponsors describe as repeal of the health insurer antitrust immunity known as the McCarran-Ferguson Act. The bill more accurately can be described as codifying various court interpretations of the Act, all of which the industry lives with day in and day out. The bill specifically says health insurers (and MedMal insurers) cant hide behind McCarran-Ferguson to price-fix, bid-rig or engage in market allocations with competitors. Insurers cant do that now. Thus, the bill is much more of a vehicle for some in Congress to further demonize a well thought-out piece of legislation with positive policy underpinnings. Whether this item gets added to a health care reform bill or progresses on its own remains to be seen. The timing for floor debate on health care reform will likely ebb and flow for several weeks, but the current thinking is that this process may take all of 2009 and possibly into 2010 to complete. The House merging process is all but done along with the CBO review of the House bill. The House bill could be released this week, go to the Rules Committee on Thursday/Friday and on to the House floor the first week of November. This schedule requires that everything fall into place and that the Speaker be willing to begin floor debate before the Senate, which seems to be the case. On the Senate side, merging the HELP and Finance Committee bills seems to be picking up speed, particularly with reports of an emerging public plan compromise. But the process will not be finished until later this week, which would bring the bill to the floor the week of November 2 at the earliest. There is a real chance that too many variables will get in the way and neither Chamber will get to the floor until December, which, if true, would translate into a January Conference. States COLORADO: The Colorado Health Care Task Force has voted several bills out of committee, including: a prohibition on the use of gender in developing rates for individual policies; a maternity coverage requirement in individual policies; and a requirement that the Department of Insurance develop standardized formats for such things as policy forms and explanations of benefits. Aetna will provide comments. GEORGIA: Commissioner Oxendine signed the regulation allowing health insurers to utilize health status at renewal when underwriting small groups (2-50). Aetna has worked with the Georgia Association of Health Plans for some time to help enact this regulation. The Commissioner has also scheduled a meeting with health plan representatives to discuss his 2010 legislative agenda, which will include a bill similar to one defeated this year that would have regulated rates for individual policies. ILLINOIS: The legislature last week completed the first week of a two-week veto session and took on two insurance-related issues. One bill would create external review requirements for all commercial insurance products, rather than just HMOs, effective July 1, 2010. The bill also would establish committees to create a uniform small-employer, group-health status questionnaire and an individual health statement for use beginning January 1, 2011. Lastly, the bill would require insurers to semi-annually prepare and provide the Department of Insurance a statement on aggregate administrative expenses and other information. Surprisingly, Chairman of the Executive Committee Mary Flowers stated that she was not going to allow the bill to be called for a vote until she had an opportunity to question the sponsor. Thus, no vote was taken, even though there was no opposition. It appears the bill will be moved for a vote this week in a different committee. Also, negotiations have begun on an insurance mandate bill for prosthetics and orthotics. The General Assembly has indicated that when they adjourn late this week, they will not return again until January. PENNSYLVANIA: Governor Ed Rendell signed spending, revenue and fiscal code bills earlier this month, ending the 101-day budget standoff. But negotiations continue over the unresolved issue of expanding legalized gambling to include table games. Of primary interest, one bill signed into law embraces an extension of the 5.9 percent gross receipts tax on Medicaid MCOs as an alternative to the Administration’s proposed 2 percent health insurance tax as the basis for federal matching Medicaid funds. The final bill also dropped the proposed “trigger provision,” which would have authorized the Department of Public Welfare to abrogate its Medicaid MCO contracts if the Centers for Medicare amp; Medicaid Services were to disapprove the GRT approach for fund matching. UTAH: The Health Reform Task Force has drafted two proposals to recommend to the 2010 legislature. The first, under the guise of administrative simplification, would establish procedures to be followed for coordination of benefits for dependents subsequent to a divorce, superseding the provisions in the applicable insurance contract. The second proposal would require the DOI to develop standards for the use and electronic exchange of uniform claim forms, billing and claim codes, eligibility and coverage information and coordination of benefits.br
br
pQuoting Saving just got easier…EasyToInsureME Health Insurance/pbr
br

www.cash1min.com www.pdlnow.com 247 green street cashloannetwork.com indian loan indian loan 5000 5000 sky loan sky 24 now