Tag Archive for state

Health care reform and buying coverage across state lines

I hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving. Now that that’s over, Congress is back in session, and the Senate is tackling the health care reform issue.

One of the things that is being discussed in reforming our health insurance system is allowing people to buy insurance plans from other states where they might be able to find less expensive plans. I’m not sure how this is supposed to work, and here’s why.

One reason the cost of plans is lower in some states than is others is the number of mandated services a health plan is required to cover. The more a plan is required to cover, the higher the cost of coverage. For example, California has 56 required services that each plan must cover.  By contrast, Idaho has 13 state mandates. We aren’t at the top of the list by any means; Virginia has 60 mandates and Maryland has 66. Want to check out what kinds of things are mandated, click here.

Another area that needs to be addressed is how physicians and others are paid. HMO plans in California tend to be more expensive than PPO plans in the individual market, but you have lower out of pocket costs when obtaining care on an HMO plan. (The opposite is usually true in group health insurance.) The reason this can be is through very specific networks of contracted doctors. Most people know that you don’t have coverage if you go outside the HMO network unless it’s an emergency. So maybe you just don’t offer HMOs between states.  But PPOs have networks too. If you see a contracted doctor you are covered at a higher level than non-contracted doctors. So if you are in California and buy a plan from Kansas, would you always be covered at the lower reimbursement rates?  Larger carriers like United Healthcare and Aetna have networks in most states, but what about the smaller, regional carriers without networks in other states? How would that work?

Another aspect of provider payment that affects premiums is how much providers are paid. Care in some states is less expensive than others, so how do you pay providers in the ‘expensive’ states versus the less expensive, and what will that do to the cost of insurance in those states where lower costs of care are factored into the cost of insurance? You could still end up with the problem of some people being ‘under insured’ depending on how reimbursement is worked out.

So be careful what you ask for, you may gt it. The more you want covered in a plan, the more it’s going to cost. Just remember the old marketing adage, if it sounds too good to be true, it usually is.

Health Care Bill Would Bring Higher State Medicaid Costs

The health bill passed by the House of Representatives Sunday would cost Nevada taxpayers an extra $613 million from 2014-2019, to provide health care to the needy.

According to early state estimates, the bill would make an additional 70,000 residents eligible for Medicaid. The state would be mandated to cover another 8,000 individuals who are now eligible but have not applied to be covered by the state health insurance program for the poor.

About 209,000 Nevadans are currently covered by Medicaid.

Including state and federal money, “the total cost of reform is $2.3 billion,” said Mike Willden, director of the state Department of Health and Human Resources.

Willden went through the numbers for the Nevada Vision Stakeholder Group, formed to develop a plan for the future, looking ahead as much as 20 years.

Meanwhile, Gov. Jim Gibbons railed against the costs of the bill in a written statement Monday: “The bill disguises its true cost by shoving Medicaid expansions down to the state level and shuffling Congressional Budget Office estimates into later years so it appears to save federal tax dollars. It is an insult to those who truly care about meaningful health care reform.”

But Jon Sasser of Washoe Legal Services said during the Vision Stakeholder meeting the bill will expand the number of people eligible for Medicaid and that should put less stress on counties, which handle medically needy cases. “It means extra millions of federal dollars coming into our state,” Sasser said.

Most of the health care bill doesn’t kick in until 2014, Willden said. Some states are starting early, but Willden said he doesn’t see Nevada doing that because of its budget shortfall.

The federal-state dollar match for Medicaid is 50-50. Federal stimulus funds pushed that to a 64 percent federal match, saving the state $40 million to $45 million a quarter. But after the stimulus money expires Nevada will be back to picking up the 50 percent share, Willden said.

Willden said only 8 percent of the population is covered compared to 14 percent in other states. The state spends $435 per capita compared to the national average of $1,021.

State health department takes additional steps to protect the public against Salmonella outbreak


State health department takes additional steps to protect the public against Salmonella outbreak
To help prevent a secondary outbreak of Salmonella serotype Hvittingfoss associated with SUBWAY® restaurants in the state, the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) is requiring food handlers in 46 restaurants currently linked to the outbreak, to have two consecutive test results that are negative for Salmonella serotype Hvittingfoss before being allowed to return to work.

Read more on The Canton Daily Ledger

Bank Health by State


Bank Health by State
The Texas Ratio has become the de facto way of gauging a bank’s health. By aggregating banks by geography and calculating a weighted average Texas Ratio for each geographic region we can gain a understanding of what things look like on a more global scale. There are several definitions of the Texas Ratio, but the quick and dirty is taking a bank’s Adjusted Nonperforming Assets and dividing them …

Read more on Zero Hedge

A threat to bypass the state govt over health


A threat to bypass the state govt over health
The Federal Health Minister says West Australians will not miss out on federal health funding even if the State Government refuses to sign up to the national reform package.

Read more on Australian Broadcasting Corporation

State round-up: Tenn. lawmakers fail to pass bill to opt out of health care law; Mass. officials continue to study …


State round-up: Tenn. lawmakers fail to pass bill to opt out of health care law; Mass. officials continue to study …
Tennessee lawmakers adjourned the 106th General Assembly early Thursday after failing to pass a bill to opt out of the new federal health care law. … Both chambers passed the budget — the only piece of legislation they are constitutionally required to adopt — last week, but spent the last few days wrangling over issues like the federal health care overhaul.

Read more on News-Medical-Net

Dell Health Care Services Targets State Governments


Dell Health Care Services Targets State Governments
Now that the health care reform bill is signed into law, Dell is looking to offer local state governments a set of IT services designed to help meet new federal regulations regarding issues such as Medicaid. Since its acquisition of Perot, Dell is moving deeper into the IT services field, especially in the health care and government markets.

Read more on eWeek

Dell Health Care Services Targets State Governments


Dell Health Care Services Targets State Governments
Now that the health care reform bill is signed into law, Dell is looking to offer local state governments a set of IT services designed to help meet new federal regulations regarding issues such as Medicaid. Since its acquisition of Perot, Dell is moving deeper into the IT services field, especially in the health care and government markets.

Read more on eWeek

State issues health alert for Coos County beach, lifts one for Clatsop County


State issues health alert for Coos County beach, lifts one for Clatsop County
Oregon authorities lifted a health advisory today for a beach in Clatsop County while issuing one for a beach in Coos County. Coos County residents should avoid contact with the water at Bastendorff Beach, which is contaminated with fecal bacteria….

Read more on The Oregonian

CNY hospitals lose millions under state budget cuts for health care


CNY hospitals lose millions under state budget cuts for health care
Frank Ordonez/The Post-Standard, file photograph, 2009Dr. Terrence Li (right) and medical student Mark Van Deusen attend to a patient in the emergency room at Upstate Hospital last year. State lawmakers approved cuts Monday to the state health care budget that…

Read more on The Post-Standard