Viewing entries tagged with 'AHIP'

AHIP Statement on Coverage for Children

Posted by The Campaign on July 28, 2010 at 8:05 AM

AHIP Statement on Coverage for Children

  

Washington, D.C. – America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) President and CEO Karen Ignagni today released the following statement on the announcement by the Department of Health and Human Services to clarify that health plans may use a structured open enrollment period implementing health reform’s provision eliminating pre-existing condition exclusions for children under age 19:

 

“Today’s announcement will help ensure millions of children have access to affordable health care coverage.  For years, structured enrollment periods have been used in the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program, Medicare, and in employer based coverage to minimize disruption for families, seniors, and small businesses.  Health plans are committed to working with federal and state officials to ensure consumers are aware of all of their coverage options, including how and when they are able to sign up for coverage.” 

 

Health plans will engage in a multi-faceted consumer education effort by posting information on their web sites, coordinating with agents and brokers to educate consumers, and reaching out to insurance commissioners and community-based organizations that focus on children’s interests. 

Tags: AHIP, Pre-ex

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MUST SEE TV: AHIP's Karen Ignagni on MSNBC "We'll have a cost explosion."

Posted by The Campaign on March 17, 2010 at 8:48 AM

AHIP's Karen Ignagni appeared on MSNBC's The Daily Rundown this morning.  In the appearance, she outlined the strong concerns with the current bill and the lack of cost containment in the bill.  At one point she stated "We'll have a cost explosion."

 

 

 

Tags: MST, AHIP, Costs

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MUST SEE TV: AHIP's Karen Ignagni on Fox Business News

Posted by The Campaign on March 16, 2010 at 4:54 PM

AHIP's Karen Ignagni appeared on Fox Business News to discuss the health care reform debate and rising health care costs.

Watch the video below:

 

Tags: AHIP, MST, Costs

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ICYMI: AHIP Letter to HHS Secretary Sebelius

Posted by The Campaign on March 16, 2010 at 11:31 AM

 

AHIP sent a letter to HHS Secretary Sebelius yesterday to respond to her request for specific cost savings recommendations that could be included in the current legislation.  Below are a few highlights from the letter:

 

Increased Transparency

To address your request for greater transparency, we immediately began working with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) to develop a template our members can use across the country to provide information on the factors that are driving premium increases.

As you request transparency from our members, we urge you also to consider pursuing transparency for hospitals, physicians, pharmaceutical and device companies, and other suppliers.

First Do No Harm

We are particularly concerned that there are inadequate incentives in the legislation to bring everyone into the system, that new age-rating requirements would drive up costs for younger families, and that the proposed premium tax on health insurers would further drive up costs for consumers in the individual and small group markets.

Limiting the amount by which premiums can vary by age can have particularly significant effects for young adults, as moving from a 5:1 to 3:1 rating band...raises rates for adults under age 30 by approximately another 30 to 50 percent beyond that projected for the population as a whole.

Enacting insurance reforms and coverage expansions without meaningful cost control will bring more people into an unsustainable, unaffordable system.

The Senate legislation would establish a new commission to review Medicare and private sector health care spending. That is a start, but it will not provide the comprehensive oversight needed because it would exempt Medicare payments for hospitals, physicians, and other key services from review during the first five years.

Payment Reform

Within a comprehensive framework for cost containment, we recommend broadening and expediting certain provisions of the Senate bill that focus on realigning incentives and promoting innovation. The following are several specific examples:

  • To reduce preventable hospital readmissions, we recommend strengthening the Senate bill's proposal to require modest Medicare payment reductions for hospitals with unnecessary risk-adjusted readmissions for three conditions. Increasing the amount of the payment reduction and applying it to a broader range of conditions will create stronger financial incentives for improvements in patient care, thereby reducing unnecessary admissions that are contributing to higher costs while also improving patient safety and quality.
  • To reduce hospital-acquired infections, we recommend building upon the Senate's proposal to reduce Medicare payments by one percent for the worst performing hospitals on medical conditions identified by the Secretary. The Senate proposal would be more effective if it established a stronger financial incentive and applied to all "never events" identified by the National Quality Forum.
  • To accelerate the adoption of payment reform and quality improvement, incentives under the Value-Based Purchasing program should be accelerated forward to begin in 2011 with final recommendations by 2015. By building on existing collaborations to tie hospital performance on quality measures to common high-cost conditions (AMI, Heart Failure, Pneumonia, etc.), we can more rapidly move away from traditional fee-for-service structures.
  • To advance new payment reform models on a system-wide basis, we recommend that the Senate proposal for a CMS Innovation Center be expanded beyond Medicare and Medicaid. Focusing solely on public programs will not improve the overall health care system.
  • To improve the value of comparative effectiveness research and the proposed Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute, we recommend that such research focus on both the clinical and cost effectiveness of treatments.

Provide Malpractice Protections for Doctors 

To reduce the burden of defensive medicine, a fresh approach to medical liability reform should be adopted that combines a safe harbor for following evidence-based medicine and a system to ensure that harmed individuals are compensated adequately. As an alternative to the existing litigation system, we recommend an approach that offers protections for providers who follow established best practices and implement safe, accountable care models based on the latest scientific evidence.

 

 

 

Tags: ICYMI, AHIP, Costs

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ICYMI: AHIP's New Ad on Costs

Posted by The Campaign on March 16, 2010 at 6:05 AM

 

Building on AHIP's national television advertising campaign on health care costs, the below open letter to the American people has begun running in national newspapers.  For a printable version of the letter, click here.

Tags: ICYMI, AHIP, Costs

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MUST SEE TV: AHIP's Karen Ignagni on CBS' Face the Nation

Posted by The Campaign on March 15, 2010 at 11:21 AM

AHIP's Karen Ignagni appeared on CBS' Face the Nation this weekend.  Karen set the record straight on what is driving premiums higher (underlying costs), health plan profits (other industries profit margins are much higher), and the need for the current legislation to do more to control costs (can't pay for $1 trillion legislation by only focusing on 4% of all health care spending.)

 


Tags: AHIP, MST, Costs, Profits

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MUST SEE TV: AHIP's Karen Ignagni on Fox Business News Discussing Rising Health Care Costs

Posted by The Campaign on March 11, 2010 at 7:08 AM

AHIP's Karen Ignagni was on Fox Business News last night discussing rising health care costs and AHIP's new ad campaign on health care costs.

Watch the full video below:

 

Tags: AHIP, MST, Costs

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MUST SEE TV: AHIP's Mike Tuffin on PBS' Newshour

Posted by The Campaign on March 11, 2010 at 6:18 AM

AHIP's Mike Tuffin appeared last night on PBS' Newshour to discuss health care reform, rising costs and what is driving health care costs higher.

Click here to watch the whole interview.

Here are some excerpts from the transcript:

* "Well, a small slice of our total health care spending. About 4 percent of what we spend in health care in this country goes to our administrative costs and profits.  And it's entirely appropriate to direct scrutiny at us and to ask us to be more efficient and do a better job, but we need to look at the other 96 cents, too. And what we're seeing from Washington is a laser-like focus entirely on one slice of the pie. And, if we want to make health care affordable in this country, we have to look at the whole piece of pie."

* "Well, according to the secretary's own department, HHS, the share of premium going to administrative costs and profits of health insurers has declined for six years in a row.  What is causing health care to be unaffordable is spiraling medical costs, doctors, hospitals, new technologies that come online, new drugs. The bulk of people's premiums go to pay for those services. And the share, again, going to administrative costs and profits of our companies is actually declining."

* "We are trying to make health care reform work. And, to have it work, it has to be affordable. We are an advocate of reform. We have embraced all the issues people are concerned about related to our sector: preexisting conditions, rating people based on their health status.  We, before this president was inaugurated, embraced doing away with all of that as part of a comprehensive plan that covers all Americans. The problem with the leading proposals is, they're going to actually, unfortunately, make health care more expensive, not more affordable.  Our customers, the people who pay the bill for health care, principally employers, believe this is going to make their cost structure unsustainable. They're having a hard enough time already covering their work forces. And they think this bill is going to make it worse. We need to fix that before this is passed."


Tags: AHIP, MST, Costs, Profits

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MUST SEE TV: AHIP Hits the Nightly News To Discuss Costs and Set the Record Straight on Health Plan Profits

Posted by The Campaign on March 09, 2010 at 4:57 PM

CBS and ABC both reported on today's developments in the health care reform debate.  Watch the full clips below which include important setting the record straight segments on health plan profits as well as good discussion on what is driving premium increases.

AHIP's Karen Ignagni on CBS Evening News:

 

AHIP's Robert Zirkelbach on ABC Evening News:

 

Tags: MST, ICYMI, Profits, Costs, AHIP

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MUST SEE TV: AHIP's Mike Tuffin on CNBC Discussing Rising Medical Costs

Posted by The Campaign on March 04, 2010 at 11:29 AM

AHIP's Mike Tuffin appeared on CNBC this afternoon along side NAIC's Sandy Praeger to discuss what is driving premium increases as well as putting in perspective health plan profits.

Watch the full clip below:

 

Tags: MST, AHIP, Costs

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