I have to agree with Bill? OMG something is wrong with me or him!
Quote from: Bill Peckham on April 06, 2013, 11:37:42 PMSo if this Bill is signed into law ... in 2014 a person with a liver transplant and without Employer Group Health Insurance or access to Medicare due to age or disability will buy insurance through the health insurance exchanges so that all their post transplant needs are covered - coverage for physician visits, hospitalizations, diagnostic testing - including their transplant meds for whatever the cost of their coverage and subsidized to some degree for those who earn less than 400% of the federal poverty level. Those with a liver transplant won't be affected by this law, their post transplant care will be covered by the insurance through the health insurance exchanges.As compared to a person in 2014 with a kidney transplant and without Employer Group Health Insurance or access to Medicare due to age or disability and 36 months post transplant, will buy insurance through the health insurance exchanges so that most of their post transplant needs are covered - coverage for physician visits, hospitalizations, diagnostic testing - but for their transplant meds they'll need to pay $400 more a year so that they can get 80% coverage through Medicare for the immunosuppressant meds. That's a good idea? A $400 tax on kidney transplant patients?If anyone takes the time to read through the advocacy literature for these misguided Bills, note there is no mention of the fact that as of 2014 the Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare) requires everyone to have health insurance and for those with a chronic condition, for instance living with a transplant, they will have the opportunity to be insured and under the ACA all health insurance policies will have coverage for certain essential health benefits. How could the CKD Transplant community continue to press forward with this legacy policy without considering the impact of Obamacare? Some day the CKD Transplant community will make great fodder for a study of group think.Personally I will continue to advocate against S 323 and H.R. 1325.I am not a medical economist, so I can't really analyze whether or not a transplant patient will pay an extra $400 per year or not under the affordable care act. I don't think anyone, at this point, can say how the act will be implemented and who will have access to which types of insurance (exchange or Medicare/aid expansion) and how much they will cost at this time. In particular, states like Georgia, that are not expanding Medicaid, make predictions even more difficult.I also think the financial argument is a false argument -- a percentage of patients who lose their Medicare after 3 years into transplant find a way to get their drugs, whether out of pocket, through assistance programs, etc -- but it is true that many patients lose their transplants after losing Medicare and go back on dialysis. Whether the government saves or loses money by covering immunosupressants for life, it is just wrong to stop drug and other medical coverage at three years.I know that professional organizations like the Kidney Foundation and AST are strongly supporting these bills, and that they have access to political and financial expertise in analyzing the pros and cons.
So if this Bill is signed into law ... in 2014 a person with a liver transplant and without Employer Group Health Insurance or access to Medicare due to age or disability will buy insurance through the health insurance exchanges so that all their post transplant needs are covered - coverage for physician visits, hospitalizations, diagnostic testing - including their transplant meds for whatever the cost of their coverage and subsidized to some degree for those who earn less than 400% of the federal poverty level. Those with a liver transplant won't be affected by this law, their post transplant care will be covered by the insurance through the health insurance exchanges.As compared to a person in 2014 with a kidney transplant and without Employer Group Health Insurance or access to Medicare due to age or disability and 36 months post transplant, will buy insurance through the health insurance exchanges so that most of their post transplant needs are covered - coverage for physician visits, hospitalizations, diagnostic testing - but for their transplant meds they'll need to pay $400 more a year so that they can get 80% coverage through Medicare for the immunosuppressant meds. That's a good idea? A $400 tax on kidney transplant patients?If anyone takes the time to read through the advocacy literature for these misguided Bills, note there is no mention of the fact that as of 2014 the Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare) requires everyone to have health insurance and for those with a chronic condition, for instance living with a transplant, they will have the opportunity to be insured and under the ACA all health insurance policies will have coverage for certain essential health benefits. How could the CKD Transplant community continue to press forward with this legacy policy without considering the impact of Obamacare? Some day the CKD Transplant community will make great fodder for a study of group think.Personally I will continue to advocate against S 323 and H.R. 1325.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on April 07, 2013, 05:07:05 PMThe world in 2014 is not unknowable, if instead of busying themselves with this effort the transplant advocates spent their time familiarizing themselves with the implications of Obamacare they would be doing the people they are advocating for a real service. Without even considering the details, the fact that the advocates for this coverage don't ever mention the Affordable Care Act or even allude to the sea change in insurance coverage that happens after 2014 should raise concerns. One must notice the dog that doesn't bark - the information that is missing is what should concern people thinking of supporting these Bills. How serious can their analysis be if they don't even mention that they've considered how their legislation would fit into a post ACA world?ACA does not stipulate immuno drug coverage as an "Essential Health Benefit." Therefore, insurers and state Medicaid programs (participating or not) are left to determine if it will be included as a benefit.Although states can add new protections of many varieties, many do not seem to be going in this direction. In fact, they are doing the opposite, limiting coverage to the minimum required by the law (Georgia is one of them). According to the American Society of Transplant Surgeons, advocates are reporting that very few of the new state benchmark plans would provide immuno drug coverage. As such, this legislation remains necessary to guarantee kidney transplant recipients receive coverage beyond the current 3 year limit.Don't know if you were aware, this legislation only serves as a last resort. If a beneficiary has additional coverage, like a plan through an exchange that includes drug coverage, the bill does not apply.I think it is prudent and pragmatic for the transplant/renal community to support this Medicare legislation. It will guarantee coverage no matter what the final fallout of ACA. This has all to do with what is best for patient care, not a legacy policy.On a political note, unlike the ACA, this bill has bipartisan sponsorship and support.
The world in 2014 is not unknowable, if instead of busying themselves with this effort the transplant advocates spent their time familiarizing themselves with the implications of Obamacare they would be doing the people they are advocating for a real service. Without even considering the details, the fact that the advocates for this coverage don't ever mention the Affordable Care Act or even allude to the sea change in insurance coverage that happens after 2014 should raise concerns. One must notice the dog that doesn't bark - the information that is missing is what should concern people thinking of supporting these Bills. How serious can their analysis be if they don't even mention that they've considered how their legislation would fit into a post ACA world?