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HCR Bill Implementation Timeline - YR 2011 - (CORRECTED)

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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-14-10 09:58 PM
Original message
HCR Bill Implementation Timeline - YR 2011 - (CORRECTED)
version I posted previously was not the most current timeline of implementation.
This one is more recent (thanks zmolly!)

This is the Senate Bill as is; not fixes or reconcilation actions are included.


2011

Bringing Down the Cost of Health Care Coverage. Health plans, including grandfathered plans, must annually report on the share of premium dollars spent on medical care and provide consumer rebates for excessive medical loss ratios.

Increasing Reimbursement for Primary Care. Provides a 10 percent Medicare bonus payment for primary care physicians and general surgeons.

Increasing Training Support for Primary Care. Establishes a Graduate Medical Education policy allowing unused training slots to be re-distributed for purposes of increasing primary care training at other sites.

Improving Health Care Quality and Efficiency. Establishes a new Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation to test innovative payment and service delivery models to reduce health care costs and enhance the quality of care provided to individuals.

Improving Preventive Health Coverage. Provides a free, annual wellness visit and personalized prevention plan services for Medicare beneficiaries and eliminates cost-sharing for preventive services. Creates incentives for State Medicaid programs to cover evidence-based preventive services with no cost-sharing, and requires coverage of tobacco cessation services for pregnant women.

Improving Transitional Care for Medicare Beneficiaries. Establishes the Community Care Transitions Program to provide transition services to high-risk Medicare beneficiaries.

Expanding Primary Care, Nursing, and Public Health Workforce. Increases access to primary care by adjusting the Medicare Graduate Medical Education program. Primary care and nurse training programs are also expanded to increase the size of the primary care and nursing workforce. Ensures that public health challenges are adequately addressed.

Transitioning to Competitive Bidding in Medicare Advantage. Begin transition to a competitive bidding system to eliminate overpayments to insurers in Medicare Advantage.

Reporting Health Coverage Costs on Form W-2: Requires employers to disclose the value of the benefit provided by the employer for each employee’s health insurance coverage on the employee’s annual Form W-2.

Standardizing the Definition of Qualified Medical Expenses. Conforms the definition of qualified medical expenses for HSAs, FSAs, and HRAs to the definition used for the itemized deduction. An exception to this rule is included so that amounts paid for over-the-counter medicine with a prescription still qualify as medical expenses.

Increased Additional Tax for Withdrawals from Health Savings Accounts and Archer Medical Savings Account Funds for Non-Qualified Medical Expenses. Increases the additional tax for HSA withdrawals prior to age 65 that are not used for qualified medical expenses from 10 to 20 percent. The additional tax for Archer MSA withdrawals not used for qualified medical expenses would increase from 15 to 20 percent.

Cafeteria Plan Changes. Creates a Simple Cafeteria Plan to provide a vehicle through which small businesses can provide tax-free benefits to their employees. This would ease the small employer’s administrative burden of sponsoring a cafeteria plan. The provision also exempts employers who make contributions for employees under a simple cafeteria plan from pension plan nondiscrimination requirements applicable to highly compensated and key employees.

Limiting Health Flexible Savings Account Contributions. Limits the amount of contributions to health FSAs to $2,500 per year, indexed by CPI for subsequent years.

Eliminating Deduction for Employer Part D Subsidy. Eliminates the deduction for the subsidy for employers who maintain prescription drug plans for their Medicare Part D eligible retirees.

Medical Device Manufacturers Fee. Imposes an annual, non-deductible fee on the medical device manufacturing sector allocated according to market share and exempting companies with U.S. sales of $5 million or less. The fee does not apply to any sale of a Class I product or any sale of a Class II product that is primarily sold to consumers at retail for not more than $100 per unit (under the FDA product classification system). The fee is $2 billion per year from 2011-2017 and $3 billion per year thereafter.

Health Insurance Provider Fee. Imposes an annual, non-deductible fee on the health insurance sector allocated across the industry according to market share. The fee does not apply to companies whose net premiums written are $25 million or less. The fee is $2 billion for 2011, $4 billion for 2012, $7 billion for 2013, $9 billion for years 2014 through 2016 and $10 billion for years after
2016. Creates a limited exemption from the fee for certain non-profit insurers with a medical loss ratio (MLR) of 90 percent or more in the individual, small group and large group markets and whose overall MLR is at least 92 percent.

http://dpc.senate.gov/healthreformbill/healthbill50.pdf


This was the original thread with a more dated version: http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=433x222421


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Go2Peace Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-14-10 10:18 PM
Response to Original message
1. Thanks, it's good to be informed
Even though I see some things I am not happy about. Like what is with increasing the penalty on withdrawing from an HSA? It just makes it harder for us middle/low incomers to use. It would be good for everyone to be encouraged to keep an HSA for future medical expenses, but no way can I do that if I can't withdraw it if I end up not needing it or have an emergency (without a hefty fine). Only the rich can set aside money expecting never to have to touch it for anything else.

Good to see the increase in spending for primary care and nursing education. Hopefully the "primary care" is for more things like Physician's assistants. Physician's assistants can provide appropriate primary care at a lower cost.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-14-10 10:20 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. You're welcome!
Told you I would correct it if I found a newer version.
Unfortunately there are no dates on these things. :(

:hi:
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