Category: CMS
Why aren’t the Republicans talking about health?
Volume 403, Issue 10450
27 July 2024
WORLD REPORT Health-care issues were conspicuously absent from the 4-day party convention culminating in Donald Trump’s nomination as the Republican 2024 presidential candidate. Susan Jaffe reports.
Former US President Donald Trump spent 93 minutes accepting the Republican Party’s nomination for president last week, exceeding his own 2016 record for the longest acceptance speech at a political convention. But there was no time to mention major health-care issues such as abortion, the COVID-19 pandemic, medical research funding, the Affordable Care Act (ACA), or the opioid epidemic, to name a few. Yet domestic and global healthcare spending consume the largest part of the US budget. [Continued here.]…
Dr. Mandy Cohen’s first year as Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
23 July 2024
PROFILE Mandy Cohn: public health advocate and CDC director
“My North Star has been about building healthier communities”, Dr. Cohen said. “Sometimes that’s about access to doctors and hospitals and sometimes that’s about larger issues, and how we build healthier communities where we live, work, play, and pray.” That goal has motivated Cohen throughout her career. “I loved being a physician, but I’m always thinking about the broader context in which my patients live.” [Full article here.]
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Biden Plan to Save Medicare Patients Money on Drugs Risks Empty Shelves, Pharmacists Say
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By Susan Jaffe | KFF Health News | June 11, 2024
Your Doctor or Your Insurer? Little-Known Rules May Ease the Choice in Medicare Advantage
By
,Bart Klion, 95, and his wife, Barbara, faced a tough choice in January: The upstate New York couple learned that this year they could keep either their private, Medicare Advantage insurance plan — or their doctors at Saratoga Hospital.
The Albany Medical Center system, which includes their hospital, is leaving the Klions’ Humana plan — or, depending on which side is talking, the other way around. The breakup threatened to cut the couple’s lifeline to cope with serious chronic health conditions.
Klion refused to pick the lesser of two bad options without a fight.
..With rare exceptions, Advantage members are locked into their plans for the rest of the year — while health providers may leave at any time. …But a few years ago, CMS created an escape hatch by expanding special enrollment periods, or SEPs, which allow for “exceptional circumstances.” Beneficiaries who qualify can request SEPs to change plans or return to original Medicare. [Continued on KFF Health News]…
Dodging the Medicare Enrollment Deadline Can Be Costly
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,Angela M. Du Bois, a retired software tester in Durham, North Carolina, wasn’t looking to replace her UnitedHealthcare Medicare Advantage plan. She wasn’t concerned as the Dec. 7 deadline approached for choosing another of the privately run health insurance alternatives to original Medicare.
But then something caught her attention: When she went to her doctor last month, she learned that the doctor and the hospital where she works will not accept her insurance next year.
Faced with either finding a new doctor or finding a new plan, Du Bois said the decision was easy. “I’m sticking with her because she knows everything about me,” she said of her doctor, whom she’s been seeing for more than a decade.
Du Bois isn’t the only one tuning out when commercials about the open enrollment deadline flood the airwaves each year — even though there could be good reasons to shop around. But sifting through the offerings has become such an ordeal that few people want to repeat it. Avoidance is so rampant that only 10% of beneficiaries switched Medicare Advantage plans in 2019.
Once open enrollment ends, there are limited options for a do-over…. [Continued on Kaiser Health News and NPR]…
Uncle Sam Wants You … to Help Stop Insurers’ Bogus Medicare Advantage Sales Tactics
By
,After an unprecedented crackdown on misleading advertising claims by insurers selling private Medicare Advantage and drug plans, the Biden administration hopes to unleash a special weapon to make sure companies follow the new rules: you.
Officials at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services are encouraging seniors and other members of the public to become fraud detectives by reporting misleading or deceptive sales tactics to 800-MEDICARE, the agency’s 24-hour information hotline. Suspects include postcards designed to look like they’re from the government and TV ads with celebrities promising benefits and low fees that are available only to some people in certain counties.
The new rules, which took effect Sept. 30, close some loopholes in existing requirements by describing what insurers can say in ads and other promotional materials as well as during the enrollment process. [Continued on Kaiser Health News and NPR]…
Feds Rein In Use of Predictive Software That Limits Care for Medicare Advantage Patients
By
,Judith Sullivan was recovering from major surgery at a Connecticut nursing home in March when she got surprising news from h when she got surprising news from her Medicare Advantage plan: It would no longer pay for her care because she was well enough to go home.
At the time, she could not walk more than a few feet, even with assistance — let alone manage the stairs to her front door, she said. She still needed help using a colostomy bag following major surgery.
“How could they make a decision like that without ever coming and seeing me?” said Sullivan, 76. “I still couldn’t walk without one physical therapist behind me and another next to me. Were they all coming home with me?”
UnitedHealthcare — the nation’s largest health insurance company, which provides Sullivan’s Medicare Advantage plan — doesn’t have a crystal ball. It does have naviHealth, a care management company bought by UHC’s sister company, Optum, in 2020. NaviHealth’s proprietary “nH Predict” tool sifts through millions of medical records to match patients with similar diagnoses and characteristics, including age, preexisting health conditions, and other factors. Based on these comparisons, an algorithm anticipates what kind of care a specific patient will need and for how long.
…Next year, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services will begin restricting how Medicare Advantage plans use predictive technology tools to make some coverage decisions.[Continued on Kaiser Health News and The Washington Post.]…
US pharmaceutical companies sue to halt cuts in drug prices
Volume 402, Issue 10399
29 July 2023
WORLD REPORT Medicare will soon be able to negotiate some drug prices to reduce costs for patients and taxpayers. Susan Jaffe reports from Washington, DC.
The first set of ten drugs subject to price negotiations by the US Medicare programme will be unveiled on Sept 1, 2023, but some pharmaceutical companies and their allies are not waiting to find out which products will be on the list. So far, four manufacturers and two trade associations are suing to stop the process before it begins. [Continued here.]
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A Covid Test Medicare Scam May Be a Trial Run for Further Fraud
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,Medicare coverage for at-home covid-19 tests ended last week, but the scams spawned by the temporary pandemic benefit could have lingering consequences for seniors.
Medicare advocates around the country who track fraud noticed an eleventh-hour rise in complaints from beneficiaries who received tests — sometimes by the dozen — that they never requested. It’s a signal that someone may have been using, and could continue to use, seniors’ Medicare information to improperly bill the federal government. …One beneficiary in Indiana suspected something was amiss after receiving 32 unrequested tests over a 10-day period. [Continued on Kaiser Health News, NPR, Yahoo News, and St. Louis Post-Dispatch]…
US plan to shield science from “inappropriate influence”
Volume 401, Issue 10375
11 February 2023
WORLD REPORT The Biden administration is launching a new initiative on scientific integrity in federal agencies following multiple lapses. Susan Jaffe reports from Washington, DC.
Just a week after Joe Biden was sworn in as president in January, 2021, he created a multi-agency Task Force on Scientific Integrity to restore “trust in government through scientific integrity and evidence-based policy making”…Last month, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy released A Framework for Federal Scientific Integrity and Practice, a follow-up to the task force’s 2022 recommendations that provides a blueprint for implementation. [Continued here.] …
Medicare Plan Finder Likely Won’t Note New $35 Cap on Out-of-Pocket Insulin Costs
Medicare considers expanding dental benefits for certain medical conditions
Proposed changes in Medicare rules could soon pave the way for a significant expansion in Medicare-covered dental services, while falling short of the comprehensive benefits that many Democratic lawmakers have advocated.
That’s because, under current law, Medicare can pay for limited dental care only if it is medically necessary to safely treat another covered medical condition. In July, officials proposed adding conditions that qualify and sought public comment. Any changes could be announced in November and take effect as soon as January. The review by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services follows an unsuccessful effort by congressional Democrats to pass comprehensive Medicare dental coverage for all beneficiaries, a move that would require changes in federal law. As defeat appeared imminent, consumer and seniors’ advocacy groups along with dozens of lawmakers urged CMS to take independent action. [Continued on Kaiser Health News and CNN]
…Nursing Home Surprise: Advantage Plans May Shorten Stays to Less Time Than Medicare Covers
“The health plan can determine how long someone is in a nursing home typically without laying eyes on the person.”
By Susan Jaffe | Kaiser Health News | October 4, 2022 | This KHN story also ran on
“This seems unethical,” said daughter Amy Loomis, who feared what would happen if the Medicare Advantage plan, run by UnitedHealthcare, ended coverage for her mother’s nursing home care. The facility gave Christopherson a choice: pay several thousand dollars to stay, appeal the company’s decision, or go home.
But instead of being relieved, Christopherson and her daughter were worried because her medical team said she wasn’t well enough to leave.
Health care providers, nursing home representatives, and advocates for residents say Medicare Advantage plans are increasingly ending members’ coverage for nursing home and rehabilitation services before patients are healthy enough to go home. [Full story in and Fortune, Kaiser Health News, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and Yahoo News]
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US Congress lets Medicare negotiate lower drug prices
Volume 400, Issue 10352
20 August 2022
WORLD REPORT A new law also targets climate change in a major victory for Democrats and President Joe Biden. Susan Jaffe reports from Washington, DC.
Medicaid Weighs Attaching Strings to Nursing Home Payments to Improve Patient Care
Medicare Surprise: Drug Plan Prices Touted During Open Enrollment Can Rise Within a Month
By Susan Jaffe | Kaiser Health News | May 3, 2022 | This KHN story also ran on
…Medicare covers new Alzheimer’s drug, but there is a catch
Volume 399, Issue 10335
23 April 2022
WORLD REPORT The federal health plan for older Americans will pay for the controversial new drug aducanumab only for patients participating in clinical trials. Susan Jaffe reports.
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Seeking to Shift Costs to Medicare, More Employers Move Retirees to Advantage Plans
By Susan Jaffe | Kaiser Health News | March 3, 2022 | This KHN story also ran in Fortune and The Dallas Morning News.
…Medicare Patients Win the Right to Appeal Gap in Nursing Home Coverage
The next steps for US vaccine mandates
Volume 399, Issue 10323
28 January 2022
WORLD REPORT As the Supreme Court blocks one of the Biden Administration’s plans to raise COVID-19 vaccination rates but approves another, Susan Jaffe looks at the next steps.
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Holmes verdicts prompt questions over justice for patients
Volume 399, Issue 10321
15 January 2022
WORLD REPORT The founder of Theranos was found guilty of defrauding some investors, but cleared of charges that she misled patients. Susan Jaffe reports.
Theranos founder counters fraud charges in federal trial
Volume 398, Issue 10315
27 November 2021
WORLD REPORT Federal prosecutors charged Theranos’ founder Elizabeth Holmes and former Theranos president Ramesh Balwani with wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud, alleging that they deceived investors and patients and their doctors by claiming that Theranos’s machine could produce accurate test results from blood collected in its tiny “nanotainer” device instead of several vials. But witnesses for the prosecution testified that the devices did not operate as promised…. “When something is brought forward as the next new thing regardless of whether it’s a drug or device, it needs to go through the process of rigorous scientific and clinical testing, then presented to the scientific community for peer review and ultimately publication”, said Roy Silverstein a haematologist and chair of medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin. “And I’m not aware of any single publication that ever came out of this Theranos technology.” [Full story here.]
…Legal challenges threaten Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine rule
Volume 398, Issue 10314
20 November 2021
WORLD REPORT Almost a year after the first COVID-19 vaccine was approved for emergency use in the USA, roughly a third of adults have still not received it. After urging Americans to get vaccinated, US President Joe Biden has taken a tougher approach: under his administration’s new workplace safety standard, people must get vaccinated or undergo weekly tests for the virus if they work for companies with at least 100 employees. “The rule will protect more than 84 million workers from the spread of the coronavirus on the job”, said Jim Frederick, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health. …A day after OSHA’s announcement on Nov 4, 2021, multiple lawsuits to block the rule started rolling in to federal courts across the country.[Continued here.]
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Medicare’s Open Enrollment Is Open Season for Scammers
By Susan Jaffe | Kaiser Health News | November 11, 2021 | This KHN story also ran in The Washington Post.
In response, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has threatened to penalize private insurance companies selling Medicare Advantage and drug plans if they or agents working on their behalf mislead consumers. The agency has also revised rules making it easier for beneficiaries to escape plans they didn’t sign up for or enrolled in only to discover promised benefits didn’t exist or they couldn’t see their providers.
The problems are especially prevalent during Medicare’s open-enrollment period, which began Oct. 15 and runs through Dec. 7. A common trap begins with a phone call like the one Linda Heimer, an Iowa resident, received in October. [Full story in The Washington Post and Kaiser Health News.]