Friday, March 30, 2012
Lawmakers get update on Medicaid restructuring | Georgia Health News
CDC: Autism is more common than previously thought - USATODAY.com
Supreme Court has a wide range of options in ruling on Obama's health care overhaul law - chicagotribune.com
Justices vote today on reform challenge - Healthcare business news and research | Modern Healthcare
Doc associations warn CMS about coming ‘storm' of overlapping regulations - Healthcare business news and research | Modern Healthcare
Children Who Develop Asthma Have Lung Function Deficits As Neonates
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Childhood Asthma Hot Spots May Be Explained By Air Pollution From Trucks And Low-Quality Heating Oil
Childhood Asthma Hot Spots May Be Explained By Air Pollution From Trucks And Low-Quality Heating Oil
Future Skin Cancer Risk Revealed By UV Photographs Of 12-Year-olds
Sine Die: Deadline Day Ticks Down
Vigorous Questions On Severability, Medicaid On Final Day - Kaiser Health News
P4P project yields no long-term gains on mortality: study - Healthcare business news and research | Modern Healthcare
After reform arguments close, senators are wary about future legislation - Healthcare business news and research | Modern Healthcare
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Lawmakers back budget with a little extra to spare | ajc.com
Secondhand Smoke Exposure Affects Girls More Than Boys
MedPAC calls for pay parity between hospital, doctor office visits - amednews.com
Pharma scales back drug samples to physician offices - amednews.com
More doctors work part time, flexible schedules - amednews.com
Monday, March 26, 2012
Medicare cost board targeted by House GOP – USATODAY.com
Some Insurers Paying Patients Who Agree To Get Cheaper Care - Kaiser Health News
Justices hold first hearing on health law | Georgia Health News
Georgia a player in health law case today | ajc.com
Teen Girls' Self-Esteem May Not Be Helped By Weight Loss
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Georgians braced for health care decision | ajc.com
Combating Childhood Obesity, The Budget Case - Rep. Ron Kind and Donna Katen-Bahensky
Risk For Early Alcohol Use Reduced By Middle School Teacher Support
Anxiety Makes Brain Poor At Math For Some Children
Scorecard: What The Health Law Has Delivered, Or Not - Kaiser Health News
Obesity is an expensive problem — and getting more so (video) | Georgia Health News
Friday, March 23, 2012
Not all health bills draw controversy | Georgia Health News
Court weighs US power over states in health case - Yahoo! News
How The Health Law Could Survive Without A Mandate : Shots - Health Blog : NPR
House Votes to Kill a Medicare Cost Control Board - NYTimes.com
Respiratory Syncytial Virus May Cause Complications In Kids
Second Hand Smoke Exposure Affects Majority Of Fourth Graders
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Drug tests and classes for public benefits | ajc.com
State Senate adopts $19.2B state budget plan | Online Athens
Synthetic Marijuana Usage Alarms American Pediatricians
Unconscious Racial Bias May Affect A Pediatricians' Pain Medication Judgment
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
National study says Georgia is most corruption-prone state | savannahnow.com
Medicaid Expansion Rule Aims for Vastly Simpler Enrollment Process - CQ HealthBeat
Medicaid Expansion
Rule Aims for Vastly Simpler Enrollment Process
By John Reichard, CQ HealthBeat Editor
A final rule released Friday spells out the terms for the expanded Medicaid
eligibility in 2014 under the health care law and requires “real-time”
enrollment that documents income, citizenship and other data without the
applicant having to bring in paperwork.
The rule also collapses the many eligibility categories now in Medicaid
into just four: adults, children, parents and pregnant women.
“I’ll guarantee you that Medicaid will look and feel like a very different
program in 2014,” federal Medicaid director Cindy Mann told reporters on a
telephone briefing.
The rule will make it much easier for states to run their Medicaid
programs, she said. “We had overwhelmingly strong support from all stakeholders
for the rule,” she said. It also will make a big difference for the many
low-income Americans who now go without coverage, she added. “Think for a
minute about a 55-year-old woman who works in a restaurant. Her kids have grown
— left the home — she earns let’s say $12,000 a year. In most states, if she’s
not getting affordable coverage through her workplace, she’s not going to be
eligible for Medicaid even though she really has no options. The Affordable
Care Act fills that gap by expanding eligibility to low-income adults for the
first time in the program.”
The health care law extends Medicaid coverage to all individuals between
ages 19 and 64 with incomes up to 133 percent of the federal poverty level.
That’s $14,856 for an individual and $30,656 for a family based on the 2012
federal poverty level. (While the law specifies 133 percent, in practice it’s
138 percent since states disregard five percent of income in determining
eligibility, Mann noted.)
Mann said that under the health law the application process will be
completed “literally in real time.” As an example, she said an application
filed online at nine in the morning would be processed and, if in order,
approved an hour later.
Health and Human Services is simplifying this process for the states by
serving as a single point of computer entry to federal data sources such as the
Internal Revenue Service to determine income, the Social Security Administration
to determine identity and the Department of Homeland Security to confirm legal
status.
Under the health care law, the uninsured will obtain coverage through
Medicaid or on insurance exchanges using tax credits to help them pay premiums.
In many instances, people won’t know whether they should be applying for
Medicaid or premium tax credits — or in the case of their children, for
Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program.
No matter, Mann said. Applicants will have to fill out just one
application. They won’t have to know ahead of time whether they should apply to
Medicaid, CHIP or insurances exchanges to get tax credits.
In response to comments on the proposed version of the rule, the final
version provides two ways for exchanges to perform Medicaid-eligibility
evaluations. They can determine themselves whether an applicant qualifies for
Medicaid or make an initial determination of that and rely on state Medicaid
and CHIP agencies for a final determination. If they choose the latter, applications
have to be processed in “timely” fashion, Mann said.
When Medicaid expands, large numbers of uninsured people who qualify for
the program based on current criteria but haven’t enrolled are expected to sign
up for coverage. That is because of expanded outreach efforts and the
requirement in the health law that individuals without coverage pay penalties.
But those qualifying for coverage based on current criteria, the states
will get current federal matching rates, not the enhanced federal matching rate
provided for those newly eligible for Medicaid under the health law. In 2014,
2015 and 2016, the federal government will pay 100 percent of the Medicaid
costs of the newly eligible under the health law; then the federal percentage
gradually drops so that in 2020 it’s 90 percent, where it stays.
Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid
Directors, said in an email that “the provision about how to conveniently
calculate the regular and enhanced match rates for enrollees are not included
in this regulation. CMS anticipates a final rule on these provisions around
October 2012. We understand why it takes so long, because this is
extraordinarily complicated. But the longer any piece takes, the more it
stretches already tight time frames” for the health law. That’s especially the
case “since many state agencies are or soon will be preparing budgets for the
next fiscal year.”
Salo added that state Medicaid agencies will need flexibility on the
deadlines for determining final Medicaid eligibility when they do it rather
than the exchanges.
Separately, CMS released regulations Friday establishing a time frame by
which participants in the Early Retiree Reinsurance Program must use reimbursement funds; and
standards relating to reinsurance, risk corridors and risk adjustment to
eliminate incentives for insurers to avoid covering people in poor health.
Southern teens have highest rates of pregnancies, STDs, study says | Online Athens
Senate Panel Approves $19.3B 2013 Budget
Complication In Premature Babies And The Immune System's Role
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
New Rule Spells Out Streamlined Medicaid Eligibility – Capsules - The KHN Blog
FTC targets hospital mergers - FierceHealthcare
amednews: Med schools shift focus to team-based care :: March 19, 2012 ... American Medical News
Infants' Faces Evoke Species-Specific Patterns Of Brain Activity In Adults - Evidence Of Basis For Caregiving Impulse
Health care message wars heat up on anniversary of law - CNN.com
Monday, March 19, 2012
U.S. Government Steps Up Challenges to Hospital Mergers - WSJ.com
State paid day cares that failed to meet standards | ajc.com
Comparing Diets For Weight Management In Obese Children
Passive Smoking In Childhood Increases Risk Of COPD In Adulthood
Breastfeeding Recommendations Not Met By Most Low-Income Moms
Methamphetamine Usage During Pregnancy May Cause Childhood Behavioral Problems
Friday, March 16, 2012
The new health care — for better or worse | Georgia Health News
Youth safety suffers a blow as bill derailed | Georgia Health News
Medicaid patients with PCP barriers flock to ED--more coming soon - FierceHealthcare
What effects the health care law has had and what's to come – USATODAY.com
Medical News:Anti-Smoking Ads Pull No Punches - in Primary Care, Smoking & Tobacco from MedPage Today
Cerebral Palsy In Children - Innovative Intervention Evaluated
MedPAC continues to urge SGR repeal - Healthcare business news and research | Modern Healthcare
Medicaid, CHIP costs swell to $444 billion - Healthcare business news and research | Modern Healthcare
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Legislature: No action on concussions | ajc.com
Peer-Led Parenting Interventions Prove Effective
Helping Children To Succeed By Reducing Academic Pressure And Fear Of Failure
Stair-Related Injuries Among Children In The United States: New Study
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
GOP links IPAB repeal and malpractice reform - Matt DoBias - POLITICO.com
Access, quality, costs vary widely, says Commonwealth report - Healthcare business news and research | Modern Healthcare
Health-record privacy impeding medical research - Philly.com
Legislature passes supplemental $18B budget for fiscal year 2012 - The Times-Herald
Inhaled Nitric Oxide Still Given To Preemies Despite Lack Of Supporting Evidence And Standards
Tweens Just Say 'Maybe' To Cigarettes And Alcohol
Medicare cost seen nearly doubling in 10 years; Medicaid expected to grow even faster - Healthcare business news and research | Modern Healthcare
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Rules For New Insurance Marketplaces Give Insurers Clout - Kaiser Health News
Gerber recalls baby formula because of odor | Reuters
Monday, March 12, 2012
Concussions Linked To Decline In Children's Quality Of Life
Cobb school blazes trail in promoting students’ health | Georgia Health News
Health Insurance Exchange Rules Highlight 'State Flexibility' - Kaiser Health News
Report: Safety-net hospitals need targeted, more Medicaid payments - FierceHealthcare
'Largest commercial ACO' earns early results - FierceHealthcare
At health-care reform’s key agency, no one stays in charge for long - The Washington Post
Brain Development Of Premature Infants May Be Influenced By Maternal Obesity
amednews: Tobacco control groups push for appeal to allow graphic cigarette labels :: March 12, 2012 ... American Medical News
amednews: FDA and industry not waiting for Congress on drug shortages :: March 12, 2012 ... American Medical News
10 Days Left in 2012 Legislative Session
Lasting symptoms possible after kids' concussions | Reuters
Examining The Causes Of Childhood Pneumonia
Study Finds Higher Doses Of ADHD Drug May Disadvantage Children In The Classroom
Friday, March 9, 2012
House Republicans Introduce Legislation Overhauling Medicaid
House Republicans Introduce Legislation Overhauling Medicaid
BY: Dylan Scott
| Nation | March 7, 2012 governing magazine
States would receive total authority to determine Medicaid
eligibility, benefits and provider reimbursement rates under legislation to be
introduced Wednesday by U.S. Rep. Todd Rokita (R-Ind.).
The official legislation has not yet been filed with the House
clerk, but Rokita's office released a fact sheet outlining the issue and the proposal. Federal funding
for Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) would be
consolidated into a single block grant and capped at current levels for the
next 10 years, reducing spending by $1.8 trillion over that time, according to
Rokita's office.
States would have sole authority to set eligibility standards,
benefit packages and provider reimbursement rates for the insurance program.
Under the proposal, annual independent audits would be conducted to monitor
states' use of federal funding. Forfeiture of federal aid and a 10 percent
penalty would be incurred for misuse of funding, according to Rokita's office.
The bill will be co-sponsored by Rep. Paul Broun (R-Ga.), Rep.
Tim Huelskamp (R-Kansas) and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), an aide to Rokita told Governing.
It is based on principles set out by 29 Republican governors last year,
according to Rokita's office.
The viability of the legislation outside the House would be
questionable. By handing full authority to establish eligibility and benefits
to the states, it would seem to conflict with the Affordable Care Act, which
requires states to cover residents with income up to 133 percent of the federal
poverty level in 2014 and onward. Last year, Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) included a Medicaid block grant in his budget, which passed
the House but was turned down by the Senate
Immature Brains May Be Responsible For Selfishness In Children
An Urgent Need For More Effective Treatments For Adolescent Depression
State revenues grow 7 percent in February | ajc.com
Thursday, March 8, 2012
Teen tobacco 'epidemic' shocks surgeon general - USATODAY.com
Drug Abuse In Adopted Children - Nature Vs. Nurture
The health care scorecard on Crossover Day | Georgia Health News
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Court ruling gives hospitals, patients a say in Medicaid cuts - FierceHealthcare
Safety-net hospitals under threat with reimbursement cuts - FierceHealthcare
Rise in Preschool Cavities Prompts Anesthesia Use - NYTimes.com
Even mild concussions can cause lingering symptoms - USATODAY.com
CURIE: Perils of one-size-fits-all Medicaid - Washington Times
Grassley Wants States to Tell Him How They Oversee Medicaid Managed-Care Plans
Grassley Wants
States to Tell Him How They Oversee Medicaid Managed-Care Plans
By Jane Norman, CQ HealthBeat Associate
Editor
Sen. Charles E. Grassley has
launched a letter-writing campaign to the states to determine whether they are
exercising enough scrutiny over their Medicaid managed-care programs.
Grassley, the ranking Republican on the Judiciary Committee, said Thursday
in identical letters to every state Medicaid director that a 2010 Government
Accountability Office (GAO) report found that the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS) has been inconsistent in reviewing Medicaid
managed-care plan rates. CMS is required to determine whether states are being
adequately reimbursed for their expenses for the plans; states are supposed to
ensure that as well.
“In the 18 months since that report was issued, I have seen nothing to
convince me CMS or the states have improved in their ability” to verify that
managed-care entities are appropriately and correctly reimbursed for the
services provided, he said.
If a plan is paid too little, the quality of care for beneficiaries is
harmed, and if it is paid too much, it’s diverting scarce Medicaid dollars away
from needed services, he said.
Grassley aides said the state of Minnesota
and its Medicaid plans are drawing attention for what some believe to be high
operating margins. The Pioneer-Press reported in February that federal
authorities are investigating whether the Minnesota state government received excess
Medicaid money from the federal government, although details of the
investigation are unclear. Most Medicaid recipients in the state receive
benefits through private HMOs, and critics say the plans make more money on
Medicaid than on their private beneficiaries, the newspaper said.
Grassley said in his letter that for years states have been allowed to
provide Medicaid services through private plans so they can better manage
costs, and these entities have proved better at care coordination than public
programs.
However, he said, states also have to be correctly reimbursed, and the risk
of inaccurate reimbursements will grow as the Medicaid program expands under
the health care law.
Grassley asked that each state tell him, by March 16, whether they have
independent audit requirements for managed-care plans and how those audits are
performed. He also asked states for examples of the language in the plan
contracts dealing with allowable medical costs and for examples of documents
that plans give to states reporting on their medical costs, administrative
costs and profits.
Atlanta's Grady Hospital Chief Sees Major Threat In Medicaid Cuts - Kaiser Health News
Analysis: Supreme Court may question Medicaid expansion, a pillar of new health law - St. Louis Beacon
Innovative Telemedicine Program For Premature Babies
Learning About Hearing In Adolescence Can Save Young People's Ears
Dramatic Fall In Preterm Deliveries In Scotland Linked To Smoking Ban
Crossover Day
Georgia House approves $19.2 billion budget | jacksonville.com
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Former Governors Recommend Reforms to Medicaid Waivers
Former Governors Recommend Reforms to Medicaid Waivers
BY: Dylan Scott
| Nation | March 1, 2012 governing magazine
Can the federal government make it easier for states to adapt
their Medicaid programs to ever-changing circumstances? That is the core
question addressed by the Bipartisan
Policy Center ’s
Governors’ Council in a new paper recommending reforms to Medicaid waivers.
Their answer: Yes. By streamlining and standardizing the waiver
process, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) would allow
states to pursue more innovative strategies that improve care and lower costs,
argued six former governors (three Democrats, three Republicans) who make up
the Governors' Council. Council members include former Govs. Phil Bredesen
(Tennessee), Jim Douglas (Vermont), Brad Henry (Oklahoma), Linda Lingle
(Hawaii), Mike Rounds (South Dakota) and Ted Strickland (Ohio).
For now, the application and review process is “an 800-pound
gorilla,” said Douglas at a briefing with
reporters.
States can apply for three kinds of waivers that exempt them
from certain provisions of the Social Security Act, which allow them to: enroll
Medicaid patients in managed-care programs (Section 1915b); move long-term care
patients into community settings (Section 1915c); and pursue broad reform
initiatives (Section 1115). They can also file for state plan amendments (SPA)
that make minor changes to their Medicaid programs.
The Governors’ Council made six recommendations that they say
would bring more transparency to the waiver process and reduce the
administrative burden for states. Generally, they called for setting clear
parameters and developing templates that would ensure states know what to
include in their applications in order to gain approval. They urged a more
timely process; reviews are supposed to take 90 days, but CMS often extends the
period with further questions. One Tennessee
waiver took a year to be approved, Bredesen said.
The governors also recommended establishing a mechanism that
would allow waivers that have proven successful to become permanent or semi-permanent.
For example, Bredesen said his state’s TennCare is built on various waivers.
But every five years, Tennessee
must reapply, despite the fact that the program couldn’t function without the
waivers. Vermont saved more than $260 million
over five years with its Global Committment to Health initiative, Douglas said, but still faced uncertainty when reapplying
for a waiver.
With the Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act (ACA)
looming, the council stressed the necessity of adapting such changes. “These
are going to be triply important,” Bredesen said. “This antiquated, serial
process… needs to be streamlined.” The governors also contend that a more
normalized process would simplify efforts to transfer successful waiver
programs across state lines.
Jason Grumet, president of the Bipartisan Policy
Center , acknowledged that
the recommendations were primarily designed to “start a dialogue” about
improving the process. But the feeling on the council was that the issue was
ripe for discussion.
“We should all value efficiency,” Strickland said. “I think
there is a feeling that the process is not as efficient as it could or should
be.”
Male newborn circumcision rate falls to lowest level :: March 2, 2012 ... American Medical News
Diverted special fees under fire | ajc.com
Georgia lawmakers race to beat crossover day deadline | The Augusta Chronicle
Healthy young brains a key to Georgia’s future | Georgia Health News
Georgia Senate approves bill that would allow electronic prescriptions | jacksonville.com
$19B Budget Moving Forward
Supreme Court keeps California Medicaid pay cut lawsuit alive :: March 5, 2012 ... American Medical News
Children with Abnormal Breathing In Sleep - Show Tendency For Behavioral Problems
A Healthy Teenager Is A Happy Teenager
Immaturity May Lead To Misdiagnosis Of ADHD
Friday, March 2, 2012
Emergency docs blast Medicaid denials based on final diagnosis - FierceHealthcare
New bill would restore child-only policies | Georgia Health News
Judge: Graphic Cigarette Labels Violate First Amendment - Health Blog - WSJ
Mayo Clinic gains presence in Georgia | Georgia Health News
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Co-Sleeping Puts Children At Risk
WABE: Providers Welcome Governor's Proposed Payment Bump of Medicaid Reimbursement Rates (2012-02-22)
amednews: Flu season gets a late start :: Feb. 27, 2012 ... American Medical News
Strike a balance as a boss :: Feb. 13, 2012 ... American Medical News
Physical Activity Levels In Children Not Altered By Active Video Games
Sport Concussions: Teenagers More Vulnerable
Language Development Predicted In Children
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