Oct 13, 2013
For this episode, I read the entire Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act.
The following is a resource for finding information within the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. My goal was to
highlight the portions of the bill that will most directly affect
our lives and put them into plain, understandable English. I'd also
like for you to be able to find the text that makes these rules
within the bill. The easiest way to search within a bill is by
section number. You'll have to read a bit to find exactly what
you're looking for, but this outline will tell you which section
you can find the different provisions in. Anything "in quotes" is
exact text from the bill. There are two versions of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (Public Law 111-148) you can read. This version is 906 pages.
This version is 2,409 pages (the
margins and the font are bigger). If you are going to attempt to
read the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, you must know
that Title X amends the first nine titles and The Reconciliation Act amended
the whole bill. This means that the law is often not what the text
says. Here is a section by section summary
of the changes made by Title 10 and the Reconciliation Act.
This document was provided to the United States Senate for
clarification. TITLE I: "QUALITY, AFFORDABLE
HEALTH CARE FOR ALL AMERICANS Subtitle
A: "Immediate Improvements in Health Care Coverage for All
Americans" Section 1001: Rules on health insurance
minimums that became effective immediately
- Insurance company can't drop you when you get sick,
unless you committed fraud
- Health insurance plans have to provide - at no extra
charge:
- All of the preventatives services on
this list
- Immunizations
- Preventative care screenings for
kids
- Kids can stay on their parent's insurance plans until their
26th birthday
- Insurance companies must cover at least 60% of medical
payments
- The health insurance companies need to provide customers with a
summary of benefits, which can
only be 4 pages long with a minimum of 12-pt font and must include
limitations, co-payments, deductibles, and percentage of medical
costs covered by the insurance company.
- If they fail to provide the summary,
the health insurer has to pay $1,000 for each customer who didn't
receive it
- Employers are not allowed to only offer coverage to their
high-paid employees
Section 1001 as changed by amendment (See Section 10101):
- No lifetime limits or "unreasonable
annual limits" on the value of benefits for any customer
- They can place limits on things that
are not essential health benefits
- Gun ownership health dangers
must be ignored:
- Prevention programs can not collect
information related to the presence of guns or ammunition in
someone's home
- Premium rates can not be affected by
the presence of a gun in someone's home
- Medical Loss Ratio
- Health insurance companies covering
large groups must spend 85% of your premiums on you, or they have
to issue a rebate check.
- Health insurance companies covering
people in the individual market or small groups through exchanges
have to spend 80% of your premiums on you or issue a rebate
check.
- Hospitals must publish a list of standard charges for their
services.
- Health insurance companies have to let you go to any primary
care doctor that you choose and who can accept you
- The insurance company must have an appeals process for
customers and must continue coverage while claims are in
appeals
- If you get treatment in an out-of-network emergency room, your
health insurance has to pay for those services.
- Health insurance companies can't
require prior approval for emergency services.
- Health insurance companies can not require advance approval to
go to get gynecological services.
Section 1003: Premium Increase Reviews
- The Federal government and the States will review annual
premium increases.
- States can recommend that a health insurance company be
excluded from the exchange for unjustified premium increases.
Subtitle B: "Immediate Actions to Preserve and Expand
Coverage" Section 1101: Creates the "high risk health
insurance pool program" to cover people with pre-existing
conditions until January 1, 2014
- Could only be run by non-profit private insurers or States
- Insurer had to cover at least 65% of customer's medical
costs
- Could vary premiums based on age no more than a 4:1 ratio
- Only open to United States citizens or lawful residents who had
no health insurance for the 6 months prior to enrollment
- Provided $5 billion (this money ran out & the government
stopped accepting new applicants on
February 15, 2013 - the House Republicans would have added
money only if the Public Health fund were defunded, as explained in episode CD026)
- High risk pool ends on January 1, 2014 and customers will then
buy their insurance on the exchanges, when health insurers will not
be allowed to deny them coverage anymore
Section 1102: Reimbursement for employers who give health
coverage to "early retirees"
- Employers who provide health insurance to people over 55 years
old but under 65 (when Medicare kicks in) will be reimbursed for a
portion of that expense.
- Payments will be 80% of the amount over $15,000 up to
$90,000.
- Payments must be used for health care expenses & can not be
used as general revenue or count as income.
- Provided $5 billion for this program
- Program ends on January 1, 2014, when everyone can buy
insurance on the exchanges
Section 1104:
- Orders the Secretary of Health & Human Services to develop
"uniform standards" for health information electronic data entry
- The rules will be for communication
between hospitals/doctors and the health insurance companies.
- Allows for the creation of "machine readable identification
cards"
- Penalty fee will be assessed beginning on April 1, 2014 for
health insurance companies that don't comply
- Fee is $1 per customer covered until
they've completed the electronic information requirements. The fee
is imposed for each day the plan is not in compliance.
- The fee is increased annually and
capped at $20 per customer or $40 per customer if the insurance
company purposely provides false or incomplete information.
- Penalty fees are paid to the
Treasury Department and are due November 1 of each year starting in
2014.
Subtitle C: "Quality Health Insurance Coverage for All
Americans" Section 1201: Health Insurance Market
Reforms
- Health insurance companies can not exclude someone for having a
pre-existing condition
- This law became effective for
children starting six months after the Affordable Care Act was
signed
- Premium rates are allowed to vary based on the following
factors only:
- The number of people covered by the
plan (individual or family)
- Location
- Age, but the rate can not vary more
than a 3:1 ratio for adults
- Tobacco use, but the rate can not
vary more than a 1.5:1 ratio
- Health insurance companies must accept every employer or
individual customer who applies for coverage during their open
enrollment periods.
- Health insurance companies can not deny a customer coverage due
to health status, mental or physical illnesses, history of claims,
medical history, genetic information, domestic violence history,
disability, or any other health-related factor.
- Health insurance companies also have
to renew your insurance policy
- Health insurance companies can offer rebates or premium
discounts as a reward to customers' participation in wellness
programs including:
- Reimbursement for fitness center
memberships
- A disease testing program that does
not base the reward on outcomes
- Waiving co-payments or deductibles
for preventative care visits (prenatal care & well-baby
visits)
- Reimbursement for programs that help
people quit smoking, regardless of whether or not they can actually
quit
- A reward for attending health
education seminars
- Waiting periods can not be longer than 90 days
- This does not apply to the
individual market (added by Section 10103)
Section 1201 as changed by amendment (See Section 10103)
- Health insurance companies can't deny coverage for approved
clinical trials for treatment of cancer or another life-threatening
disease.
Section 1251: Grandfathered health care
plans
- Nothing in the Affordable Care Act forces an individual to
cancel the coverage they currently have.
- Grandfathered plans are exempt from the provisions of Subtitle
A and Subtitle C, except for the provisions specifically listed
below.
- New employees and their families can be enrolled in health
plans that existed before the Affordable Care Act was
enacted.
Section 1251 as changed by amendment (See Section 10103)
- Grandfathered plans must provide the easily understood summary
of benefits from Section 1001 to their customers.
- Grandfathered plans must issue rebate checks under the Medical
Loss Ratio just like new plans
- Health insurance companies covering
large groups must spend 85% of your premiums on you, or they have
to issue a rebate check.
- Health insurance companies covering
people in the individual market or small groups through exchanges
have to spend 80% of your premiums on you or issue a rebate
check.
Section 1251 as changed by the Reconciliation Act (See Public Law 111-152)
- Grandfathered plans are prohibited from enforcing waiting
periods over 30 days.
- Grandfathered plans are prohibited from enforcing lifetime or
annual limits to coverage (group plans only).
- Grandfathered plans can not drop you when you get sick.
- Grandfathered plans will also have to cover children until
their 26th birthday.
- Grandfathered plans can not refuse an employee with
pre-existing conditions.
Subtitle D: "Available Coverage Choices for All
Americans" Section 1302: Essential Health Benefits
Requirements
- Essential health benefits to be included in all "qualified
health plans":
- Ambulances
- Emergency room services
- Hospitalizations
- Maternity and newborn care
- Mental health
- Substance abuse treatment
- Behavioral health treatment
- Prescription drugs
- Rehabilitation services and
devices
- Laboratory services
- Preventative care
- Chronic disease management
- Pediatric care, including dental and
vision
- Health insurance companies are allowed to cover more than these
minimums
- Coverage for emergency services can not require prior
authorization
- Health insurance companies can't
limit coverage because the ambulance took you to an out-of-network
emergency room
- Out of pocket expense caps
- In 2014, an individual can not be charged more than
$5,000/year for out-of-pocket expenses (not including
premiums); after that, it can be increased by the same percentage
as premium increases.
- Deductibles for employer-paid plans
are capped at $2,000/year for individuals or $4,000/year for family
plans. After 2014, these numbers can be increased by the same
percentage as premium increases.
- Out-of-pocket caps do not include
amounts for non-network providers or non-covered services
- Levels of Coverage
- Bronze: Covers 60% of medical
costs
- Silver: Covers 70% of medical
costs
- Gold: Covers 80% of medical
costs
- Platinum: Covers 90% of medical
costs
- Catastrophic Coverage available only
on the individual market
- Plan provides no benefits until the
person has spent the $5,000/year out-of-pocket limit (or whatever
the limit is for that year, adjusted for inflation)
- Available only to people under 30
years old
- Available only if a monthly premium
would exceed 8% of that person's income
Section 1303 as changed by amendment (See Section 10104):
Abortion Rules
- States can prohibit abortions from being offered by health
insurance plans offered through the exchange.
- States must pass a law to do
this.
- Health insurance plans do not need to include abortions.
- No Federal funds can be used to pay for abortions.
- No hospital or doctor's office can be discriminated against by
insurance companies for not providing abortions.
Section 1311: Health Insurance Exchanges
- States will be given Federal grants to set up their own health
insurance exchanges, which are websites where people will compare
and purchase their insurance plans.
- Grants will stop being awarded on
January 1, 2015.
- Exchanges will include an "enrollee" satisfaction system for
plans covering more than 500 people.
- Secretary must determine yearly open enrollment periods
- Stand-alone dental plans will be allowed on the exchanges.
- States are allowed to require more benefits than the Federal
government requires, but must make up cost to individuals for extra
costs if they're eligible for a tax credit.
- By 2015, exchanges must be self-sustaining and can charge user
fees.
- Exchanges have to publish all
payments required by the Exchange & the administrative
costs.
- Interstate and regional exchanges are allowed.
- Creates "navigator" positions
- They will inform the public on the
health plans, help people enroll, and help people understand their
tax credits.
- Navigators are not allowed be
employees of the health insurance industry
Section 1311 as changed by amendments (See Section 10104)
- Health insurance companies need to publicly disclose - in plain
language - information on claims payment policies, enrollment,
denials, out-of-network charges, and customer rights.
Section 1312: Health Insurance Eligibility & Members of
Congress
- All customers in with a company's individual plan will be
considered part of a one risk pool.
- All customers enrolled as employees of small businesses will be
considered part of one risk pool.
- The individual and small business
pools may be merged if the State determines it appropriate.
- Starting in 2017, States can permit large employers (over 101
employees) to offer insurance through the Exchange.
- Health insurance companies can offer insurance outside of the
Exchanges.
- Only United States citizens and lawfully present foreigners
will be allowed to purchase health insurance on the Exchange.
- Prisoners will not be eligible to
buy insurance on Exchanges while they're still incarcerated
- The Federal Government can only offer health plans to members
of Congress that are offered through an Exchange.
Section 1312 as changed by amendment (See Section 10104)
- Agents and brokers are allowed to enroll employers and
individuals in health insurance plans and help them apply for tax
credits and out-of-pocket reductions.
Section 1321: States Must Create Exchanges or Federal Government
Will Do It For Them
- Department of Health and Human Services will provide an
exchange for a State if the State will not have it's own
operational by January 1, 2014.
Section 1322: Grants for Creation of Non-Profit, Member-Run
Health Insurance Companies
- The goal is to have at least one non-profit, member-run health
insurance company in each State offer insurance on the individual
and small business exchanges.
- If a State doesn't have a non-profit, member-run option, they
will be loaned money to create one or to have one from elsewhere
expand into their State.
- The loan must be repaid within 15
years (added by Section 10104)
- The non-profit, member-run health insurance companies are not
allowed to use Federal funds for marketing.
- A health insurance company will not count as a non-profit,
member-run insurance company unless "any profits made by the
organization are required to be used to lower premiums, to improve
benefits, or for other programs intended to improve the quality of
health care delivered to its members."
- Non-profit, member-run health insurance companies will be tax
exempt.
Section 1323: Optional State Public Option (Killed by
amendment: See Section 10104)
States are allowed to offer a public option, labeled
"community health insurance", but they are not required
to.
Section 1331: States Can Buy Insurance for Low-Income People Who
Don't Qualify for Medicaid or Medicare
- To qualify for this program, if offered by your State:
- Must be a resident of the offering
State
- Must be under 65 years old
- Your income needs to be between
133%-200% of the poverty
level
Section 1332: Waiver for States That Develop A Better System
- States that develop a system that covers as much and costs the
same or less than the Federal system can apply for a waiver. If
granted, they can enact their own system.
- The new system could begin on January 1, 2017.
Section 1333: Allows Health Insurance Plans to Be Sold To
Multiple States
- Health insurance companies would have to be licensed in all the
States where its plans are sold.
- Health insurance companies would have to "clearly notify
consumers that the policy may not be subject to all the laws and
regulations of the State in which the purchaser resides."
- Plans sold in multiple states - "health care choice compacts"-
can begin on January 1, 2016.
Section 1334 as added by amendment (See Section 10104): National
Health Insurance Plans
- The Director of the Office of Personnel Management will
contract with at least two insurance companies to offer insurance
to the individual and small group markets in every state.
- At least one of these companies must
be non-profit.
- Plans need to be licensed in each State where they offer
coverage.
- States can require health insurance companies to offer
additional benefits but must pay the additional cost.
- The multi-state insurance plans will be nationwide within four
years.
Section 1341: Insurance Companies Will Have Insurance for
"High-Risk" Customers for First 3 Years Subtitle E:
"Affordable Coverage Choices for All Americans" Section
1401 as amended by Section 1001 of the Reconciliation
Act: Tax Credits

- The premium used for calculation is the second-lowest silver
plan in the individual market where the taxpayer lives.
Section 1402: Out-of-Pocket Limits Reduced
- Only applies to people who have purchased Silver Level coverage
on an Exchange
- The standard out-of-pocket limits ($5,950 for individuals and
$11,900 for families) would be reduced for people making under 400%
of the poverty level.
- Reduction Levels:
- People making 100%-200% of the
poverty level will have their limit reduced by 2/3.
- People making 201%-300% of the
poverty level will have their limit reduced by 1/2.
- People making 301%-400% of the
poverty level will have their limit reduced by 1/3.
- No health insurance company will
ever pay more than 94% of medical costs (increased by Section 1001 of the Reconciliation
Act).
- The Federal Government will pay the health insurance companies
for the amount they reduce out-of-pocket limits
- Illegal immigrants are not eligible.
*Tax Credit / Premium Calculator
Section 1411: How Government Will Determine Eligibility & Grant
Individual Exemptions
- People or employers who disregard regulations and provide false
information are subject to a $25,000 fine.
- People or employers who purposefully provide false information
are subject to a $250,000 fine.
- No property can be taken away if the
person or company doesn't pay the penalty.
Section 1412: Advance Payment of Tax Credits and Out-of-Pocket
Reductions
- Premium tax credits can be claimed in advance to help pay for
premiums.
Section 1415: Premium Tax Credits Don't Count As Income Section
1421 as changed by amendment (See Section 10105): Small Business
Tax Credit
- Eligible employers must:
- Have fewer than 25 employees
and
- Pay average annual wages of less
than $50,000/year.
- Pay at least 50% of total
premiums.
- Eligible employers who purchase coverage through the State
exchange can get a tax credit of up to 50% of their health
insurance costs.
- Tax-exempt eligible employers can get a tax credit of up to 35%
of their health insurance costs.
Subtitle F: "Shared Responsibility for Health
Care" Section 1501 as changed by amendment (See Section
10106): The Individual Mandate
- Individuals must ensure that they and their dependents have
health coverage every month starting in 2014.
- If individuals fail to get themselves and their dependents
covered, they will pay a penalty for each month they and their
dependents were uncovered. (see Section 1002 of the
Reconciliation Act)
- The penalty in 2014 will be $95 or
1% of income, whichever is higher
- The penalty in 2015 will be $325 or
2% of income, whichever is higher
- The penalty in 2016 and after will
be $695 or 2.5% of income, whichever is higher.
- Penalties are capped at the cost of
the national average for a bronze plan premium.
- Exemptions are allowed:
- For people in an exempt religious
sect
- For members of a health care sharing
ministry
- For Native Americans
- For people below 100% of the poverty
level who can't afford available health insurance options
- People who have a coverage gap of
less than three months (if the gap goes longer than three months,
they get no exemption for any of that time)
- People who have proven to the
Department of Health and Human Services that they have an
extraordinary hardship.
- You can not be criminally prosecuted, thrown in jail, or have
your property taken away if you fail to pay the penalty.
Section 1502: Health Insurance Companies Will Report Your
Coverage Status to the Government
- Every year, the Treasury Department will send notices to people
who didn't get coverage telling them what is available to them on
their State's exchange.
Section 1503: Automatic Enrollment for Workers with Large
Employers
- Companies with over 200 employees will automatically enroll
their new full-time employees in one of the health plans they
offer.
- Employees are allowed to opt out of their employer provided
coverage.
Section 1512: Workers Must Be Informed of Better Options
- If a company's health insurance plan doesn't cover at least 60%
of medical expenses, the worker might be eligible for premium tax
credits and out-of-pocket limit reductions.
- Companies need to inform their workers about the exchanges and
provide a description of the exchange's services.
Section 1513 as amended by Section 1003 the Reconciliation Act:
Employers With Over 50 Employees
- Starting January 1, 2014, they must offer their employees
health insurance.
- If one or more of their employees
received tax credits or an out-of-pocket limit reduction on the
exchange, the employer will be fined $2,000 per full-time
employee.
- They will not have to pay the
penalty for the first 30 full-time employees.
- If the employer offers health
insurance but the employee claims tax credits and/or out-of-pocket
limit reductions on the exchange, the employer will be charged
either $3,000 per employee receiving tax credits or $2,000 per
full-time employee minus the first 30 employees, whichever is
less.
Employers can not have waiting periods for health coverage
of over 60 days. (Eliminated by the Reconciliation Act)
- Fines are not tax deductible.
- Seasonal workers - that work less than 120 days per year -do
not count as full-time employees.
Section 1514: Large Employers Must Report Your Coverage Status
to Government Section 1553: No One Can Discriminate Against Anyone
Else For Not Providing Doctor Assisted Suicide Section 1558:
Protection For Employees
- Employers may not fire or discriminate against any worker who
reports, testifies, or helps the government prosecute an employer
that has violated the Affordable Care Act.
Section 1560: Hawaii Can Keep Its Health Care System Section
1563: CBO Estimates The Affordable Care
Act Will Reduce Budget Deficits TITLE II: "ROLE OF
PUBLIC PROGRAMS"
Subtitle A: Improved Access to Medicaid Section
2001 as amended by Section 10201: Medicaid for Poor People
-
-
-
- Starting in 2014, anyone making under 133% of the Federal
Poverty Level will be eligible for Medicaid's health benefits.
- Medicaid's health benefits will include the essential benefits
required of all health insurance plans on exchanges, prescription
drugs, and mental health services.
- The Federal Government will pay States for the new Medicaid
expenses at the following rates (changed by Section 1201 of the Reconciliation
Act):
- 100% for 2014-2016
- 95% for 2017
- 93% for 2019
- 90% for ever
*The June 28, 2012 Supreme Court
ruling effectively made the Medicaid expansion optional for the
States. The result is that unfortunate souls making under 133% of
the Federal Poverty Level and
living in States that have turned
down the Federal Government money will not have health care
coverage.
Via:
The Advisory Board
Company Section 2004 as amended by Section 10201: Medicaid for
Foster Children
- Beginning in 2014, States must cover former foster children in
their Medicaid programs
Subtitle B: "Enhanced Support For the Children's Health
Insurance Program" Section 2101: Federal Financing of
Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP)
- Federal Government will increase its contribution to States'
CHIP programs by 23%, funding up to 100%.
Subtitle C: "Medicaid and CHIP Enrollment
Simplification" Section 2201: Electronic Enrollment
- By January 1, 2014, States must create websites that allow
individuals to apply and enroll in Medicaid and CHIP
- States that fail to create the
website will lose their Federal Medicaid money.
Section 2202: Hospital Enrollment in Medicaid
- Allows hospitals to determine whether a person qualifies for
Medicaid based on preliminary information in order to provide them
with medical assistance.
Subtitle D: "Improvements to Medicaid Services"
Section 2301: Free-Standing Birth Centers
- Requires Medicaid cover services from free-standing birth
centers.
Section 2303: Family Planning Services
- States can, but don't have to, provide family planning services
as part of Medicaid.
Subtitle E: "New Options for States to Provide Long-Term
Services and Supports" Section 2401: At Home Services
Option
- Allows States to cover at home services - the kind that would
usually be offered in an institution - to people under 150% of the
poverty level.
Subtitle F: "Medicaid Prescription Drug
Coverage" Section 2501: Prescription Drug Rebates
- Increases rebates for prescription drugs up to 100% of the cost
of the drug.
Section 2502: Additional Drugs Covered
- Drugs to help quit smoking, barbiturates, and benzodiazepines
will be covered by Medicaid starting on January 1, 2014.
Subtitle G: "Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital
(DSH) Payments" Section 2551: Payment Reductions
- Reduces Federal payments to certain hospitals.
Subtitle H: "Improved Coordination for Dual Eligible
Beneficiaries" Section 2602: Medicaid and Medicare
Coordination
- Creates a Federal Coordinated Health Care Office to coordinate
the benefits of individuals who qualify for both Medicaid and
Medicare.
Subtitle I: "Improving the Quality of Medicaid for
Patients and Providers" Section 2703: Care for Medicaid
Patients with Chronic Conditions
- Gives States the option to create teams of health professionals
to manage care for Medicaid patients with chronic conditions.
- Chronic conditions include:
- Mental health disorders
- Substance abuse issues
- Asthma
- Diabetes
- Heart Disease
- Obesity
Subtitle K: "Protections for American Indians and Alaska
Natives" Section 2901: No Out-of-Pocket Costs for Certain
Indians
- Indians at or below 300% of the Federal Poverty Level will not
have to pay out-of-pocket costs for insurance they get through a
state exchange
TITLE III:
IMPROVING THE QUALITY AND EFFICIENCY OF HEALTH CARE
Subtitle A: "Transforming the Health Care Delivery
System" Section 3001: Links Hospital Payments to
Performance
- Starting in 2013, a percentage of hospital payments will be
tied to performance in treating common high-cost conditions
(cardiac issues, surgeries, pneumonia, etc.)
Section 3007: New System for Physician Payments
- Secretary of Health and Human Services must create a new
budget-neutral payment system that will adjust Medicare payments to
physicians based on the quality of care they deliver.
- New system will be phased in over two years beginning in
2015.
Section 3008: Penalties for Poor Performance
- Hospitals in the top 25th percentile for rates of diseases
caught inside the hospital will have a payment penalty through
Medicare.
Section 3011: National Strategy
- Secretary of Health and Human Services has to establish our
national strategy to improve health care delivery and overall
population health.
Section 3025: Readmissions Reduction
- Ties Medicare payments to hospitals with the hospitals
percentage of potentially preventable readmissions to the
hospital.
- The Secretary of Health and Human Services will make
readmission rates for certain conditions at every hospital
available to the public.
Subtitle B: "Improving Medicare for Patients and
Providers" Section 3112: Eliminates "Medicare Improvement
Fund"
Rest of Subtitle creates new systems and changes the way
Medicare charges paid for by the government. Subtitle C:
"Provisions Related to Part C" Section 3201: Limited
Medicare Advantage Payments (Killed by Section 1102 of the
Reconciliation Act) Section 3202: Prevents Private Medicare Advantage Plans
from Overcharging
- Prohibits private Medicare Advantage plans from charging more
for basic Medicare services than actual Medicare charges.
- Medicare Advantage plans that offer extra benefits must
prioritize reductions in out-of-pocket expenses and preventative
care over their extra goodies.
Section 3204: Seniors Can Return to Actual Medicare
- Seniors will be allowed to unenroll in their Medicare Advantage
plans and return to real Medicare from January 1-March 15 of every
year.
Section 3209: Medicare Advantage Plan Denial Allowed
- Secretary of Health and Human Services now has the authority to
prohibit Medicare Advantage plans that significantly increase cost
to customers or decrease benefits offered to seniors.
Subtitle D: "Medicare Part D Improvements for
Prescription Drug Plans and MA-PD Plans" Section 3301:
Donut Hole Discount Program
- Medicare Part D private insurance plans pay 75% of drug costs
up until $2,970 is spent and
then start paying 95% once the senior has spent $4,750. Between
$2,960 and $4,750, the insurance company pays nothing. This window
is known as the "coverage gap" or "donut hole".
- This section requires drug manufacturers provide a 50% discount
for brand name drugs for seniors while paying out-of-pocket for
drugs in the coverage gap.
- Even though they only pay 50% of cost, the full price of the
drug will count as paid so that they get out of the coverage gap
sooner.
- The Secretary of Health and Human Services was put in charge of
implementation.
Section 1101 of the Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act
- Provides a $250 rebate to seniors who enter the "coverage
gap""donut hole".
- Closes the Medicare Part D "coverage gap" "donut hole" by
2020.
Section 3308: Reduces Medicare Subsidy for High-Income
Seniors Section 3311: Medicare Advantage & Medicare Part D
Complaint System
- Secretary of Health and Human Services will create a system so
that seniors can submit complaints about the private Medicare
Advantage and Medicare Part D drug plans
Subtitle E: "Ensuring Medicare Sustainablity"
Section 3401: Changes Payment Structures for Medicare Payments
Section 3402: Freezes Premiums for High Income Seniors at 2010
Levels until 2019 Section 3403: Independent Payment Advisory Board
(IPAB)
- Creates a 15 member board to propose ways to reduce the growth
of Medicare spending.
- The board's recommendations will not
go into effect during years that the Medicare growth rate is under
control.
- The board will make non-binding
recommendations during years when the Medicare growth rate is under
control (added by Section 10320).
- The board is not allowed to propose anything that rations care,
raises taxes, raises premiums for actual Medicare, increases
out-of-pocket expenses for seniors, or reduces benefits.
- The board's suggestions will take effect unless Congress enacts
alternative legislation that achieves the same level of
savings.
Subtitle F: "Health Care Quality Improvements"
Provides funding for a variety of programs. Subtitle G:
"Protecting and Improving Guaranteed Medicare Benefits"
Section 3601: Nothing in This Law Can Cut Medicare Benefits Section
3602: Nothing in This Law Can Cut Medicare Advantage Benefits
TITLE IV:
PREVENTION OF CHRONIC DISEASE AND IMPROVING PUBLIC
HEALTH Subtitle A: "Modernizing Disease
Prevention and Public Health Systems" Section 4002:
Prevention and Public Health Fund
- Will provide $2 billion a year (starting in 2015) for public
health programs that include research, health screenings, and
immunizations.
Subtitle B: "Increasing Access to Clinical Preventative
Services" Section 4103: Free Wellness Plan for Medicare
Seniors
- Seniors will get a physical their first year on Medicare and
risk assessments every year following without having to pay a
co-pay or deductible.
Section 4107: Help to Quit Smoking for Pregnant Women on
Medicaid
- States must provide counseling and products to help pregnant
woman on Medicaid quit smoking with no out-of-pocket costs.
Subtitle C: "Creating Healthier Communities"
Section 4205: Nutrition Labeling at Chain Restaurants
- Chain restaurants with 20 or more locations have to provide the
number of calories (or a calorie range for combo meals) on menus,
boards, and drive-thru boards.
- Upon request by a customer, they must be able to provide
calories from fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, sodium, total
carbohydrates, sugars, fiber, and protein.
Section 4207: Break Time for Nursing Mothers
- Employers must allow nursing mothers break time to milk
themselves.
- The employers do not have to pay the mothers for that
time.
- Employers with under 50 employees are exempt.
Subtitle D: "Support for Prevention and Public Health
Innovation" Funds research and other programs.
TITLE V: HEALTH
CARE WORKFORCE Subtitle A: "Purpose and
Definitions" Subtitle B: "Innovations in the
Health Care Workforce" Creates a commission and provides
grants. Subtitle C: "Increasing the Supply of the Health
Care Workforce" Section 5201: Federally Funded Medical
Student Loans
- Federal government will help pay medical student loans if the
student agrees to practice as a primary care physician for 10
years.
- Decreases the penalty for students who don't comply.
Section 5202: Increases Student Loan Amounts for Nursing
Students Section 5203: Federal Government Loan Payback for
Pediatric Medicine Students
- If the student agrees to work full-time providing pediatric
services, the Federal government will help pay their student loans
up to $35,000 a year.
Section 5204: Federal Government Service in Return For Loan
Repayment
- If a medical student agrees to work for the government for 3
years or longer, the government will pay up to $35,000 of that
student's loans.
Subtitle D: "Enhancing Health Care Workforce Education
and Training" Subtitle E: "Supporting the Existing
Health Care Workforce" Subtitle F: "Strengthening
Primary Care and Other Workforce Improvements"
Subtitle G: "Improving Access to Health Care
Services" Section 5601: Provides Funding for Community
Health Centers TITLE VI: TRANSPARENCY AND
PROGRAM INTEGRITY Subtitle A: "Physician
Ownership and Other Transparency" Section 6001: New
For-Profit Doctor-Owned Hospitals Can Not Participate in Medicare
Section 6002: Reporting on Industry Payments to Doctors
- Starting on March 31, 2013, pharmaceutical companies and
manufacturers must report any kind of payments that they make to
doctors.
- Manufacturers must report any ownership or investment
relationships their doctor customers have with the company.
- Penalties for not reporting
- Between $1,000 an $10,000 for each
payment that was not reported, capped at $150,000.
- If the manufacturer knowingly failed
to report a payment, the penalty is $10,000-$100,000 for each
payment that was not reported, capped at $1,000,000.
- The payment information reported on by manufacturers must be
posted on a searchable website by September 30, 2013 (this has been delayed one
year).
Section 6004: Reports on Prescription Drug Samples
- Drug manufacturers and distributors must report the identity
and quantity of drug samples requested and distributed every
year.
Section 6005: Pharmacy Reports
- Pharmacies need to report on their generic drug dispensing
rate, rebates, discounts, and price concessions.
Subtitle B: "Nursing Home Transparency and
Improvement" Section 6103: Nursing Home Comparison
Website
- The Department of Health and Human Services will operate a
website that will allow customers to compare nursing homes by
providing staffing data, certifications, complaints, and criminal
violations.
Section 6105: Creates a Standard Complaint Form Section 6111:
Penalties Reduced for Self Reporting
- Secretary of Health and Human Services will be allowed to
reduce penalties by 50% for facilities that report their own
violations
Subtitle C: "Nationwide Program for National and State
Background Checks on Direct Patient Access Employees of Long Term
Care Facilities and Providers" Section 6201: Background
Checks
- Secretary of Health and Human Services will establish a system
for doing background checks that include fingerprints on employees
of long term care facilities.
Subtitle D: "Patient Centered Outcomes
Research" Subtitle E: "Medicare, Medicaid, and
CHIP Program Integrity Provisions" Section 6401: Provider
Screenings
- Secretary of Health and Human Services must establish
procedures for screening providers and suppliers for Medicare,
Medicaid, and CHIP
- All screening will include license
checks
- Secretary can impose additional
screenings including fingerprinting, background checks, and random
visits.
- Providers and suppliers will have to report shady affiliations,
suspended payments, if they're excluded from other Federal
programs, and/or if they've had their billing privileges
revoked.
- There will be an application fee of $200 for individual doctors
and $500 for institutions every five years.
Section 6404: Medicare Claims Must be Made Within 12 Months
Section 6407: Physicians Must Have Face-to-Face Meeting With
Patient Before Certifying Home Services Section 6411: Recovery
Audit Contractors
- Secretary of Health and Human Services will establish contracts
with auditors who will identify under and overpayments and collect
overpayments for Medicaid services.
- The Secretary is required to include Medicare Advantage and
Medicare Part D.
Subtitle F: "Additional Medicaid Program Integrity
Provisions" Section 6501: Medicaid Termination
- States must terminate a Medicaid program if they were kicked
out of Medicare or another State's Medicaid program.
Section 6502: Medicaid Exclusions
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- Medicaid must exclude an individual or company that owns or
manages something that:
- Has unpaid overpayments
- Is suspended or excluded from
participation
- Is affiliated with someone who is
suspended or excluded from participation
Section 6505: No Payments Can Go Outside of the United States
Subtitle G: "Additional Program Integrity
Provisions" Section 6601: Prohibits False Statements
- Insurance company employees can be prosecuted and sentenced up
to 10 years in prison and fined if they lie about the plan's
financial solvency, benefits, or regulatory status.
Subtitle H: "Elder Justice Act" TITLE VII: IMPROVING ACCESS
TO INNOVATIVE MEDICAL THERAPIES Subtitle A:
"Biologics Price Comparison" Subtitle B: "More
Affordable Medicines for Children and Underserved
Communities" TITLE VIII:
"CLASS
ACT"(Repealed)
TITLE IX:
"REVENUE PROVISIONS" Section 9001 as amended by
Section 1401 of the Reconciliation
Act: Excise Tax on High-Cost Employer Paid Insurance Plans
- Starting in 2018, there will be a on insurance companies for
any health plan that costs more than $10,200 for single coverage
and $27,500 for family coverage.
- The tax is 40% of the amount of the
premium above $10,200 and $27,500.
- The tax begins at $11,850 for
individuals and $30,950 for families for plans covering people over
55 and in high risk professions.
- The tax does not apply to plans sold on the individual market;
it only applies to employer paid plans.
- The tax does not apply to stand alone dental or vision
plans.
Section 9002: Employer-Paid Health Benefits Will be Included on
W-2 Forms Section 9008 as amended by Section 1404 of the Reconciliation
Act: Pharmaceutical Industry Fee
- A fee of at least $2.8 billion a year will be divided by market
share and paid by pharmaceutical manufacturers and
distributors.
Section 9009 as amended by Section 1405 of the Reconciliation
Act: The Medical Device Tax
- There will be a 2.3% deductible tax on the sale of medical
devices to be paid by the manufacturer or importer.
- The tax is not applied to items sold directly to the public
such as eyeglasses, contacts, etc.
Section 9010 as amended by Section 1406 of the Reconciliation
Act: Tax on Health Insurance Companies
- A non-deductible fee will be divided amongst all health
insurance companies based on market share every year.
- The fee will not apply to insurance
companies that make less than $50 million in net premiums.
- The fee will not apply to government
or employers.
- Non-profits who get more than 80% of
their money from government programs are exempt.
- The fee is:
- $8 billion in 2014
- $11.3 billion in 2015-2016
- $13.9 billion in 2017
- $14.3 billion in 2018
- 2019 and beyond: The previous year's
fee increased by the rate of premium growth
Section 9012: Eliminate Incentives For Employers to Enroll in
Medicare Part D Section 9013: Raises Threshold for Medical Expenses
Deduction
- Increases from 7.5% to 10%
- Individuals over 65 can claim the deduction at 7.5% until
2016
Section 9014 as changed by amendment (See Section 10906): Tax on
Wealthy
- Increases the hospital insurance tax on people earning over
$200,000 a year individually or $250,000 married couples filing
together by 0.9%.
Section 9014 as changed by Section 1402 of the Reconciliation
Act: Tax on Wealthy Wall Street Income
- The hospital insurance tax will include a 3.8% tax on income
from interest, dividends, annuities, royalties, and certain rents
on people earning over $200,000 a year individually or $250,000
married couples filing together.
Section 9017 as changed by amendment (See Section 10907): Tax on
Elective Medical Procedures Indoor Tanning
There will be a 5% tax on elective cosmetic
surgery
- There will be a 10% tax on indoor tanning services.
TITLE X:
STRENGTHENING QUALITY, AFFORDABLE HEALTH CARE FOR ALL
AMERICANS Buried in Section 10104: Dismissal of
Fraud Cases

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- In it's place, they put this:
Section 10108: Free Choice Vouchers
- If a worker's health insurance contribution through their
employer will be between 8%-9.8%, their employer has to offer them
a voucher that will pay the employee's share if the worker would
like to pick their own plan on the exchange.
Section 10330: Update Computer Data Systems for Medicare and
Medicaid
- Secretary of Health and Human Services must make a plan and
determine the budget for modernizing the computer and data systems
for Medicare and Medicaid
Additional Provisions from
The Health Care and Education Reconciliation
Act
Section 1103: Stops Medicare Advantage
Excessive Profits
- Medicare Advantage plans must spend 85% of their revenue on
medical costs rather than profit and overhead.
Additional Information: Intro and Exit Music:
Tired of Being Lied To by
David Ippolito (found on Music
Alley by mevio) Music: Begging for Change - Healthcare Blues by Peter
Alexander Is Obamacare Enough? Without
Single-Payer, Patchwork US Healthcare Leaves Millions
Uninsured, Democracy Now, October 7, 2013. Treasury Department Memo
(describes why the large employer reporting requirements are
delayed for a year), July 2, 2013. Obamacare Medical Loss Ratio Saved
$1.5 Billion in 2011, Insurance Journal, December 5, 2012.