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King Charles’ Cancer Diagnosis Shines A Light On Holes In The U.K.’s Healthcare System – And Ours

In early February, Buckingham Palace announced that King Charles has been diagnosed with cancer. As is often the case for the royals’ personal lives, not a lot is always shared. But the King and his now deceased mother should be congratulated for some of their openness. Like his mother’s announcements when her health was in question, the King’s announcement was meant to encourage everyone to take care and get preventive care performed. At the same time, the King’s announcement has shined a light on some of the problems in the United Kingdom’s healthcare system. As I have covered a few times in my blogs, the U.K. just celebrated its National Health Services’ 75th anniversary of its founding a few years after World War II ended. The U.K. took the socialized medicine approach, where the government funds, directs, runs, and largely provides healthcare services to its citizens. Some other nations in

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Joe Biden Goes On The Offensive With Healthcare Reforms

Looking for any angle to take the focus off his age and the economy overall, President Joe Biden and Democrats are now focusing on healthcare in the presidential election. In my mind, it is a very good strategy. As I have said in previous blogs, my Republican Party has a compassion gap when it comes to healthcare. Republicans have not formulated any real agenda on healthcare reform. Most tend to distance themselves from any talk of reform. More right-wing elements talk actively of repealing the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which has helped in the neighborhood of forty million Americans (not counting those with pre-existing conditions and on their parents’ policies until age 26.) Whatever you think of some of the Democrats’ ideas, the party has actively embraced healthcare reform. Some ideas I clearly hate, such as Medicare for All. But others, like drug price reform and anti-trust activities, make a

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Part 4: My Courageous Daughter Is Having Brain Surgery!

This is one of a number of blogs that will appear on my daughter. I call her Kitty. She is a wonderfully talented, bright, and empathetic individual in her late ‘20s. She and I agreed I would write this series to impart how important health coverage is. Not only is her decision to have surgery courageous, but so is her decision to share her journey through me. The principal reason to share the journey is because we both want to explain what many average Americans go through financially when they have major operations and do not have the best insurance or no insurance at all. My daughter is privileged to come from a well-off family and to have consistent and robust insurance. This will mean that she will pay a tiny amount for a surgery with a sticker price in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. But for uninsured and

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Medicare Advantage Enrollment Growth Continued From January To February

In my January 22, 2024 Healthcare Labyrinth Blog ( https://www.healthcarelabyrinth.com/great-news-for-insurers-and-medicare-beneficiaries-january-2023-to-january-2024-medicare-advantage-growth-rebounds/ ), I told you about the exciting news of Medicare Advantage’s (MA) continued strong growth (from January 2023 to January 2024) as well as a nice recovery from a bit of a sluggish increase from January 2022 to January 2023. As I always do, I publish short follow-up blogs in the first few months of each year given continuing growth outside of the main enrollment season of October 15 to December 7. The key takeaways from the January 22, 2024 blog were: So what happened with February enrollment? A change over the past few years now allows all members enrolled in an MA plan to change to a different MA plan or go back to traditional Medicare (and also get a standalone Part D plan) between January 1 and March 31 of each year. Previously, an MA member could only

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2024 Medicare Advantage Compliance And Regulatory Issues

A number of folks have texted, LinkedIn messaged, or emailed and asked if I would give an overview of some of the major compliance and regulatory issues Medicare Advantage (MA) plans need to be aware of as the 2024 year gets going. Here is my best take on the major issues from a compliance and regulatory standpoint: Audits in full swing I am hearing from health plan friends that MA audits have already begun this year with January notices. As promised by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), regular program audits are being supplemented with ad hoc audits concerning the 2024 rule requiring major changes to how MA plans perform prior authorization (PA) and utilization management (UM). In addition to adding the ad hoc audits for those under regular program audit, plans can be noticed for just an ad hoc audit as well.  In general, the new rule

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February 22, 2024

New Poll Suggests MA Enrollees Have Issues With Prior Authorization, But Some Use Added Benefits A new poll says Medicare Advantage (MA) enrollees are more likely than those in traditional Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) to experience care delays due to prior authorization, but they do receive supplemental benefits not in the traditional program. While the rates of such use can always be better, a 70% member-use rate is encouraging.  Still, it is indeed time for MA plans to show their value by encouraging the use of all of the added benefits at reasonable rates. Proposed supplemental benefits reporting rules will encourage this trend. Overall, MA plans need to educate members thoroughly on all benefits, lest critics and researchers build a case that there is no added value. The critics continue to argue massive overpayments, which I do not agree with. One point just does not resonate with me. About 12% of

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Part 3: My Courageous Daughter Is Having Brain Surgery!

This is one of a number of blogs that will appear on my daughter.  I call her Kitty.  She is a wonderfully talented, bright, and empathetic individual in her late ‘20s.  She and I agreed I would write this series to impart how important health coverage is. Not only is her decision to have surgery courageous, but so is her decision to share her journey through me. The principal reason to share the journey is because we both want to explain what many average Americans go through financially when they have major operations and do not have the best insurance or no insurance at all.  My daughter is privileged to come from a well-off family and to have consistent and robust insurance.  This will mean that she will pay a tiny amount for a surgery with a sticker price in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.  But for uninsured and

Read More »
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February 21, 2024

New CMS DSH Rule Will Reduce Medicaid Hospital Payments Medicaid disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payments are being cut by $8 billion annually for the nest five fiscal years based on a new rule finalized by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).  The rule is purported to rein in overpayments. A recent study suggested that a liberal formula calculation meant a third of all qualifying hospitals should not have received payments.  CMS has been pushing to reduce such payments in favor of broad coverage. Additional articles: https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/providers/many-disproportionate-share-hospitals-face-lower-medicaid-payments-under-new-final-rule and https://www.modernhealthcare.com/policy/medicaid-dsh-cuts-safety-net-hospitals-cms-final-rule (Some articles may require a subscription.) #medicaid Link to Article HCSC Believes In Medicare Advantage As Cigna decided its investment in Medicare Advantage (MA) was too much on the health plan side, Health Care Service Corporation (HCSC) agreed with most large insurers that MA investments made sense.  It paid $3.3 billion for about 600,000 Cigna MA lives, bringing its total

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February 20, 2024

Analysts Say Digital Health Facing Funding Challenges After record years of funding, digital health ventures are facing lean times to stay solvent. (Article may require a subscription.) #digitalhealth #healthcare Link to Article 2024 Financial Woes For Medicare Advantage Plans Excellent Healthcare Dive article on the potential financial woes for Medicare Advantage (MA) plans resulting from rising medical expense and insufficient rates.  I covered some of this in my blog here: https://www.healthcarelabyrinth.com/with-boom-over-will-medicare-advantage-collapse-or-adjust/ #medicareadvantage #rates Link to Article New Challenges For Providers On Medicare Drug Price Negotiations Interesting article on the impediments to provider entities suing on their fallout from the Medicare drug price negotiations. A judge found they have a lack of standing right now to sue. (Article may require a subscription.) #ira #drugpricing Link to Article AI Task Force In The House Similar to Senate interest, the House Speaker has formed a bipartisan task force on regulating AI in healthcare.

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Part 2: My Courageous Daughter Is Having Brain Surgery!

This is one of a number of blogs that will appear on my daughter.  I call her Kitty.  She is a wonderfully talented, bright, and empathetic individual in her late ‘20s.  She and I agreed I would write this series to impart how important health coverage is. Not only is her decision to have surgery courageous, but so is her decision to share her journey through me. The principal reason to share the journey is because we both want to explain what many average Americans go through financially when they have major operations and do not have the best insurance or no insurance at all.  My daughter is privileged to come from a well-off family and to have consistent and robust insurance.  This will mean that she will pay a tiny amount for a surgery with a sticker price in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.  But for uninsured and

Read More »

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