Showing posts with label Governor Romney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Governor Romney. Show all posts

Monday, June 29, 2015

MEDICARE VERSUS THE INDEPENDENT PAYMENT ADVISORY BOARD (IPAB)


Here is how it works: The Affordable Care Act (ACA) grants coverage to about 15 million persons not previously covered by what passed for health care coverage before passage of the ACA. Trouble is that Covered California and other ACA derived plans have now raised their premiums to cover the influx. But the premiums can't be raised enough to cover this influx. It has been determined that a better way  is to reduce utilization to keep costs below or equal to the pre-ACA expenditure. This method is a form of rationing with a special dagger aimed at the hearts of the elderly. It is called the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB). 

Here's a pre-IPAB example: programs that provide vision care advise patients that refraction is not covered by Medicare or by most commercial PPO plans. Refraction is the method by which corrective lenses are prescribed. Medicare and the commercial PPOs determined that refraction isn't a medical procedure after all. Medicare and the involved PPOs conveniently decided that refractive errors requiring prescribed lenses are a result of changing eye-shape and are not because of disease.  Hence, coverage is denied.  

How about something more current than refraction? Let's take a look at what's happening to cardiac pacemakers. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has determined that as of 6 July 2015 coverage for cardiac pacemakers will be restricted to patients with "non-reversible symptomatic bradycardia." This decision means that patients with asymptomatic complete heart block would not be covered and that the exclusion will apply even to patients with asymptomatic Mobitz Type II heart block. So far our information is that the American Medical Association (AMA) has not filed a protest. We're now obliged to ask would-be presidents of AMA and contingent state medical associations where they stand on this matter.

We all recall Sarah Palin's barbs about "death panels" for Medicare. Suddenly, it doesn't seem as though she was all that far off the mark, does it?

That's where the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB) comes in -- the IPAB was formed to manage costs that the ACA might run up due to the influx of previously non-covered patients. The IPAB owes its existence to Sections 3403 and 10320 of the ACA. The official job of the IPAB will be to control and cut Medicare spending. The IPAB according to the ACA will be appointed, not elected, and will not be obliged to report to Congress. In effect this technique will remove Congressional  oversight of Medicare spending. Instead,  unelected IPAB members will have this power. The salary for the 15 IPAB members is proposed to be about $165,000 annually -- once again we see there's money enough for bureaucracy but not for patients and citizens. The IPAB is ripe for repeal before it can do damage.

In the second Obama-Romney debate, Gov. Romney asked President Obama who would be appointed to the IPAB. Obama's answer, and I quote same in toto, was "doctors et cetera."
Although the reply was short, it was also wrong. Trouble is neither Romney nor Obama knew it. The fact is that there is nothing in Sections 3403 or 10320  or in the rest of the ACA that requires even one physician to be appointed to the IPAB. While it's likely that an acquiescent physician can be found, the fact is that there is no legal requirement under the ACA to appoint even one physician to the IPAB. The IPAB should be repealed forthwith -- so doing will improve the ACA by removing what to all intents and purposes looks as close to Palin's death-panels as one can get without handing the IPAB a portable gallows. 

Saturday, October 20, 2012

OBAMACARE: "DOCTORS ET CETERA" IN THE ACA AND IPAB

DO IT OUR WAY OR DIE

October 29th Update to Politico comment of October 22nd. The above comment is in reference to "Presidential debate: 5 things to watch Monday" by MAGGIE HABERMAN and GLENN THRUSH | 10/22/12 4:23 AM EDT.
Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1012/82696.html#ixzz2AhZSGXJx


The highwater mark of Obamacare is carried in the bowels of the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB), a level that hasn't yet been reached because the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is still in its infancy. It is the IPAB that will have the authority to declare entire diagnostic and treatment protocols too extravagant not only for Medicare but also for the general public and therefore not covered or payable by the ACA -- that's when Obamacare will become known for its bite.

But that bite won't chomp on President Obama or Congress because both of them are exempt from the ACA. Did you know that? Congress has its own health care plan. The Congressional plan does not include an IPAB to water  down care by restricting access to diagnostic testing and treatment. The current ACA does just that. The IPAB portion of the ACA should be repealed even if we continue to debate the rest of it.

Keep in mind that Congress keeps special healthcare benefits handy for itself including access to treatment at military hospitals.

In the autumn of 2009 President Obama stated "I will ensure that no government bureaucrat gets between you and the care you need." It's probably safe to say he wasn't thinking of the IPAB at the time. President Obama has now promised a minimum of 15 brand new bureaucrats.

In the first debate, President Obama said the IPAB would consist of "doctors et cetera." The fact is that there'll be plenty of "et cetera" but there's no obligation under the ACA that any of the 15 appointees to the IPAB must be a physician.

Governor Romney did no better than the president because he didn't seem to realize that President Obama was winging it when he said "doctors et cetera." What else does Governor Romney not know about the ACA except that he prefers his pals in the insurance industry, the blokes who rescind health care contracts once the subscriber has the temerity to get sick?

For a guy known for his financial expertise, we're surprised that the Governor failed to mention that each one of the 15 appointees to the IPAB will be paid $165,000 annually for a total annual budget of $2,475,000 just for the 15 appointees -- staff and resource time will get counted later, right?

The IPAB can be repealed without repealing the entire bill. The mechanism would be to rescind Sections 3403 and 10320. The current stand-off means that one side won't improve what's wrong with the ACA and the other side would repeal all of it to bring back the greed-soaked insurance companies.

See also our October 4th blog; use the glossary to find more articles about the IPAB, the ACA, and related topics.