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Making health care reform work for Alabama

Making health care reform work for Alabama What the Affordable Care Act means for a high-poverty state. Dollie Hambrick Health Reform Organizer Arise Citizens’ Policy Project. Health Care Reform Training. Welcome!. Our goals for this session are:

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Making health care reform work for Alabama

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  1. Making health care reform work for Alabama What the Affordable Care Act means for a high-poverty state Dollie Hambrick Health Reform Organizer Arise Citizens’ Policy Project Health Care Reform Training

  2. Welcome! Our goals for this session are: • To become more familiar with the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and what it means for Alabama • To understand what the law has already done and will do • To understand Alabama’s role in health care reform • To understand what you can do to help!

  3. Heads up Tons of information . . . Listen for two things: Alabama Health Insurance Exchange is a new “marketplace” of affordable coverage for uninsured Alabamians. Medicaid expansioncould cover low-income adults.

  4. Our broken system • Nearly 750,000 Alabamians lack health insurance, including about 100,000 children. • Thousands more are “underinsured.” • Insurance companies discriminate against women and people who get sick. • Alabama ranks high for many health risks. • Medical debt is the leading cause of bankruptcy.

  5. The ACA is a game-changer • Affordable coverage for millions of uninsured people • New protections for all health insurance consumers • Insurance companies can’t discriminate!

  6. What’s the basic idea? • Not a new health care system • Builds on current system • Most people will continue to get coverage through work Biggest changes . . .

  7. How is ACA already helping Alabamians? • Patient choice of doctor* • OB/GYN visits without referral* • No more “pre-existing condition” exclusions for children • Young adults can stay on their parents’ plans to age 26 • Free preventive care* • More affordable prescription drugs for seniors • No more lifetime benefit caps, phased-in ban on annual caps* • Hospitals more accountable to their communities • Consumer resources at healthcare.gov * Note: Some “grandfathered” plans are currently excluded.

  8. What will happen in 2013?

  9. Increasing access to affordable care • Higher Medicaid payments for primary care doctors • Extended funding for the Children’s Health Insurance Program (ALL Kids)

  10. What’s ahead for 2014? The Exchange! Alabama is opting for the federal version of this new “marketplace” of health insurance options that will help uninsured people and small businesses: • Compare plans that meet quality standards • Enroll in coverage that’s right for them • Get tax credits to reduce premium costs

  11. Essential Health Benefits (EHB) Ten categories of services: • Ambulatory patient services • Emergency services • Hospitalization • Maternity & newborn care • Mental health & substance use disorder services • Prescription drugs • Rehabilitative & habilitative services & devices • Laboratory services • Preventive & wellness services& chronic disease management • Pediatric, including oral & vision care

  12. The other biggie for 2014 . . . In many states, Medicaid will expand to cover low-income adults. Alabama is opting out for now. If we decide to move forward in future years: Vulnerable Alabamians will get free health insurance. Regular care will reduce chronic illness and high-cost ER visits. Federal government pays 100% until 2017. After, Alabama chips in a share that rises to a maximum 10% for 2020 and beyond.

  13. Wait, there’s more in 2014 . . . • No more “pre-existing condition” exclusions for adults! • No more annual benefit limits! • Cap on annual out-of-pocket costs! • Most Americans must either have health insurance or pay a penalty to cover their uninsured care. • Members of Congress will get their health insurance through the Exchange.

  14. And . . . By 2020:

  15. What does Alabama need to do? Gov. Bentley has said No to Medicaid expansion and a state Exchange for now. But we can still: • Move forward on Medicaid expansion in time to take full advantage of federal funding. • Move forward on a state Exchange for 2015.

  16. Even under a federally facilitated Exchange We need to take extra steps to protect Alabama consumers by: • Granting state insurance commissioner authority to review health insurance rates • Allowing state officials to authorize external review of consumer appeals.

  17. What’s the bottom line? We need your help! Tell your friends, your family, your neighbors, your church members, your co-workers and Governor Bentley: • Alabama needs a consumer-friendly Health Insurance Exchange. Let’s take every step to protect Alabamians – under a federally facilitated or state Exchange. • Expanding Medicaid is a bargain we can’t afford to miss! Alabama can cover 500,000 low-income workers at one-tenth of the cost.

  18. Need More Info? Center on Budget & Policy Priorities, www.cbpp.org Community Catalyst Projects, www.communitycatalyst.org Families USA, www.familiesUSA.org HHS, www.healthcare.gov or 1-800-633-4227 The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, www.rwjf.org

  19. Thank you! For more information, visit healthcare.gov Dollie Hambrick Arise Citizens’ Policy Project (800) 832-9060 dollie@alarise.org www.arisecitizens.org

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