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The New Health Law: What It Means for New Hampshire. About NH Voices for Health. A network of advocacy organizations, consumers & small businesses committed to expanding access to quality, affordable health care Representing 200,000 consumers statewide Our activities:
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About NH Voices for Health • A network of advocacy organizations, consumers & small businesses committed to expanding access to quality, affordable health care • Representing 200,000 consumers statewide • Our activities: • Convening stakeholders • Sharing information and promoting a public dialog • Expanding the state’s advocacy capacity • Advancing savvy and meaningful policy changes on the state and federal level
Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act: A Historic Milestone • A century in the making • Builds on & strengthens our current health care system • Strengthens and expands coverage options • Makes coverage more affordable • Makes coverage more stable & higher quality • Invests in health care cost control, quality, workforce, public health & equity
Strengthening and Expanding Coverage Options • Strengthens public programs • Medicaid – Federal funding for expanded eligibility and improved reimbursement • Medicare – Improved preventive care, closing the donut hole and extending the solvency of the trust fund • CHIP/ Healthy Kids Silver – Extended & increased federal funding • Streamlined enrollment
Strengthening and Expanding Coverage Options • Expands access to private coverage • Can keep the coverage you have • Access regardless of health status / history • Extended family coverage for young adults • Improved access / choice through the Exchange • Web portal
Making Coverage More Affordable • Reigns in excessive and wasteful costs • Promotes preventive care & efficiency • Strengths premium rate review • Limits administrative spending • Makes premium charges more equitable • Reducing cost shifting
Making Coverage More Affordable • Provides assistance for working families and small businesses • Individual premium subsidies & cost-sharing assistance • Small business tax credits & grants
Making Coverage More Stable & Higher Quality • No benefit limits • No rescissions • Cost-sharing limited & no cost-sharing for preventive services • Waiting periods limited • “Essential health benefits” package • Transparency of information
Shared Responsibility • Based on the notions that: • The system works best when everyone is in it • We have an employer-based coverage system • Must purchase coverage if it’s affordable to you • Various exemptions and waivers • Expectation that employers provide coverage • Does not apply to small employers
Other Investments • Health care cost control • Health care quality • Health care equity • Public health • Health care workforce
Example: Personal Story • Your child is now a young adult, but unable to get a job that provides health coverage and they do not qualify for public coverage. You are worried because your son or daughter requires regular medical attention.
Under the New Health Law … • The new health law allows young adults to stay on parent’s plans up to age 26 • Expanded eligibility reimbursements may allow them to enroll in subsidized plans on their own (including cost-sharing) • New regulations prohibiting insurance companies from denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions will ensure they are able to access potential health plans
Example: Personal Story • Your child has a chronic illness which makes them more susceptible to health problems. Your primary insurance has cost sharing at 80/20 but your family is concerned about being able to afford frequent visits to the doctor and/or hospital.
Under the New Health Law … • Free preventative care (which will help lower additional visits to the hospital, especially for those with weakened immune systems) • Cost-sharing provisions • The end of discrimination based on pre-existing conditions gives families more flexibility to change insurers to a plan that might be a better fit
The New Health Law: What It Means for Alcohol and Other Drug Problems
Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act: • An unprecedented understanding that addiction is a disease • That this chronic condition deserves effective treatment as part of regular healthcare • That access to substance abuse services must be increased, integrated and universal • And is our opportunity to close the addiction treatment gap for the many men, women, and adolescents who need help in New Hampshire -- and do not receive it.
A Revolutionary Opportunity • Private Insurance reimbursement • Medicaid reimbursement • Recovery Support services reimbursement • INTEGRATED CARE
Private Insurance Health Insurance Exchange • Required to offer mental health and substance use disorder services • Required to be at parity per MHAEPA of 2008 federal law
Policy opportunities • Provider readiness – moving from stand alone system to integrated system with multi-payors • Prevention – integrated into primary care and public health policy • Integration of treatment – bi-directional with mental health and physical health • And then the Medicaid expansion population …
Medicaid Coverage • Current Medicaid Program • Expansion of Medicaid • Medicaid Managed Care in NH
Current Medicaid Services in NH • Medicaid is “diagnosis blind” • Does not include alcohol and other drug prevention, intervention, treatment or recovery support services • Does not include specialty trained providers, MLADCs and LADCs are not reimbursable
Medicaid Managed Care in NH • Bids due December 16, 2011 • Contract operational July 1, 2012 • Should have alcohol and other drug services at parity to medical • Current advocacy focused on inclusion in contract language
Medicaid Expansion • 2014 Affordable Care Act Expansion of Medicaid to “healthy adults” under 133% of federal poverty guidelines • Requires alcohol and other drug services to be provided at parity • Will cover previous non-participants in health care
Will require a resiliency and recovery-oriented system of care • Will require lessons learned from implementation of managed care of alcohol and other drug services • Will require provider integration to effectively serve multi-morbid clients • Will require vigilance and advocacy for effective implementation
Next Steps: The Work Continues • Public education • People can only benefit from the new health law if they know what’s in it • People support the law when they know the details • How you can be involved • Letters to the Editor, op-eds • Talk to your colleagues, patients, family
Next Steps: The Work Continues • Decisions continue to be made • Federal & state level challenges • Federal & state level implementation • How you can be involved • Work with New Futures & NH Providers to attend meetings • Attend hearings, contact elected officials • Share your experiences!
For More Information… • New Futures: www.new-futures.org Amy Pepin, Policy Director, apepin@new-futures.orgor 603-225-9540 • NH Voices for Health: www.nhvoicesforhealth.orgmailing lists for updates and public meetings • HealthReform.govlearn about the law and search coverage options • Kaiser Health Reform Gateway: www.healthreform.kff.orglearn about the law