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The Affordable Care Act in California: Overview and Update. Marian Mulkey California HealthCare Foundation Encore Fellows April 25, 2012. Coverage Provisions of the ACA. In 2014, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) will broadly expand health coverage through:
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The Affordable Care Act in California: Overview and Update Marian Mulkey California HealthCare Foundation Encore Fellows April 25, 2012
Coverage Provisions of the ACA • In 2014, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) will broadly expand health coverage through: • Medicaid expansion • Insurance market reforms • New individual responsibilities • New employer responsibilities • Establishment of Insurance Exchanges
Additional Provisions of the ACA • Test new ways to pay for and organize care • Prevention and wellness provisions • Workforce training and development • (Voluntary long-term care insurance program)
Sources of Financing • Reduce spending in Medicare program • New taxes and fees on drug manufacturing, devices, health insurance sector • Increase Medicare payroll tax on high earners • Eliminate various tax benefits and exclusions • Impose penalties on employers and individuals • Reduce Medicare Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) payments • Impose tax on high-cost employer health plans
An Uncertain Environment • Supreme Court is considering: • Individual mandate • Severability of mandate • Jurisdiction / timing • Medicaid expansion • National election scenarios: • Status quo • Republicans control both Houses • Republican sweep
ACA Changes to Medicaid Eligibility • Expands eligibility to 133%* FPL to all nonelderly • Coverage for childless adults • Children ages 6-10 with incomes 100-133%* FPL transition to Medi-Cal from HF • Simplifies income eligibility standards • Imposes Maintenance of Effort requirements on states • *Or 138% of Federal Poverty Level with the ACA’s 5% income disregard; equivalent to annual income of about $15,000 for a single person or $31,000 for a family of four.
Private Insurance Changes • “Guaranteed Issue” in the individual market • Subsidies available through Exchange to help people afford coverage • Individuals and families up to 400% of the federal poverty level • Small, low-wage businesses (up to 25 employees, up to $50,000 average wages) • Individuals must obtain coverage, or face penalties • Businesses with more than 50 employees must provide coverage that meets standards, or face penalties
Health Benefit Exchange • Structured selection of plans intended to facilitate consumer choice • Access point for subsidized coverage, both public and private • Must provide coordinated enrollment with Medi-Cal and Healthy Families
Long-Term Impact: California Coverage • 2 to 3 million newly enrolled in Medi-Cal • 2 to 3 million gain private coverage through new market rules, subsidies, and mandates • 1 to 3 million remain uninsured • Undocumented Californians will make up 40%, or more, of those remaining uninsured
ACA Implications for Community Clinics • In 2014 under ACA, many more people will be eligible for Medi-Cal; access to care will be strained • A large group, even more marginalized than today, will remain without coverage and will look to clinics and other traditional safety net providers for care
ACA and “Essential Community Providers” • In general, Exchange-offered plans must: • Include “Essential community providers” in their networks • Pay Medi-Cal prospective payment system (PPS) rates • However, it appears there will be exceptions: • Plans and FQHCs may mutually agree on a rate less than PPS -- IF it is no less than plan’s generally applicable rate • Kaiser and other closed-network plans may be exempt -- IF they otherwise meet access and network adequacy standards for low-income enrollees
Issues on the Horizon • What will SCOTUS say? • Will California establish a Basic Health Program (BHP)? • What will be ACA’s impact on state spending? • What will be ACA’s impact on access to care for current and newly enrolled beneficiaries? • What will happen to access to care for populations “left behind”? • What public and private actions will emerge to: • Simplify eligibility and enrollment? • Coordinate purchasing across public programs? • Advance delivery system reform?