Congress Approves Medicaid Reform, Digital TV Bill; Legislation Now Awaits Bush's SignatureNew Reports Highlight the Benefits of Medicaid Reform
WASHINGTON - The U.S. House of Representatives Wednesday gave final
approval to historic reforms to save Medicaid and to bring television into the
digital age, legislation crafted by the Energy and Commerce Committee under U.S.
Rep. Joe Barton's chairmanship.
On a 216-214 vote, the House passed the legislation (S. 1932) for a second
time due to the delaying tactics of some Senate Democrats. The digital
television (DTV) provisions and the Medicaid restructuring were contained in a
larger budget "reconciliation" bill that also reduced the national
deficit.
"In June 2004, at my first DTV hearing since becoming chairman of the
Energy and Commerce Committee, I announced that expediting the DTV transition
would be a top priority," said Barton, R-Texas, on the House floor before
the vote. "I also noted that the 85-percent loophole in current law has
delayed the consumer benefits of digital television and preventing the clearing
of very vital broadcast spectrum for critical public safety and wireless
broadband uses.
"The DTV legislation brings needed certainty to allow consumers,
broadcasters, cable and satellite operators, manufacturers, retailers, and
government to prepare for the end of the transition," Barton said. "It
includes a strong consumer education measure. And it helps ensure that all
consumers have continued access to broadcast programming, regardless of whether
they use analog or digital televisions, or whether they watch television signals
broadcast by a local station or subscribe to pay-TV."
Barton has long argued that the bill "will mean enhanced television for
millions of Americans, cutting-edge new services in the marketplace, and better
communications capabilities for first responders."
"We now have three years to prepare for the transition," Barton has
previously said about the bill. "That is more than enough time for
manufacturers and retailers to move low-cost digital televisions and
converter-boxes into the market, for the FCC to complete the channel allocation
process, for broadcasters to finalize their digital facilities, and for
government and industry to prepare consumers for the transition."
"Medicaid is a victim of its own success," Barton reiterated during
the Wednesday debate. "The program has grown so expensive that it is
unsustainable in its current form.
"The nation's governors understand the grim future of Medicaid without
reform," he said. "They told us over and over again in our hearing
that Medicaid will begin to bankrupt the states unless some reasonable reforms
are enacted. They were Democratic governors and Republican governors. They told
us what they needed done and we attempted to do it.
"Our proposal contains common-sense reforms and will help fix some of
the flaws in the current Medicaid program to ensure that it can continue to be
the safety net that protects our nation's most vulnerable citizens," Barton
added. "The reforms in this legislation include allowing states to charge
basic co-pays to higher income beneficiaries, reducing Medicaid overpayment for
drugs, and providing states with the flexibility to tailor their benefit package
to meet the specific health care needs of beneficiaries. We'll also make it
difficult for lawyers to hide assets so wealthy clients can pretend to be poor
enough to qualify for long-term Medicaid coverage in nursing homes.
"I recognize that some critics will argue that even modest reform will
hurt the poor. I would submit to you that Medicaid in its current form is
hurting the poor," he said.
Two findings recently released highlight the benefits of Medicaid reform. A
Jan. 31 Congressional Budget Office report notes the salutary effect of better
targeting limited Medicaid resources.
CBO estimates that in the next ten years, as a result of Medicaid reform:
- 115,000 disabled children will gain Medicaid coverage;
- 120,000 beneficiaries will be able to access home- and community-based
services; and
- 100,000 people will leave nursing homes and instead receive long-term care
services in their community.
The second analysis, by research firm Thomson Medstat, found that children
covered by Medicaid are nearly six times more likely to be treated for severe
obesity than children with private insurance, according to the Associated Press.
Medicaid reforms approved by Congress today will allow states to tailor benefits
to better serve special needs patients, like diabetics, while current law
mandates governors offer a one-size-fits all benefit.
Specifically the DTV legislation:
* Establishes a February 17, 2009 hard deadline for the end of analog
broadcasting, freeing critical spectrum for public safety and wireless broadband
use, and is expected to generate at least $10 billion in auction revenues.
1 Authorizes the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA)
to create a digital-to-analog converter box program to help over-the-air viewers
continue to receive broadcast programming.
* The bill allocates up to $990 million for the program, which will enable
households that make an affirmative request to receive by U.S. mail up to two,
$40 converter-box coupons. This will help minimize participation by consumers
who do not need a subsidized converter-box.
- The NTIA may use up to $100 million of the $990 million for administrative
costs. Up to $5 million of the administrative funds may be used to educate
consumers about the digital television transition and the digital-to-analog
converter-box program.
- If NTIA certifies to Congress that it needs more money to fulfill the
program, the overall amount available increases to up to $1.5 billion and
the administrative amount available increases to up to $160 million.
* The bill also makes up to $1 billion available for a grant program to help
public safety agencies obtain and deploy interoperable communications systems.
1 Note: Most consumers should be unaffected by the February 17, 2009
deadline, and will not need an over-the-air converter box.
* Less than 15 percent of households rely exclusively on over-the-air
broadcasts.
- The remaining 85 percent subscribe to a multichannel video programming
distributor (MVPD), such as a cable or satellite operator. Cable and
satellite operators can convert digital broadcast programming to
analog-viewable format for these households.
The Medicaid reforms are based on recommendations from all 50
governors, Democrats and Republicans alike, and authored by the House Energy and
Commerce Committee. They will accomplish the following goals:
- Give states greater flexibility to provide services - Medicaid
covers newborn babies and seniors alike, but state officials are forced to
offer a one-size-fits-all program. States will have greater flexibility to
better target scarce resources and offer coverage that better meets each
patient's needs. The most vulnerable groups, including children, pregnant
women and seniors will see no changes at all.
- Root out wasteful over spending on pharmaceuticals - The government
routinely overpays for prescription drugs for beneficiaries. In fact,
Medicaid could pay $5,336 for a prescription that only cost the pharmacist
$88 to obtain. The Department of Health and Human Services inspector-general
found in 2002 that Medicaid reimbursements exceeded pharmacists' true costs
by $1.5 billion. Every dollar wasted on overpayments is a dollar that does
not go to treat patients. The bill sets more realistic reimbursement rates
for medicines based on the average manufacturers price (AMP). Starting in
2007, the federal government will not pay more than 250 percent of the AMP
of the lowest-cost version of a generic drug. For the first time the AMP
will be publicly available, which CBO estimates will save taxpayers hundreds
of millions of dollars in overpayments, and could also help private health
plans negotiate better drug prices.
- Encourage personal responsibility - Today Medicaid lacks any
meaningful co-payment for services, no matter the cost. As a result health
care costs predictably take a back seat in today's "free" system.
In a typical example, at one Georgia hospital 29% of emergency room patients
were seeking care for common, maladies like ear infections and the flu.
That's roughly 29,000 patients and $5.6 million wasted in 2004 in one ER
alone. The legislation lets states enforce a co-payment of as much as 20
percent for a prescription drug or service (but to never exceed 5 percent of
a family's annual income) and allows that amount to be adjusted for
inflation. A demonstration program will also allow governors to offer Health
Opportunity Accounts modeled after the Health Savings Accounts that are
rapidly-growing in the private health care market.
- No more Medicaid for millionaires - Increasingly middle and
upper-income seniors are transferring or hiding assets to appear
impoverished and, thus, entitled to Medicaid coverage for long-term care
services. The legislation extends the "look-back" period from
three to five years to provide greater scrutiny of such "Medicaid
planning" financial transactions and bans anyone with more than
$750,000 in home equity from Medicaid eligibility altogether. Congress
should ensure Medicaid dollars support only the truly needy and encourage
long-term care insurance and other options for those who can pay.
- The bill would also require states to use basic identification documents
to better enforce current law and prevent illegal aliens from getting
Medicaid coverage.
Other health care issues included these:
Hurricane Katrina Aid - The plan allocates more than $2 billion to
help Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi cover Medicaid expenses. Specifically,
the legislation waives the three states' "match" or share of Medicaid
costs incurred between August 28, 2005 and May 15, 2006.
Medicare physician payments - the legislation repeals a scheduled 4.4
percent cut in payments to physicians treating Medicare patients. That cost was
offset by reducing payments to Medicare Advantage plans, requiring higher-income
Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, cracking down on the over-use of
medical imaging services, lowering payments for home health services and other
changes.
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