I am sending just in case everyone is not subscribed to this.  Sorry  my 
sending it bothers you, Lori.
 
Dana
 
In a message dated 10/15/2008 6:14:46 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

  
 
I am subscribed to the biweekly electronic newsletter  MEDICARE WATCH and so 
should most people rather than getting it from  here.  It is usually just a 
bunch of bureaucracy but this one caught my  eye.
 
Notice #3 below regarding  nursing homes.  91% is a huge number and might as 
well be 100%.   Further, notice that the nursing homes were only "cited" for 
Deficient  Care rather than having anything done about it other than a slap on 
the  wrist.
 
Then, look at #4 where the topic is --  MEDICARE STOPS PAYING HOSPITALS FOR 
MEDICAL ERRORS.   

It SHOULD READ or SAY "Medicare  Stops Paying Hospitals for Medical Errors 
AND  Hospitals Will Not Be Allowed to go after the patient for ANY  balances."  
If ALL that occurred (to protect the patient) --  hospitals would probably 
not want to take Medicare patients.  But since  it is federal I don't think 
they 
would be allowed to do that.   

In any case, what I added above Re: #4 --  it should be recognized and 
included in the Medicare policy.   But apparently it is not.  
 
Sometimes it is so laughable to read "A Patient's Bill  of Rights." I know 
they hang on the walls of assisted living facilities and  probably on nursing 
home walls as well but as you can see above -- that  is a joke.
 
Lori


On Tue, Oct 14, 2008 at 10:59 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]) 
> 
wrote:


 
 


 
Welcome to MEDICARE WATCH, a biweekly electronic newsletter  of the Medicare 
Rights Center 
Vol. 11 , No. 21 : October 14, 2008 

Contents: 
1. FAST FACT   
2. LOW-INCOME PEOPLE WITH MEDICARE FACE REASSIGNMENT AS  DRUG PREMIUMS RISE  
3. NURSING HOMES WIDELY CITED FOR DEFICIENT  CARE 
4. MEDICARE STOPS PAYING HOSPITALS FOR MEDICAL  ERRORS 
5. CASE FLASH: SWITCHING PRESCRIPTION COVERAGE FROM A  MEDIGAP PLAN TO PART D 
 
  
____________________________________
 
1. FAST FACT 
According to Douglas Holtz-Eakin, Senator John McCain's senior  policy 
adviser, the health care reform plan offered by Sen. McCain will have  major 
cuts 
for Medicare and Medicaid. The nonpartisan  Tax Policy  Center, a Washington  
think tank, estimates that the McCain plan would cost the government $1.3  
trillion over 10 years. The McCain campaign has not disputed these figures  or 
offered their own. _("McCain Plans Federal Health Cuts", Washington Post,  
October 
2008) _ 
(http://www.kintera.org/TR.asp?a=glKSK6PQJfIYLrK&s=fqLHJWMCIbLHI0NPG&m=kkJWLaOPLfJ3F&af=y)
  
2. LOW-INCOME PEOPLE WITH MEDICARE FACE REASSIGNMENT AS  DRUG PREMIUMS RISE 
At least 1.3 million low-income people with Medicare will be  reassigned to a 
new prescription drug plan in 2009, as the number of drug  plans that qualify 
for a full premium subsidy dropped from 495 in 2008 to  308 in 2009, 
according to Avalere, a health consultancy firm.  
Low-income people who qualify for full Extra Help can receive  premium-free 
drug coverage, but only in a plan that charges a premium below  the regional 
average. When a drug plan's premium rises above that average,  which is reset 
every year, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services  reassigns most Extra 
Help recipients in that plan to a new drug plan with a  premium below the 
average. Because reassignment is random, and plans vary  greatly in the drugs 
they 
cover and the coverage restrictions they impose,  low-income people will face 
new coverage restrictions under their new  plan. 
In all but one state, Wisconsin, the number of drug plan offerings  for 
low-income Medicare enrollees decreased. In six states –  Arizona, Florida,  
Hawaii, Maine,  Nevada and New Hampshire  – there will be five or fewer drug 
plans 
available to automatically enroll  low-income people with Medicare in 2009. 
Nevada will have only one drug plan  for those people automatically reassigned 
by 
CMS, eliminating any choice of  stand-alone drug plans for low-income 
enrollees unless individuals can pay  for part of the premium cost from their 
limited 
incomes.  Arizona has the second fewest options for  low-income enrollees, 
with only two zero-premium drug plans for Extra Help  recipients.  
Humana completely withdrew from the low-income market, offering no  plans 
with premiums below the benchmark. However, United Healthcare  increased the 
number of PDPs it will offer to low-income people with  Medicare after it lost 
nearly 600,000 low-income enrollees last  year.  
The number of people reassigned by CMS has increased annually since  Part D 
went into effect in 2006. In 2007 CMS reassigned 250,000 people; the  number 
steeply jumped in 2008, when CMS reassigned 1.2 million  people. 

3. NURSING HOMES WIDELY CITED FOR DEFICIENT  CARE 
>From 2005 to 2007 more than 91 percent of nursing homes surveyed  were cited 
for deficiencies, the Health and Human Services Department Office  of 
Inspector General (OIG) reports. Nearly 17 percent of nursing homes had  
deficiencies 
that caused residents actual harm or immediate jeopardy of  harm, with a 
greater percentage of for-profit nursing homes cited for these  serious 
violations 
than not-for-profit nursing homes.  
The most common deficiency categories cited in each of the past  three years 
were quality-of-care, resident assessment and quality of  life. Almost 74 
percent of nursing homes surveyed were cited for  deficiencies involving 
accident 
hazards, and failure to prove the highest  physical, mental and psychosocial 
care for the residents' well-being. Around  34 percent of nursing homes were 
cited for improper storage, preparation or  serving of food.  
In addition, 17 percent of nursing homes surveyed in 2007 were  cited for 
actual harm or immediate jeopardy deficiencies. Examples of these  problems 
included infected bedsores, medication mix-ups, poor nutrition and  abuse and 
neglect of residents. 
4. MEDICARE STOPS PAYING HOSPITALS FOR MEDICAL  ERRORS 
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) will no  longer reimburse 
hospitals for ten categories of preventable medical errors  that result in 
serious risk of injury to patients. CMS prohibits hospitals  to charge people 
with Medicare for the additional costs associated with  treating these 
conditions.  
Hospitals will now assume the costs of procedures associated with  "never 
events," so called because they should never occur. While Medicare  will save 
$21 
million as a result of the new policy, the primary purpose of  the rule is to 
improve quality of care for people with Medicare by creating  greater 
incentives for doctors and hospitals to avoid preventable errors.  The 
expectation is 
that if these errors affect hospitals' overall budgets,  doctors and 
hospitals will take more aggressive measures to prevent these  errors.  
The ten categories of "never events" Medicare no longer covers  include 
remedial treatments related to foreign objects retained by patients  after 
surgery; 
transfusion of incompatible blood; falls and traumas during a  hospital stay; 
manifestations of poor glycemic controls; catheter-associated  urinary tract 
infections; surgical site infection following a coronary  artery bypass graft 
or orthopedic surgery; and deep vein  thrombosis/pulmonary embolism.  

5. CASE FLASH: SWITCHING PRESCRIPTION  COVERAGE FROM A MEDIGAP PLAN TO PART D 
 
Mr. S has had Original Medicare Parts A and B since 2005. He has  also had a 
Medicare supplemental plan with drug coverage, Medigap Plan H.  Medigap Plan H 
(along with Plans I and J) with drug coverage has not been  sold since 
January 1, 2006, when the Medicare drug benefit (Part D) began.  However, 
people 
like Mr. S, who bought one of these Medigap plans with  prescription drug 
coverage before that time, can keep the Medigap's drug  coverage.  
In the past year, Mr. S's overall health has declined. As a result,  his 
prescription drug costs have gone up, but Mr. S's Medigap plan only pays  up to 
a 
certain amount each year for his drugs, leaving him paying a high  price 
out-of-pocket for the medications he needs. Mr. S began looking for  other 
options 
to get more comprehensive coverage for his prescription needs.  He decided 
that he would prefer to enroll in a Medicare Part  D plan for his prescription 
drug coverage. 
In August Mr. S called the Medicare  Rights Center for help  choosing a 
Medicare Part D plan. The  Medicare Rights  Center hotline counselor told Mr. S 
that he would  have to wait until the Annual Coordinated Election Period (ACEP) 
to switch  plans; the ACEP runs from November 15th to December  31st. For 
people who sign up for a Part D plan during the ACEP,  Part D coverage becomes 
effective on January 1st. 
The hotline counselor went on to warn Mr. S that he would likely  have to pay 
a Part D premium penalty when he enrolled in a drug plan because  Medigap 
Plan H drug coverage is not considered "creditable  coverage"—coverage that is 
as 
good as or better than the Medicare drug  benefit. In most cases, people with 
Medicare who do not enroll in Part D  when they are first eligible and do not 
have creditable coverage have to pay  a premium penalty for enrolling late. 
People who qualify for Extra Help—a  federal program that helps pay for Part D 
costs—can avoid this penalty  regardless of when they enroll. Since Mr. S had 
income too high to qualify  for Extra Help, he would have to pay a premium 
penalty in addition to his  monthly premium for as long as he remained enrolled 
in Medicare Part D.  Since Mr. S could have enrolled in a Medicare drug plan in 
the spring of  2006 when the first Part D enrollment period ended, he would 
have to pay a  premium penalty that would be calculated based on the number of 
months that  he delayed enrollment in Part D. 
Mr. S decided that even with the premium penalty, it would be a  better idea 
for him to choose a prescription drug plan that provided him  better coverage 
than to stick with his Medigap plan with prescription drug  coverage. The 
longer Mr. S waited to enroll in Part D, the greater his  premium penalty would 
be. Together, Mr. S and the hotline counselor used the  Prescription Drug Plan 
Finder on Medicare.gov and searched for different  Part D plans that covered 
Mr. S's medications without restrictions at the  lowest cost.  
The hotline counselor also mentioned that Mr. S has the option of  enrolling 
in a Medicare private health plan with prescription drug coverage,  but Mr. S 
told the hotline counselor that he wanted to stay in Original  Medicare 
because he would be able to continue to see the same doctors. If  Mr. S wanted 
to 
keep the health benefits of his Medigap Plan H, Mr. S could  enroll in a Part D 
plan and then call his Medigap plan to request that they  drop him from the 
prescription drug component of the plan and adjust his  monthly Medigap premium 
so that he is no longer paying a prescription drug  premium to his Medigap 
plan.  
 
____________________________________
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Get a jump start on holiday shopping on the  Medicare  Rights  Center  
Celebration 2008 Silent Auction website. From fantasy  trips to fun items, 
you'll 
find one of a kind items galore to bid on as  gifts – for others or for 
yourself! Go to _www.medicarerights.org/events/auction.html_ 
(http://www.kintera.org/TR.asp?a=etLOL0OIIeIQIgK&s=fqLHJWMCIbLHI0NPG&m=kkJWLaOPLfJ3F&af=y)
  to begin  
bidding on these unique items, such as a house in  Ireland for a week, tickets 
to a Metropolitan  Opera Dress Rehearsal, and autographed sports memorabilia.  
 
____________________________________
Medicare Watch is the Medicare  Rights Center's  fortnightly newsletter, 
established to strengthen communication with  national and community-based 
organizations and professional agencies about  current Medicare policy and 
consumer 
issues. Each edition contains news of  recent policy developments affecting 
Medicare and health care generally and  a case story from our hotline that 
illustrates steps professionals can take  to get older adults and people with 
disabilities the health care they  need. 
The Medicare Rights Center is a national,  not-for-profit consumer service 
organization that works to ensure access to  affordable health care for older 
adults and people with disabilities through  counseling and advocacy, 
educational programs and public policy  initiatives.

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--  
Lori 
C4/5 complete quad, 27 years post
Tucson,  AZ





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