Key Components of the House Health Bill
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Nov 5, 2009 Posted by Brianna Jones
Components of the Affordable Health Care for America Act (H.R. 3962)
Increasing choice and competition. The bill will protect and improve consumers’ choices.
- If people like their current plans, they will be able to keep them.
- For individuals who aren’t currently covered by their employer, and some small businesses, the proposal will establish a new Health Insurance Exchange where consumers can comparison shop from a menu of affordable, quality health care options that will include private plans, health co-ops, and a new public health insurance option. The public health insurance option will play on a level playing field with private insurers, spurring additional competition.
- This Exchange will create competition based on quality and price that leads to better coverage and care. Patients and doctors will have control over decisions about their health care, instead of insurance companies.
- Every American who receives coverage through the Exchange will have a plan that includes standardized, comprehensive and quality health care benefits.
- It will end increases in premiums or denials of care based on pre-existing conditions, race, or gender, and strictly limit age rating.
- The proposal will also eliminate co-pays for preventive care, and cap out-of-pocket expenses to protect every American from bankruptcy.
- Guarantees that every child in America will have health care coverage that includes dental, hearing and vision benefits.
- Provides better preventive and wellness care. Every health care plan offered through the exchange and by employers after a grace period will cover preventive care at no cost to the patient.
- Increases the health care workforce to ensure that more doctors and nurses are available to provide quality care as more Americans get coverage.
- Strengthens Medicare and Medicaid and closes the Medicare Part D ‘donut hole’ so that seniors and low-income Americans receive better quality of care and see lower prescription drug costs and out-of-pocket expenses.
- Employers can continue offering coverage to workers, and those who choose not to offer coverage contribute a fee of eight percent of payroll.
- All individuals will generally be required to get coverage, either through their employer or the exchange, or pay a penalty of 2.5 percent of income, subject to a hardship exemption.
- The federal government will provide affordability credits, available on a sliding scale for low- and middle-income individuals and families to make premiums affordable and reduce cost-sharing.
- Provides transparency in plans in the Health Exchange so that consumers have the clear, complete information, in plain English, needed to select the plan that best meets their needs.
- Establishes consumer advocacy offices as part of the Exchange in order to protect consumers, answer questions, and assist with any problems related to their plans.
- Simplifies paperwork and other administrative burdens. Patients, doctors, nurses, insurance companies, providers, and employers will all encounter a streamlined, less confusing, more consumer friendly system.
- Increases funding of efforts to reduce waste, fraud and abuse; creates enhanced oversight of Medicare and Medicaid programs.
- Pays for the entire cost of the legislation though a combination of savings achieved by making Medicare and Medicaid more efficient – without cutting seniors’ benefits in any way – and revenue generated from placing a surcharge the top 0.3 percent of all households in the U.S.(married couples with adjusted gross income of over $1,000,000) and other tax measures.
- The Congressional Budget estimates the bill will reduce the deficit by at least $100 billion over ten years.
- Estimates also show the bill will slow the rate of growth of the Medicare program from 6.6 percent annually to 5.3 percent annually.
