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ACA, Exchanges and Healthcare After 2014: Understanding the Impact and Key Provisions

This article explores the impact of the ACA on healthcare, discussing key provisions such as insurance coverage requirements, Medicaid expansion, premium credits, new taxes, and the creation of health insurance exchanges. It also examines the financial impact on hospitals and the transition to bundled payments.

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ACA, Exchanges and Healthcare After 2014: Understanding the Impact and Key Provisions

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  1. ACA, the Exchanges and Healthcare After 2014 Tom W. Watson, CPA, FHFMA Managing Partner – Dallas/Waco

  2. Why are we here? • The Uninsured • More than 47.9 million uninsured in the U.S. • 90% of the uninsured are below 400% of the poverty level • More than ¾ of uninsured are in a working family • Uninsured individuals have less access to preventive care services • The assumption is this leads to higher costs • Health care costs have increased substantially, causing employers to drop coverage and individuals to not be able to afford it • Many employers are tired of paying the hidden tax needed to subsidize today’s health care system

  3. Employers Providing Health InsuranceSource: Kaiser Foundation

  4. Key Provisions of Affordable Care Act • Requirement to have insurance coverage • Effective January 1, 2014 • Penalty for failure to obtain coverage starts that eventually is the greater of $695/year or 2.5% of household income ($2,085). • The penalty amounts phase in through 2017, and are insignificant in 2014. • Employer requirement to offer coverage • 50 or more full-time employees (defined as 30 hours or more per week) • Requirement to offer “affordable” coverage • Penalty ranges from $2,000/employee if no coverage provided (excluding first 30 employees), or $3,000 per employee receiving premium assistance if coverage is provided but not deemed affordable

  5. Key Provisions of Accountable Care Act • Medicaid Expansion • Expands Medicaid to cover all individuals with incomes up to 133% of the Federal Poverty Level • States are paid 100% (declining to 90% by 2020) of the extra cost of this expansion • Supreme Court ruling on ACA made this expansion optional, and 26 states have opted not to expand coverage • Premium Credits and Cost-sharing Support • Premium credits that limit out-of-pocket costs to between 2% and 9.5% of income for individuals with incomes from 100% to 400% of the FPL • Credits are based on the cost of the “second lowest cost silver plan” • Cost-sharing credits for families up to 400% of poverty level

  6. Key Provisions of Accountable Care Act • Key New Taxes • Changes to qualified expenses from HSAs • Increase Medicare Part A tax from 1.45% to 2.35% on wages over $250,000/$200,000 for married/single individuals • 3.8% tax on unearned (i.e., investment) income • Cadillac plan excise tax • Fees on pharmaceutical industry • Fees on medical device industry • Creation of Health Insurance Exchanges • Many, many other provisions

  7. Delayed provisions include….. • Delay in cuts to Medicare Advantage Plans • One year delay in employer reporting • IRS rule that allows subsidies to flow through federal exchanges • Delay of Small Employer Health Option • Employer Mandate delay • Self-attestation partially implemented • Delay of individual mandate (only one month) • Allowed insurance companies to continue to offer “canceled” nonqualified plans • Exemption of union plans from reinsurance fee

  8. Paying for the ACA – Spending cuts ($ billions)

  9. Paying for the ACA – Tax Increases ($ billions)

  10. The ACA Income Statement

  11. The impact on doctors and hospitals

  12. Hospitals – did you know?? • The average margin for hospitals in 2013 was less than 2.5%? • Hospitals on average collect: • 2% of amounts billed to uninsured patients • 20% or less of amounts billed to Medicaid patients • 25 to 30% of amounts billed to Medicare patients • Between 30% and 60% of amounts billed to insured patients • See the hidden tax here?? • In Texas, hospitals average between 15% and 25% of their net revenue as bad debts • The average payment increase for hospitals under Medicare and Medicaid has been less than 2% for the last several years, with some years of real reductions in payment rates

  13. THE ACA Impact on Hospitals • In the opening round of the ACA discussions, the enemy was the Insurance Companies • Hospitals should be prepared to be the enemies in phase 2 • $$$ - Hospitals are the deep pockets when it comes to Medicare cuts • The ACA included over $150 billion in cuts for hospitals • Implicit promise that coverage will be expanded • ACA requires tax exempt hospitals to conduct a Community Health Needs Assessment and to implement a Financial Assistance Policy (FAP) • Limitation on “aggressive” collection efforts until proof that FAP does not apply • ACA prevents new physician owned hospitals from accepting Medicare/Medicaid patients

  14. Transition of health care payment methods over time

  15. Bundled payments – not just Medicare! • Medicare is piloting bundled payment arrangements, but many private payers are moving full speed ahead • Includes facility fees, physician fees, implants, anesthesia, etc. • Managing device costs are often the key to success • Common procedures • Knee and hip replacements • Coronary bypass graft • Bariatric surgery • Diagnostic cardiac catherizations • Cataract removal • Maternity care

  16. Medicare 2015 update and aca-Driven impact • Hospitals can expect a 1.3% increase in Medicare payments for FY 2015 • .4% ACA Productivity Adjustment • .2% ACA required reduction • .8% documentation and coding adjustment • $2 billion in net reduction for 2015 – will be $8 billion next year • Medicare DSH cuts mandated by ACA ($49.9 billion over time) • Value Based Purchasing reduction will be 1.5% ($1.4 billion in incentives) • 778 losers and 630 winners in 2014 (defined as greater than .2% impact) • Increase Hospital Readmission Penalty to 3% • Increase utilization of hospital acquired condition program • Potential changes in Medicare wage index, which will impact DRG payment computation

  17. How are hospital leaders reacting to aca? • Generally support the expansion of coverage to reduce bad debts • Many are now concerned that the law will not reduce these to the level anticipated • Concerned with failure to expand Medicaid • Note that many cuts in the original bill assumed that Medicaid would be expanded, offsetting these cuts • How will the exchanges really work? Will payment rates be sufficient? • Over the long term, revenue is not going up, so costs must go down • Continued shift to care in an outpatient setting • Focus of many hospital’s capital investments • Urgent care centers and “drug-store” clinics • How will the federal exchanges impact payer mix?

  18. Cost Shifting– Current Example 100% 85% 150% 80% 25%

  19. Feared Payer Mix 233%* 80%

  20. Why all the consolidation in healthcare? • Significant wave of consolidation in health care industry has five primary drivers: • Perceived need for scale in order to survive uncertain environment • Hospitals and physicians must work together in an accountable care and medical home model – the same owner makes this easier • Squeeze on access to capital for smaller hospitals • Private equity view growth in segment with guaranteed cash flows and ability to create economies of scale • General fear of the unknown • Will it continue?

  21. The ACA’s Impact on Physicians • No change in “doomsday” scenario of Sustainable Growth Rate reduction • SGR would reduce payments over 25% for Medicare • Continually “punted” to next year • Physician practice model is changing • The disappearance of independent doctors (nearly 70% employed by hospitals!) • Partly due to demographics and expanded regulatory actions • Partly due to fear of ACA • Physicians are being asked to provide more preventative care • Accountable Care Organizations • Medical Homes • Severe income squeeze in recent years • Growth in mid-level providers to prop up incomes (i.e., leverage)

  22. Source: www.medscape.com

  23. Patient Access concerns • If the ACA works as intended, many people that previously didn’t have insurance will be covered • Social issues aside, there was a self-limiting aspect for access to care when an individual was fully responsible for their physician visit • In many cases, the emergency room was used as a primary care office because of this • Will our current health system be able to handle a large increase in volume when this restriction on care is removed?

  24. Thoughts from rating agencies - 2013 • Overall weaker performance after three years of stability • Balance sheets remain stable due to good investment return • Requires the ability to invest in stocks • The reappearance of expense growth outpacing revenue growth • Looking forward: • Anticipate weak financial performance • All rating categories will be affected • No overriding factors to drive up admissions in 2014/15 • Anticipate the transition to value based purchasing will be highly disruptive • Rate increases are under pressure (Medicare .7% in 2014!) • Effective boards will aggressively attack expenses and CULTURAL change will be required. Benefits will have likely have delayed recognition

  25. Volume trends per Moody's

  26. The Accountable Care Act Impact on Businesses and individuals

  27. Employer impact • The requirement to provide coverage is the most significant impact • Most questions remain unanswered. There is anecdotal evidence for yes and no to each of the following questions: • Will employers drop coverage and elect to pay the penalty under ACA? • How will ACA affect working hours? • Will employers work to keep individuals below 30 hours? • How will the ACA affect job growth? • Will the 50 employee limit stifle expansion? • The bigger issues evolve around reporting and compliance with the law • Structure of health plans to meet minimum coverage and enrollment standards • Reporting coverage to IRS

  28. Higher taxes for high earners

  29. Private health Insurance Exchanges • There are several private health insurance exchanges • Allows employers to adopt a “defined contribution” approach to employee health insurance • Pros and cons • Takes the risk off of the employer, but are employees ready for this choice? • Will employees choose the right level of coverage • Enhances ability for employees to compare true compensation vs. the hidden compensation of health care • Generally more flexible than public exchanges • Ability to offer various products (even non-insurance ones) http://www.booz.com/media/file/BoozCo-Emergence-Private-Health-Insurance-Exchanges.pdf

  30. The Health Insurance Public Exchanges • Available to individuals not covered by employee health plans • State exchanges vs. federal exchanges • Four levels of coverage • Bronze (60% of average costs of care) • Silver (70% of average costs of care) • Gold (80% of average costs of care) • Platinum (90% of average costs of care) • The average individual market plan for some large carriers is currently 57% , so costs have to be higher, right? • The impact on the health care provider marketplace and individual choice • Anecdotal evidence says rates paid are slightly less than current rates, but not as low as some feared • Increasing use of “narrow networks” to encourage lower rates

  31. Texas and the Public exchange • Most areas have multiple plans to chose from (38 family plans for Dallas County) • Many big insurance players are in the plans: • Aetna • Cigna • Blue Cross • Molina • Several areas do not have “platinum” plans available • Narrow networks are very common

  32. Example of rates and coverage for Dallas County

  33. Exchange enrollment through march 2014

  34. Premium Assistance Credit

  35. Federal poverty level for 2013 • Individual • 100% = $11,490 • 133% = $15,282 ($7.34/hour) • 200% = 22,980 ($11.04/hour) • 400% = $45,960 ($22.09/hour) • Family of 4 • 100% = $23,500 • 133% = $31,322 • 200% = $47,100 • 400% = $94,200 • A family of 4 at 200% of the poverty level would be responsible for $314/month in premium before a subsidy was received • A family o f 4 at 400% of the poverty level would have to pay up to $745/month in premium before a subsidy was received

  36. Medicaid Expansion • 26 states, including Texas, did not expand Medicaid • Why it matters • Medicaid only covers specified categories of individuals • I.e., no coverage for childless adults in poverty • ACA assumed that all individuals under 138% of poverty would qualify for Medicaid • No subsidies are provided for individuals with less than 100% of FPL • Individuals between 100% and 138% can receive premium assistance that would require them to pay about $500/year toward health care coverage • Texas has about $6.1 million uninsured • Failure to expand Medicaid leaves about 1,000,000 individuals without coverage

  37. Breaking the log jam • Would Texas consider the “Arkansas” option? • The Arkansas option: • Doesn’t technically expand Medicaid • Uses the additional funds from the ACA to buy private insurance for newly eligible individuals up to 138% of the poverty level • Those that would have qualified for Medicaid previously still use that program • No premium for enrollees • Enrollment would be in “silver” plans • State pays premiums directly to insurance companies • Must address the co-pay required by many insurance companies • Requires some cost sharing for beneficiaries over 100% of FPL • Potential hidden cost of the program most often targeted by critics • Cost is $188mm in CY 2014 for 200,000 enrollees (multiply by 6x to 8x for Texas?)

  38. The Texas Medicaid Waiver • Waiver Basics • Uncompensated Care reimbursement • Delivery System Reform Improvement Program (DSRIP) payments • 5 year program with billions of dollars of revenue at stake • Replaces UPL program • We are now entering DY3 • Implementation has been somewhat rocky, with several payment delays • Cash is running, on average, six months behind schedule • Some providers have trouble finding IGT funds • The future of the program • Big winners are governmental hospitals, especially large districts • A statewide fight is brewing on how future Waiver and DSH funds should be allocated

  39. Other Texas trends and developments • Provider taxes and assessments? • Medicaid DSH battles • Burden alleviation fatigue • Physician hospitals and working around the ACA • M&A Activity • Hospitals buying hospitals • Preparing for bundled payments • Private equity

  40. The Accountable Care Act Predictions and key trends

  41. Employers role in health care

  42. Patients as consumers

  43. Consumer Surveys Offer Insight • Nearly 57% of employees would like to customize their own health plan • 70% would like to see hospital and physician prices “on-line,” including what the insurance company will pay to these groups • 62% of employees would be willing to use self-monitoring devices to manage their health • Nearly two-thirds would like to use video conferencing or other non-personal means for follow-up visits • There is a growing willingness for technology to replace direct physician access • Look for presentations by Eric Topol on-line or read his book the “The Creative Destruction of Medicine”

  44. Concierge medicine

  45. Population health management

  46. Multiple examples of “management” in insured population • Narrow steerage of certain patients to “centers of excellence” • Cardiovascular care • Orthopedic and rehabilitative services • Exclusion of high-cost providers from networks on a service line basis • Incentives for employees to choose lower cost options in the marketplace • Medical tourism

  47. We Have Seen This Before… THEN - Balanced Budget • HMOs (Health Maintenance Organizations) • Capitation • Sustainable Growth Rates (SGR) NOW - Healthcare Reform - ACOs (Accountable Care Organizations) • Bundling • SGR?

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