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Federal & State HIV/AIDS Policy

Federal & State HIV/AIDS Policy. UCLA School of Public Health Epidemiology 227 May 15, 2013 Prof. Arleen Leibowitz UCLA School of Public Affairs. Outline. Current Status and Affordable Care Act Care and Treatment Now and Under Health Reform Medicaid Medicare Ryan White CARE Act

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Federal & State HIV/AIDS Policy

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  1. Federal & State HIV/AIDS Policy UCLA School of Public Health Epidemiology 227 May 15, 2013 Prof. Arleen Leibowitz UCLA School of Public Affairs

  2. Outline • Current Status and Affordable Care Act • Care and Treatment Now and Under Health Reform • Medicaid • Medicare • Ryan White CARE Act • California issues • Private Insurance and Health Reform Changes • Testing and Prevention • Research • Income Support and Housing • Global Programs

  3. Follow The Funding to Determine Priorities Federal HIV/AIDS Budget Request – FY2013

  4. Treatment as Prevention • New results show early treatment reduces transmission • But many PLWH are not treated • About 18% do not know their HIV status • 33% on ARV therapy, 19-28% are virally suppressed • Expanded guidelines • HAART is costly--$12,000/year • $20,000-30,000/year in total costs • Highlights importance of insurance

  5. Insurance Status PLWHA in Care: 2010

  6. Affordable Care Act (ACA) • Individual mandate • Employers (50+ workers) must offer insurance or pay penalty if employees get subsidy. Small business credits • Expand Medicaid to all <65 with income <133% FPL • States have option to expand Medicaid (per Supreme Court) • 100% Federal funding for expansion, 90% in 2020 • Preventive services • Remove Medicare cost-sharing • Pay Medicaid providers at Medicare rates

  7. Affordable Care Act (2) • Health Insurance Exchanges with premium subsidies • Cost sharing subsidies • Out of pocket limits if income <400% FPL • U.S. citizens and legal immigrants • Requires guaranteed issue and renewability • Outlaws medical underwriting • Outlaws lifetime limits on coverage • Essential benefits package • Support for community health centers

  8. Two Kinds of Federal Spending • Mandatory spending • Congress must allocate funding to meet statutory obligation – e.g., Medicare, Medicaid, SSI • “Entitlements” • Defined benefit • Discretionary spending • Congress decides on spending level each year • Defined contribution • Block grants • Examples: NIH, CDC, Ryan White, VA

  9. Problems With Discretionary Spending • Block grant budget does not increase to accommodate increased enrollment • Health care costs rise faster than CPI, so annual increases are “high” • Annual budget process discourages long-term health investments • Prevention may reduce costs in long run, but not in short • Early treatment of HIV saves money in long run • Share of discretionary spending is falling

  10. Federal Support for Care and Treatment (FY2013) Entitlement • Medicaid (Federal share) $5.6 B 35% • Medicare $6.2 B 39% • FEHBP $0.2 B 1% Discretionary • Ryan White $2.5 B 16% • (ADAP) ($1.0 B) • Veterans Affairs $1.0 B 6 % • SAMHSA $0.2 B 1% • HOPWA $0.3 B 2% • Total $16.0 B

  11. Medicaid • Federal/state health insurance program • Created in 1965 • States set eligibility criteria, subject to Federal minima • States set benefits, subject to Federal mandated benefits • Entitlement program that expands to meet demand of low income and disabled meeting state criteria • Federal government pays a minimum of 50% of costs, more in low income states (average 55% of HIV $)

  12. Medicaid Benefits • Covers most services; no or minimal cost-sharing • Drugs, an optional service, are covered in all states • Optional services include case management, hospice • Some states limit services • Number of Rx per month or year • Number of MD visits • In recessions, states try to cut Medicaid costs • California instituted cost-sharing for Medicaid

  13. Medicaid Eligibility

  14. Medicaid Eligibility

  15. Medicaid Payment Issues • Low Medicaid provider payment levels make access difficult • ACA raises Medicaid reimbursement rates to Medicare levels for primary care services, with 100% federal funding in 2013, 2014 • ACA encourages primary care homes • Medicaid discount on drugs of 15.1% less than what others get • ACA increases drug 340b rebate to 23.1%, but some goes back to federal government

  16. Rep. Paul Ryan’s Bill Would Convert Medicaid to Block Grant • Repeals ACA • Caps Medicaid spending • Uses formula, rather than costs, to allocate $ to states • Cap grows with population growth and inflation • Reduces federal Medicaid spending 2012-2021 • UI estimate: $1.4 trillion • By 34% relative to current law

  17. Projected Result of Block Granting Medicaid • Federal budget savings and predictability • Inflexibility in recession • Reduction in federal payments to states • Challenges states’ ability to provide care • 36.4 million fewer people will be insured • Hospitals lose 38% of revenue

  18. Medicare • Federal entitlement program created in 1965 • Covers persons 65+, persons with ESRD, and long term disabled • Funded by payroll tax on earnings, general revenues, beneficiary premiums for Part B and co-payments (Medicaid can pay patient cost-sharing) • Uniform throughout U.S.

  19. Long-Term Disability Qualifies Many PLWH for Medicare • Disabled must have sufficient covered work history to quality for SSDI • 29 Month Waiting period • Federal law requires 5 month wait after disability determination before receiving SSDI payments • 24-month waiting period for Medicare, following SSDI • Medicaid coverage for low income persons during the 29 months

  20. Medicare Benefits • Hospital • Outpatient (20% cost-sharing) • Drugs have been covered since January 1, 2006 under Part D, private drug insurance plans • Plans required to cover all ARVs • ACA will gradually close “donut hole”

  21. Medicare – Current Policy Issues • Eligibility • Must have sufficient work history to qualify for SSDI, a problem for young, poor persons with HIV • 29 month wait for Medicare eligibility • Catch-22 of disability requirement • Cost-sharing • High cost sharing if no supplemental coverage • No cap on out-of-pocket spending • Medicare “donut hole” • When ADAP pays, doesn’t count as “true out of pocket cost” (TROOP)

  22. Health Reform and Medicare • Medicare “donut” hole will be closed • 2010--$350 towards cost • Phase-down coinsurance rate in donut hole from 100% to 25%, starting 2011 by requiring 50% rebate from manufacturers plus federal 25% subsidy • ADAP payments will count as TROOP in Part D • No cost-sharing for covered preventive services (rated A or B by U.S. Preventive Services Task Force)

  23. Ryan White Care Act • CARE= Comprehensive AIDS Relief Emergency • Discretionary program enacted 1990, Originally designed to help cities heavily impacted by HIV/AIDS (EMA; TGA) • Payer of last resort for uninsured and underinsured PLWA • Patient Centered Medical Home --Outpatient care, including medical, dental, case management, home health, hospice, housing, transportation, drugs (through ADAP and insurance continuation) • Current authorization will expire in September • If eligible under ACA, will have to leave Ryan White

  24. AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP) • Funded by Part B of Ryan White Care Act • Congressional Earmark: $1B (approx 50%) • Plus state supplements (approx 25%) • And rebates from drug manufacturers (approx 25%) • States set eligibility • 5 x FPL in NJ; 4 x FPL in CA; 2 x FPL Texas • Disability not required • Residency, not citizenship required • ADAP is a block grant • 3079 PLWH on ADAP waiting lists in April 2012

  25. ADAP (2) • Drugs provided to 133,689 PLWH monthly in 2011 • Cost/enrollee c. $1000/month • Services • HIV Medications, drug monitoring and adherence services • Can purchase health insurance for eligible clients • Variation in state coverage • Louisiana had 28 drugs; New York had 460 • States set eligibility rules, resulting in variability • States with less generous Medicaid programs, need more Ryan White support

  26. Ryan White – Current Policy Issues • Demand increases • Greater survival • Enhanced testing efforts • Loss of insurance due to recession • Medical costs increase faster than CPI • Block grant • But states have limited ability to supplement • Continued availability of prescription rebates?

  27. Health Reform and Ryan White • RWCA is funder of “last resort”; what will its role be under health reform? • ACA increases insurance -- Medicaid and Exchanges • Especially for non-disabled, reducing need for “bridge” to pay for drugs • CARE/HIPP could help purchase insurance • Effect of ACA on Ryan White funding? • Congress is looking for “offsets” • Undocumented • How will RW sites interact with Medicaid or CHCs?

  28. Health Reform and ADAP • ADAP and Medicare Part D drug coverage • Donut hole costs will fall, reducing need for ADAP • Cost of drugs while in donut hole is reduced by 50% • Donut hole coinsurance drops to 25% • ADAP payments count as TROOP • Effect on rebates? • Drug rebate for ADAP is better than rebate for Medicaid • Where will undocumented get ART?

  29. Health Reform and Private Insurance • Mandates employer offer and individual coverage • Eliminates “medical underwriting” and rescissions • Provides subsidies for purchase from exchanges (32 million people by 2019) with mandated benefits • Legal immigrants eligible for subsidies • Bronze plan—covers 60% of cost • Caps out of pocket expenditures for persons<4xFPL • Sets up high risk pool—June 2010 to Jan 2014 • Allows children to stay on parents’ policy until age 26

  30. Outline • Care and Treatment • Medicaid • Medicare • Ryan White CARE Act • California Issues • Health Reform and private insurance • Testing and Prevention • Research • Income Support and Housing • Global Programs

  31. HIV Testing • 18% of PLWH do not know they are HIV+ • CDC “Advancing HIV Prevention” (2004) • Make voluntary HIV testing a part of routine medical care • Test for HIV outside of medical care settings • Prevent new infections by focusing on HIV+ individuals and their partners • Further decrease perinatal HIV transmission • National AIDS Strategy (2010) • Focus on communities where HIV most concentrated

  32. HIV Testing – Policy Issues • CDC goal to “normalize” HIV testing • Destigmatize • Opt-out vs. opt-in testing recommended by CDC in Sept. 2006 • Default is testing; patient must specifically decline test • Covered by general consent to treat • CA state law since Jan. 1, 2008 removes requirement for specific written informed consent for testing • Question: need prevention counseling accompany testing?

  33. Testing—Policy Issues (2) • Rapid test could increase knowledge of HIV status • Results ready in 20 minutes, no need to return for results • But needs to be confirmed if “preliminarily positive” • New “60 second” test • Home testing? • New York mandated HIV testing offer in medical settings • Increase in tests • No increase in number of new positives

  34. Prevention • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention administers most federal prevention efforts (FY 12 budget: $786 M) • National budget share for prevention (3%) is decreasing over time • California cut General Fund support for prevention by $59M in 2009/10

  35. New Prevention Strategies • Treatment as Prevention • Early treatment reduced transmission by 96% • Heterosexual couples in Africa • Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) • Reduced transmission by 44% (more if 90% adherent) • MSM in US and Latin America • Post-Exposure Prophylaxis

  36. Prevention: Policy Issues • Target increased risk behavior among MSM • Methamphetamine epidemic in CA • Internet—prevention challenge or opportunity? • Social networks? • Reach populations who may not realize their risk and may not receive routine medical care • Young men are not in routine medical care • STI clinics, EDs, jails? • Separation between federal treatment and prevention efforts

  37. Outline • Care and Treatment • Medicaid • Medicare • Ryan White CARE Act • Testing and Prevention • Research • Income Support and Housing • Global Programs

  38. Research • NIH Budget for HIV research is $2.7B in FY12 • Largest investments are biomedical • California HIV Research Program

  39. Income Support and Housing • Cash Assistance (11% of Domestic HIV funding) • SSI - $520 M in FY12 • SSDI - $1.9 B in FY12 • Entitlement programs for the disabled • Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS (HOPWA) $332 M in FY12 • AIDS exceptionalism?

  40. Conclusions—Domestic Issues • HIV care is being mainstreamed • Both clinically • And in finance • Is there still a need for special programs like Ryan White? • Health Reform has addressed many HIV/AIDS policy issues • Issue of immigrants unresolved • But, the fragmented system still presents challenges • Difficult to know what resources are available • Coordinate care

  41. Outline • Care and Treatment • Medicaid • Medicare • Ryan White CARE Act • Testing and Prevention • Research • Income Support and Housing • Global Programs

  42. Global Programs • Most US AIDS funding is bilateral, circumvents Global Fund • US is still largest single contributor to GF (58%) • Obama’s Global Health Initiative (GHI) • Funding at $63B over 6 years(FY2009-2014) • Rebalances GHI portfolio from HIV to MCH • HIV/AIDS funding of $5.6B (+0.5% over FY11) • MNCH $846M (+78% over FY11) • Nutrition $150M (+100% over FY11)

  43. HIV Is Still Largest Share of GHI

  44. Focus on Health Outcomes • Rather than on dollars spent • Cost-effectiveness approach: Save the most lives within a given budget • HIV 1.9 M deaths • Respiratory infections 2.9 M deaths • Diarrheal diseases 2.2 M deaths • Malaria and TB 2.3 M deaths

  45. Cost/DALY Condom promotion and distribution $1-99 Prevent MTCT $1-34 VCT $18-22 First Line ART $350-2010 Management of neonatal pneumonia $1 Oral rehydration $24-139 Bed nets $11-41

  46. 2003 33% prevention funding had to target abstinence In 2005, 2/3 on abstinence, 1/3 condoms Condoms only for “high-risk” (prostitutes, discordant couples, substance abusers) Funded organizations need “policy explicitly opposing prostitution and sex trafficking.” (PL108-25) ARVs must be approved by FDA (WHO approval not sufficient) 2010 Abstinence rules lapsed Pres. Obama rescinded “gag rule” on abortion By 2007, 73% of drugs distributed were generic. Accelerated FDA approval. Focus on MTCT, MC and services for IDUs Global Policy Issues

  47. Overarching Policy Questions • Is treatment as prevention feasible in developing world? • How to balance domestic and global needs • Can we provide PrEP for uninfected in U.S. while many are not treated in developing world? • Is the movement toward other diseases in GHI ethical?

  48. Policy Resources HRSA http://www.hrsa.gov CDC http://www.cdc.gov/hiv NIH http://www.nih.gov CHRP http://chrp.ucop.edu CHIPTS http://chipts.ucla.edu Kaiser Family Foundation http://www.kff.org/hivaids CAPS http://www.caps.ucsf.edu

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