ACA Implementation: Adequacy and Sustainability of Coverage for Cancer Survivors
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Transcript of ACA Implementation: Adequacy and Sustainability of Coverage for Cancer Survivors
© The Brookings Institution. All rights reserved. No part of this presentation may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the Brookings Institution, 1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 (Email: [email protected]).
ACA Implementation:Adequacy and Sustainability
of Coverage for Cancer Survivors
Mark McClellan, MD PhDThe Brookings Institution
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Overview
1. Key Implementation Steps: What Happens When
2. Lessons from Part D Experience- Clear Policy Goals- Intense Education and Enrollment Support- Systems- Implementation Flexibility
1. Next Steps for Affordable, Innovative Cancer Care
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Health Insurance Marketplaces Implementation Timeline
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Deadline Action Indicators of Progress/CompletionFebruary 15, 2013 Deadline for states to submit their Declaration Letter and
Blueprint Application for State Partnership ExchangesFebruary 20, 2013 Final Essential Health Benefits Rule issued
March 2013 Final rule on risk adjustment, risk corridors, reinsurance and cost-sharing reductions and advanced premium tax credits programs
(at OMB for review)March 28, 2013 Application period for Qualified Health Plans (QHPs) begins
March 29, 2013 Outreach and Education Plan complete (for Consumer Partnership states and State-Based Exchanges, SBEs)
April 1, 2013 Plan data submission to NAIC begins
April 30, 2013 Application period for QHPs ends
Guidance & Regulations Plan Management Outreach & EnrollmentGeneral
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Health Insurance Marketplaces Implementation Timeline
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Deadline Action Indicators of Progress/CompletionSummer 2013 Consumer assistance programs must be in place
June 2013 Federal government will begin their outreach campaignJune 15, 2013 Paid and Earned Media Plan submitted to HHS (for Consumer
Partnership states and SBEs)July 2013 Federal decisions on QHPs made
July 31, 2013 State portion of the QHP certification process complete and specified plan data and recommendations sent to HHS (For Plan
Management Partnership States and SBEs)September 15, 2013 Health insurance marketplaces must be tested and operational
October 1, 2013 Open enrollment period begins
November 18, 2013 Deadline for states to submit a letter of intent to HHS to operate a state-based exchange in 2015
January 1, 2014 Insurance Coverage Begins
2015 Basic Health Plan is operational
Guidance & Regulations Plan Management Outreach & EnrollmentGeneral
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Lessons from Part D: Policy Decisions
• Just because a market doesn’t exist, doesn’t mean the market can’t succeed– Have desired policy outcomes squarely in mind (requires dealing with
tradeoffs)– Provide reliable information sufficient for decisionmaking by all major parties,
particularly health plans and states– Convey confidence through step-by-step progress with milestones identified in
advance– Ensure extensive communication for answering technical questions clearly
and consistently: industry workshops, open door forums, FAQs, subregulatory guidances, etc.
• Protect vulnerable populations – Risk adjustment, reinsurance, risk corridors– Meaningful but flexible coverage requirements (e.g., oncology drugs)– Auto-enrollment– Take other reasonable policy steps to make potentially risky patients attractive
to health plans
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Lessons from Part D: Operations• Seek accurate and timely data flows – even the best laid plans
and testing for systems won’t end up working without data– With any complex system involving multiple data feeds, there is the
potential for problems– Pilot test systems with actual data to the extent time permits – Identify metrics to enable tracking of data availability and throughput (for
example, individuals enrolled, prescriptions filled, measures of consumer experience)
– Expect to devote teams to work proactively with states, health plans, and health care providers to address data flow problems
• Make systems robust – do not depend on any single pathway for critical tasks to be accomplished
• Identify best-practice solutions in plans, enrollment activities, states – cannot anticipate let alone figure them out centrally – and spread them
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Lessons from Part D: Outreach and Collaboration
• Find friends in unlikely places – build and leverage relationships with multiple stakeholders
– Extensive effort to build broad-based local outreach efforts involving health plans, pharmacies, state agency officials, community organizations, and other stakeholders was crucial
– Interagency cooperation in outreach and education also led to essential support – requires strong and ongoing support from the top
• Overcoming awareness and enrollment inertia: free isn’t cheap enough in many cases
– Multi-faceted outreach campaign enlisted the help of pharmacists and physicians to steadily address the “eligible but not enrolled” gap
– Many mechanisms to find personalized information and enroll as easily as possible: web tools, phone customer service, community outreach events and enrollment hubs
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Lessons from Part D: Maintain Flexibility to Ensure Successful Implementation
• Mistakes will happen and problems will arise – allow for administrative flexibility and have contingency plans in place– Example: What if someone believes they are eligible for coverage
and/or subsidies (and has some evidence for it) but their relevant electronic data cannot be found in coverage systems?
• Assistance from plans and states can avoid frustrations from consumers
– Make sure people who are counting on the program and need care can get it
• Have metrics and support teams ready for potential problem areas
• Expect the need for regular media updates and outreach about any problems and steps to correct them – nationally and
especially state/local
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Oncology Reform
• Measures
• Provider Payment
• Benefit Design
• Plan Choice