How Some Actively Prevent People From Participating in Healthcare Plans

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How States Actively Prevent People From Learning About Healthcare Plans


How States Actively Prevent People
From Learning About Healthcare Plans​

In Georgia, Missouri, Ohio, and Tennessee, for example,
health navigators are not allowed to give advice about
the benefits of enrolling in Obamacare.​


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To help the 16 million uninsured Americans learn about their options and sign up for coverage, the Affordable Care Act established grants to be doled out to people called “navigators,” who can be anyone from individuals to trade associations to consumer groups.

In Kentucky, for example, navigators called “Kynectors” hang out at clinics and community sign-up events, fielding questions about, say, plans that are best for someone with multiple sclerosis, or how to deal with a moral aversion to Medicaid (when you qualify for Medicaid).

This kind of in-person help seems to be one of the few functional options left, since the launch of the federal website Healthcare.gov has been a disaster, and even attempting to calculate the subsidies one might qualify for can be a harrowing task, as my colleague Garance Franke-Ruta reported.

John McDonough, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health who helped in the implementation Massachusetts' 2006 health-reform law, on which Obamacare was partly based, said that the state’s own experience showed the importance of in-person assistance. McDonough told me that while there was a slow trickle of sign-ups through the state’s website (granted, it was seven years ago), far more new enrollees were helped along by healthcare providers and social workers.

“Most people signed up through hospitals and community health centers when they showed up for care in person,” he said. “They were assisted by hospital personnel. The voluntary individual enrollments went much pokier.”

McDonough worked on a help line that was flooded with calls from bewildered applicants who he helped shepherd through enrollment.

“There are people with literacy challenges, people who are intimidated by the process,” he said. “That's why the navigators [for Obamacare] are considered to be so important.”

States that resisted Obamacare in the first place seem to be, unsurprisingly, the same ones that are wary of the navigators. Florida banned navigators from working in county health departments. Texas Governor Rick Perry wanted navigators to be fingerprinted, pay a state licensing fee, and take an extra 40 hours of coursework on top of what federal law required.

The federal government awarded $67 million to more than 100 organizations to hire the navigators, but two groups, one in Ohio and one in West Virginia, turned down their federal grants last month, a move the Ohio group attributed specifically to that state’s restrictions on navigators. Ohio had no navigators available on the day the exchanges opened, October 1, because the state mandated that they get approval from the Ohio Department of Insurance before starting work.

Here’s a rundown of the various restrictions states have put on these helpers, from a recent series of articles by researchers from Georgetown University's Health Policy Institute, featured on the Commonwealth Fund site this week:

Preventing navigators from advising people on the benefits and terms of different plans:


Twelve states restrict the advice navigators can offer consumers. Four—Georgia, Missouri, Ohio, and Tennessee—go so far as to bar them from giving advice about the benefits, terms, and features of a particular health plan, despite the fact that federal rules require navigators to clarify distinctions among plans and assist people in making informed decisions about what coverage to choose.​

So if, say, you live in Missouri and want to see a specific doctor or take a certain drug, a navigator might be prevented from telling you which plan will cover it.


Requiring navigators to buy professional liability insurance:

Three states—Iowa, Utah, and Wisconsin—insist that navigators secure a surety bond or other insurance against claims of wrongdoing or mistake, even though federal regulations prohibit states from requiring navigators to maintain errors and omissions coverage. A fourth state, Illinois, has authorized its insurance department to impose a similar requirement.​


Expanding the limitations to non-navigator community groups:

Georgia and Illinois, for example, restrictions on providing advice about health plan particulars apply not just to navigators, but also to other individuals and community groups that help with outreach or enrollment. The broad scope of Tennessee’s regulations has led to multiple lawsuits and an agreement by the state to enforce its rules more narrowly (though they still apply to non-navigator assisters).​

Obviously, anyone charged with disseminating health-insurance information needs to be trained and vetted (and navigators are supposed to be, under the federal requirements.) But arguing that navigators “pose a serious threat to privacy” because they help clarify the costs and benefits of various health plans seems like a stretch.


SOURCE

 

Koch brothers sponsor anti-Obamacare
cornholing competition​


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Generation Opportunity, a Koch-funded front group whose goal is to convince young people that they don’t need health insurance, sponsored a tailgate party on the campus of the University of Miami on Saturday.

According to an email by Generation Opportunity’s communication director, David Pasch, the Koch brothers money allowed their organization to “roll in with a fleet of Hummers, F-150’s and Suburbans, each vehicle equipped with an 8’ high balloon bouquet floating overhead.”

“We hired a popular student DJ from UMiami,” the email continued, and “set up OptOut cornhole sets, beer pong tables, bought 75 pizzas, and hired 8 ‘brand ambassadors’ aka [scantily clad female] models with bullhorns to help out.”

The email failed to indicate who won the cornholing competition.

“Student activists independently brought (lots of) beer and liquor for consumption by those 21 and over. Oh yeah, and we educated students about their healthcare options outside the expensive and creepy Obamacare exchanges,” Pasch concluded.

How many of the attendees opted out of Obamacare is not known.

[Image via Generation Opportunity's Facebook page]


SOURCE


 
Originally posted July-10-2011

What president Obama needs to do is to communicate the truth to the American people. Obama and his entire administration are the worst communicators I have ever seen in the modern presidency.

The BuShit gang was lying their ass off every single day, but they had an aggressive media strategy to propagate their lies. Obama has the indisputable facts and the truth and he and his entire administration are basically curled up into a fetal position as the RepubliKlans step-to-the microphone and lie about what’s going on and take shots at the Obama administration.

Where are the presidents spokespeople? Where is his rapid response team, a strategy that Bill Clinton used when the republiklans would issue daily lies about him?......{

}........Obama needs to realize that with the republiklans you are dealing with the overworld mafia. That’s who they represent only, the oligarchs, the largest and wealthiest individuals and businesses in the nation. Bill Clinton and Hilary and adviser James Carville & others in that crew understood this and realized that you have to figuratively ‘punch these people in the nose’ — not try to appease, cut one sided deals, and make friends with them.

Obama needs to read that old book by Robert Ringer “Winning Through Intimidation" , in fact I recommend it to any of you peeps who haven’t read it. The republiklans represent Type Number One as outlined in the book. They Want All The Chips!!!!!!!!!!!!.................}



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I posted the comments above on July 2011 regarding the Obama administrations pathetic messaging against the lies the republiklans were propagating about the debt ceiling (read the entire post for the context & perspective)

The sentiments I expressed in 2011 about the Obama administrations inexplicably dreadful ability to use the bully pulpit to get its truthful message out, versus the demonstrable lies of the republiklans, — that failure of “Team Obama” to ‘message’ — is more momentously apparent now in 2013 during this health-care-rollout imbroglio.

Where are the President’s surrogates? —helping him to fight the battle on the corporate television media telescreens, against the onslaught of republiklan lies?? Where are the Democratic senators from the States of New York & California, Democratic strongholds where the chance of being defeated by a republiklan is almost zero percent — why are they not on the telescreens using bullet points to defend the Affordable Care Act? BuShit had the entire republiklan carcass, — senators, house members, cabinet members, retired republiklan politicos, on the telescreens, lying 24/7 about weapons-of-mass-destruction, Saddam’s connection to 911, and “mushroom clouds” —a full court press. Obama has his Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius who should have been fired a year ago, stumbling and fumbling non assertively on the telescreens about the Affordable Care Act. Obama then gives an impromptu press conference last week at the white house where he figuratively curled up into a fetal position as he literally apologized for giving health-care-access to millions of Americans who previously had-no-chance of getting it — imagine that. Does Obama really believe that — MSNBC, The New York Times, The New Yorker Magazine and the few other media outlets that still push back against the republiklan piss-cloud of 24/7 lies, — will be sufficient to bring reality to the overwhelmingly brain-washed masses watching the telescreens??



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The Shame of American Health Care


November 17, 2013

Even as Americans struggle with the changes required by health care reform, an international survey released last week by the Commonwealth Fund, a research organization, shows why change is so necessary.

<span style="background-color: #FFFF00"><b>The report found that by virtually all measures of cost, access to care and ease of dealing with insurance problems, Americans fared poorly compared with people in other advanced countries.</b></span> The survey covered 20,000 adults in the United States and 10 other industrial nations — Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and Britain, all of which put in place universal or near-universal health coverage decades ago.

The United States spends far more than any of these countries on a per capita basis and as a percent of the national economy.

For that, it gets meager results.
<span style="background-color: #FFFF00"><b>Some 37 percent of American adults went without recommended care, did not see a doctor when sick or failed to fill prescriptions in the past year because of costs, compared with 4 percent in Britain and 6 percent in Sweden.</b></span>

Nearly a quarter of American adults could not pay medical bills or had serious problems paying them compared with less than 13 percent in France and 7 percent or less in five other countries.

<span style="background-color: #FFFF00"><b>Even Americans who were insured for the entire year were more likely than adults abroad to forgo care because of costs, an indication of how skimpy some insurance policies are. </b></span>

When Americans got sick, they had to wait longer than people in most of the other countries to get help. Fewer than half were able to get same-day or next-day appointments with a doctor or nurse; one in four had to wait six days or longer. (Only Canada fared worse on both counts.) But Americans got quicker access to specialists than adults in all but two other countries.

The complexity of the American insurance system is also an issue. Some 32 percent of consumers spent a lot of time on insurance paperwork or in disputes with their insurer over denials of payment for services they thought were covered.

The Affordable Care Act was created to address these problems by covering tens of millions of uninsured people and providing subsidies to help many of them pay for policies; by setting limits on the out-of-pocket costs that patients must bear; and by requiring that all policies cover specified benefits.

Americans are understandably frustrated with the Obama administration’s failure to produce a functioning website. President Obama’s erroneous statements that all people who like their current insurance policies can keep them — not true for many people buying insurance in the individual market — has added to anger and misunderstanding. The reform law, however imperfect, is needed to bring the dysfunctional American health care system up to levels already achieved in other advanced nations.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/18/opinion/the-shame-of-american-health-care.html



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