Ch 6 - Financing and Reimbursement Methods Flashcards

1
Q

Financing

A

Any mechanism that gives people the ability to pay for health care services.

In most cases, financing is necessary to have access to health care.

Sources of financing health care:
Private health insurance
Public insurance programs such as Medicare and Medicaid
Uncompensated or charity care

Complexity of financing:
Many payers
Many plans
Many programs
Many payment mechanisms
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2
Q

Economic perspective of financing:

A

Working Americans finance their own health care and subsidize it for those who cannot afford it.

Employer-paid insurance is an exchange for more salary.

The Medicare tax is a type of prepayment for certain services received at age 65.

Moral hazard and provider-induced demand waste health care resources and add to the rising cost of health care.

National health insurance enables supply-side rationing; this has not been possible in the United States.

The ACA still leaves many uninsured—indirect or demand-side rationing

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3
Q

Underwriting

A

Evaluates, selects/rejects, classifies, and rates risk

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4
Q

Four principles of insurance:

A
  1. Risk is unpredictable for individuals.
  2. Risk can be predicted with some accuracy for a large group.
  3. Insurance can shift risk from the individual to the group by pooling resources.
  4. Losses are shared by all members.
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5
Q

Government-Financed Insurance

A

2013 stats: A little over one-third of the insured are covered under public programs.
17% covered by Medicaid
16% covered by Medicare
Categorical programs: Benefits are designed for defined categories of people.

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6
Q

Medicare

A

Title 18 of Social Security Act
An entitlement program
People contribute through taxes and are entitled regardless of income and assets.

A federal program
Administered by CMS, an agency under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS)

Finances medical care for:
Those 65 years or older
Disabled people who are entitled to Social Security benefits
Those with end-stage renal disease

The program does not offer comprehensive coverage.
	Main noncovered services:
Vision
Eyeglasses
Dental care
Hearing aids 
Many long-term care services

Medicare has four parts: Parts A, B, C, and D.

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7
Q

Medicare Part A:

A

Hospital Insurance

Financed by payroll taxes:
Paid by all working individuals
Paid on all income earned
Paid equally by both employer and employee

Hospital insurance covers:

Inpatient services
Short-term convalescence and rehabilitation in a skilled nursing facility (SNF)
Home health
Hospice

The timing of benefits is determined by a benefit period. It begins on the day a beneficiary is hospitalized. It ends when the beneficiary has not been in a hospital or a skilled nursing facility for 60 consecutive days. Thereafter, a new benefit period begins. A beneficiary can have unlimited benefit periods.

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8
Q

Medicare Part A:

A

Hospital Insurance

Financed by payroll taxes:
Paid by all working individuals
Paid on all income earned
Paid equally by both employer and employee

Hospital insurance covers:
Inpatient services
Short-term convalescence and rehabilitation in a skilled nursing facility (SNF)
Home health
Hospice

The timing of benefits is determined by a benefit period. It begins on the day a beneficiary is hospitalized. It ends when the beneficiary has not been in a hospital or a skilled nursing facility for 60 consecutive days. Thereafter, a new benefit period begins. A beneficiary can have unlimited benefit periods.

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9
Q

Medicare Part A SNF benefits:

A

Eligibility begins after 3 consecutive days of hospital stay.
100 days maximum in SNF
First 20 days at no charge to the beneficiary; copayment applies from day 21

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10
Q

Medicare Part A Hospital benefits:

A

Deductible is paid for the first 60 days.
Copayment required from 61 to 90 days.
Higher copayment required after 90 days and reserve days must be used.

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11
Q

Medicare Part A Home health benefit

A

Patient must be homebound.

Patient must require intermittent or part-time skilled nursing care or rehabilitation care.

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12
Q

Medicare Part A Hospice benefit

A

Patient must be terminally ill.

Only a token copayment is required.

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13
Q

Medicare Part B

A

Supplementary Medical Insurance (SMI)

Part B covers such things as:  
Physician services
Hospital outpatient services (surgery)
Diagnostic tests
Radiology
Also covers certain screening and preventive services
Annual wellness exam  
For most services:
An annual deductible must be paid.
80:20 coinsurance
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14
Q

Medicare Part C

A

Medicare Advantage

Beneficiaries are given the choice to remain in the original fee-for-service program or sign up for Part C.

Additional benefits (basic vision and dental) may be offered by the private managed care plans.

Beneficiary receives all Part A, B, and D services through the MCO.

It eliminates the need for Medigap coverage.

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15
Q

Medicare Part D

A

Prescription Drug Coverage

Created under the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act (MMA) of 2003.

Available to those who have Part A or B.
Monthly premium must be paid.
Annual deductible applies
Three layers based on spending

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16
Q

Medicaid

A

Title 19 of Social Security Act

Finances health care for the indigent, but it is a means-tested program

Jointly financed by state and federal governments

Each state establishes its own eligibility criteria according to income and assets.

Each state administers its own Medicaid program.

17
Q

Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP)

A

Title 21 of Social Security Act
For children up to age 19

Most states cover children in families with incomes at or above 250% of federal poverty level.

States can use existing Medicaid or create a separate CHIP program.
Federal and state funds finance the program.