Monday, March 31, 2014

The Clock is Ticking [UPDATED]

Today is (currently) the last day of the initial Open Enrollment season. Ms Shecantbeserious has indicated that, if you've tried to sign up and met with no success, the actual final day is April 15th [ed: irony - how does it work?]. I have several clients in this boat right now, and am waiting with bated breath as to how it will play out.

Golden State readers are in a very different boat. Co-blogger Bill reminds us that:

"Under the latest deadline changes, an application has to be started on CoveredCA by MARCH 31. You have until APRIL 15 to complete it. Outside of a qualifying event, if you miss the March 31 date, you're out until next year. On the Federal Exchange, they allow you to check a box that says that you tried to enroll and couldn't and are then allowed until April 15 to start a new application. That's not the case in California!"
Best get crackin'!

UPDATED: Heh (from Bill H):

The latest (slightly edited) press release from CoveredCA:

"Record-setting numbers of people trying to sign up for Covered California™ health insurance plans overwhelmed the system on the final day of open enrollment. Because of the staggering demands on the system, Covered California announced the following policy this afternoon:
• Consumers who were unable to create an online account or start their online application because of technical difficulties can contact a Covered California Certified Insurance Agent to explain that they attempted to get through on March 31 and experienced difficulties. Those consumers will have until 11:59 p.m. April 15 to work with the Certified Insurance Agent to complete their application and choose a plan.
 
• Consumers who created an online account and completed the first page of the application by 11:59 p.m. March 31, 2014, will be able to complete their application for the open-enrollment period, either by themselves online or with the help of a Certified Insurance Agent. Consumers must complete the application and select a plan by 11:59 p.m. April 15, 2014. Those enrollees will receive coverage effective May 1, 2014."
Rumors that the entire system is running on two surplus Commodore 64 computers are unfounded. An Altair 8800 is also employed to dynamically balance the load.

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Happy 9th Blogiversary to the HBB!

Congratulations to my friend David Williams' Health Business Blog, which recently hit the 9 year mark (just a few months after IB did).

Kudos, David, and many more years of successful bloggetry!

Friday, March 28, 2014

Does the ICD 10 have the Metric Curse?

Headlines on all the health care outlets yesterday (3/27/2014): 

Bill also delays ICD-10, two-midnight rule and RAC audits

According to the article: “The House of Representatives on Thursday approved a temporary fix to the sustainable growth rate (SGR) for one year in a bill that also delays ICD-10 implementation until at least October 2015 and postpones hospital compliance with the controversial "two-midnight rule" and recovery audits of medically unnecessary claims until March 2015.

While several items were approved, the excitement was due to yet another delay for the ICD-10. In 1996, the new HIPAA law mandated the acceptance of the ICD 10, and much like the poor metric system, it has been delayed and delayed in its implementation.

Why has it been delayed? Cost and complexity:

There are significant differences between ICD-9, what is used now and ICD-10, what is currently used in 25 countries, which this table demonstrates:
ICD-9
ICD-10
3-5 characters in length
3-7 characters in length
Approximately 13,000 codes
Approximately 68,000 available codes
First digit may be alpha (E or V) or numeric;
digits 2-5 are numeric
Digit 1 is alpha; digits 2 and 3 are numeric;
digits 4-7 are alpha or numeric
Limited space for adding new codes
Flexible for adding new codes
Lacks detail
Very specific
Lacks laterality

Has laterality (i.e., codes identifying right vs.
left)

What has the medical community so upset about adopting the ICD-10: moving from around 13,000 codes to 68,000 codes. Why such an increase? Because in the ICD-10 the code tells a story. Instead of a code that says “Fracture”, the new code says “Fracture, left foot, first incident, middle toe, while a passenger in a car in a car crash”. In fact, the codes are so complex, they are unintentionally funny. Here are a few real codes:
T63.442S Toxic effect of venom of bees, intentional self-harm, sequela

W56.22xA Struck by orca, initial encounter

Z73.4 Inadequate social skills, not elsewhere classified

V91.07xD Burn due to water-skis on fire, subsequent encounter

And then there is the cost. I have already had some webinars on the glory that is ICD-10, and it is recommended to the physicians that they obtain a line of credit to keep their businesses open during the transition, as the new codes will cause delay in payments. In fact, on the CMS Website, a handout for physicians states, “Budget for time and costs related to ICD-10 implementation, including expenses for system changes, resource materials, and training. Assess the costs of any necessary software updates, reprinting of superbills, trainings, and related expenses.” Great, a new unfunded federal mandate, but at least this time they are stating it will be costly to transition.

Needless to say, the medical community is doing cartwheels over a possible delay. (The first question on a CMS ICD-10 webinar I attended at the beginning of March “Is there going to be a delay?” The answer was "no"). Let’s all hope that the Curse of the Metric System continues to plague the ICD-10 or the next time you go to the doctor your code could be “Headache before sex, subsequent occurrence, would rather read “10 Shades of Gray”, or at the least take a long hot bath, sheesh…”




Cavalcade of Risk #205: Call for submissions

Nancy Germond hosts next week's Cav. Entries are due by Monday (the 31st).

To submit your risk-related post, just click here to email it.

You'll need to provide:

■ Your post's url and title
■ Your blog's url and name
■ Your name and email
■ A (brief) summary of the post

PLEASE remember: ONLY posts that relate to risk (not personal finance tips and the like). And please only submit if you are willing to link back to the carnival if your submission is accepted.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Yo Quiero Obamacare?

The Obama administration has been helping to facilitate a series of events nationwide at
Mexican Consulate offices to enroll people in Obamacare – and a key activist says the efforts are “our responsibility” regardless of citizenship.

“Whether they’re Mexican nationals or whether they’re United States citizens or whether they’re in transition-- and if they’re there it is our responsibility within all of America to educate on the Affordable Care Act,” Enroll America Field Organizer Jose Medrano told Breitbart News on Wednesday.

The 6 Million Person Question

So there's this:

"More than 6 million Americans have now signed up for private insurance under the [ObamaTax]"

But have they really bought insurance?

Consider that we already know that Ms Shecantbeserious counts plans left unpaid for as "sold." So one is left with the real question:

How many of these (alleged) new policyholders have actually paid for their new coverage?

And here's a couple more:

How many are young and healthy (and preferably male)?

How many are paying full freight, and how many are counting on the generosity of others taxpayers?

Inquiring minds want to know.

Health Wonk Review: March Madness edition

The bad news is that this week's HWR host Chris Fleming missed a total of (sweet) 16 posts by that much.

The good news is that there are plenty of great posts from which to choose, from HWR founder Joe Paduda on ideology and business decisions to David Williams ground-breaking interviews of all 9 candidates for governor of Massachusetts - pretty amazing. And our favorite health care economist, Jason Shafrin, offers some surprising insight into genetic testing and adoptions.

Do check it out.