Health care reform consists of two laws enacted in March of 2010 (the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care Education and Reconciliation Act of 2010) which will have a profound impact on people with disabilities.
While the Academy of Special Needs Planners (ASNP) and the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA) are providing their members with detailed analyses of health care reform, the structured settlement industry has not yet addressed this historic legislation in their educational programs.
Among the featured speakers at the ASNP 2011 Annual Meeting, Cynthia Barrett discussed how health care reform impacts people with disabilities. Barrett's presentation, accompanied by a detailed written analysis, summarized the new Federal health care legislation and advised ASNP attendees how to adjust their professional practice.
Of special interest to structured settlement and settlement planning professionals, Barrett highlighted and discussed the following questions plaintiff attorneys are most likely to ask about health care reform:
- Will my disabled client be able to get health insurance now?
- For settlement purposes, can future medicals be reduced to estimated lifetime insurance premiums until my client becomes eligible for Medicare or Medicaid?
- Do private health plans have “set-aside” or special needs trust requirements?
- If my client can get private health coverage, will he/she still need public benefits?
- If my client can obtain private health insurance, why do I need a special needs attorney or a special needs trust?
- As a plaintiff attorney, is there anything else I need to know about health care reform or related legislation?
In response to the last question, Barrett identified:
- The Medical Tort Claims Alternatives Demonstration Program which will send $50,000,000 in demonstration grant funds to states (up to $500,000 per state) over five years to develop and implement alternatives to the existing civil litigation system. According to Barrett, these demonstration grants:
- Focus narrowly on disputes over injuries caused by health care providers or health care organizations;
- Are intended to showcase medical malpractice alternatives;
- Will be awarded by the Secretary of Health and Human Services; and
- Plaintiffs may elect whether to participate, but cannot be required to participate.
- President Obama’s 2011 State of the Union address during which the President suggested he might cooperate with Republicans on medical malpractice tort reform.
Barrett also advised special needs attorneys to:
- Exclude from their services health coverage options advice;
- Screen claimants to determine whether needs-based Medicaid will be important.
NAELA will be devoting the entire Spring 2011 edition of the NAELA Journal to health care reform. Available to NAELA members only, this NAELA health care reform analysis will feature a detailed introduction by NAELA Journal Editor-in-Chief William J. Brisk plus eight articles and a supplement of online resources.
Brisk's introduction addresses why health care reform is "too significant to ignore" and highlights its most important features. His analysis identifies what tort reform actually does and does not accomplish. He emphasizes the important roles Medicare, Medicaid, private health insurance companies and health maintenance organizations will play in implementing health care reform.
Additional NAELA Journal topics and authors:
- Health Care Changes: Challenges to Medicare - Vicki Gottlich, Patricia Nemore, and Alfred J. Chiplin Jr.;
- The New CLASS Act - Morris Klein;
- Nursing Home Regulations - Charles Perez Golbert;
- Health Care Reform’s Impact on Small Businesses and Individuals - Ben A. Neiburger;
- Health Care Reform and End-of-Life Issues - Fay Blix;
- The Affordable Care Act’s Changes to Medicaid’s Coverage for Long-Term Services and Supports - Gene Coffey;
- Health Insurance Reforms: Once In a Lifetime Change or Same as It Ever Was? - Lucinda E. Jesson;
- Medicaid Expansion Under the 2010 Health Care Reform Legislation: The Continuing Evolution of Medicaid’s Central Role in American Health Care - Renée M. Landers and Patrick A. Leeman;
- Online Resources Available to Supplement Health Care Reform Discussion - prepared by Claire DeMarco.
If health care reform is "too significant to ignore" and if health care reform greatly impacts disabled people, why has the structured settlement industry ignored health care reform? Possible reasons:
- Product focus instead of customer focus;
- Circumscribed scope of knowledge;
- Limited strategic thinking or analysis;
- Retrospective and inside-the-box orientation;
- Protect and preserve mentality.
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