The Affordable Care Act (ACA) refers to two controversial laws enacted in March 2010, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care Education and Reconciliation Act, which restructure the fundamental relationship among government, health care providers and health care recipients and profoundly impact persons with disabilities.
Although legal challenges, political debate and disputes about future insurance premiums and health care costs continue, the Supreme Court upheld almost all of the ACA's provisions in June 2012, including the individual mandate and elimination of pre-existing condition restrictions, which became effective nationally on January 1, 2014.
With the ACA's primary constitutional framework now largely operational, various "experts" increasingly are discussing and debating what impact the ACA will have upon future medical expenses in personal injury cases - as well as its related impact on structured settlements.
In a prior blog post, S2KM re-introduced these issues by summarizing an article written by Seth Cardeli, titled "Thwart the Assault on Future Medical Expenses", which appeared in the May 2014 issue of the American Association for Justice (AAJ) Trial Magazine.
The new and evolving legal construct for future medical expenses in personal injury cases created by the ACA is complicated, controversial and important. Continuing discussions and analysis should not proceed within an intellectual vacuum. In additional to the ACA, related laws and legal developments such as Medicaid (including the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013), Medicare (including WCMSAs , liability MSAs and MMSEA) and/or state specific collateral source and subrogation rules must be considered.
This blog post summarizes ACA-related analysis by speakers at professional conferences S2KM has previously attended and includes excerpts from prior S2KM reviews of those conferences. The purpose is to provide a point of reference for future S2KM reporting about the legal interplay involving the ACA, personal injury cases and structured settlements. A subsequent blog post (ACA and Future Medical Expenses - 3) will summarize similar ACA analysis from articles and papers previously reviewed by S2KM.
Conference Speakers Addressing ACA Issues
Academy of Special Needs Planners (ASNP) - Among the professional association conferences S2KM has attended since 2010, the ASNP has provided the most consistent and comprehensive ACA reporting.
Cynthia Barrett - During the 2011 ASNP Annual Conference, Cynthia Barrett highlighted the following questions she anticipated plaintiff attorneys would most likely ask about health care reform and the ACA on behalf of their personal injury clients:
- 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?
- 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.
David Lillesand - Based upon his experience in Florida, where the Affordable Care Act (ACA) prohibition against pre-existing exclusions already existed in 2010, David Lillesand offered the following preliminary observations during the ASNP 2012 Annual Conference:
- The need for self-settled (first party) special needs trusts has decreased (except when a beneficiary requires long term institutional care) because the ACA provides better insurance options than Medicaid for many persons with pre-existing medical conditions including personal injury victims.
- Existing self-settled (first party) special needs trusts should be reviewed, in the context of the ACA's prohibition against pre-existing condition exclusions and available medical insurance options, and in many cases terminated.
- Damages for future medical costs in personal injury lawsuits could be reduced assuming the premium costs of newly available insurance premiums become admissible in proving and/or defending damages.
ASNP 2013 Annual Conference
Scott Solkoff - Continuing its analysis of the ACA, the ASNP 2013 Annual Conference featured Scott Solkoff who predicted:
- Reduced personal injury verdicts and settlements.
- A different calculus for determining future medical damages based upon health insurance costs.
- Fewer first party special needs trusts (SNTs).
- Reduced demand for Medicare and Medicaid for persons with disabilities under age 65.
- New opportunities for special needs attorneys because of the complexity of the ACA.
Social Security Administration Representatives - During a subsequent question and answer session at the ASNP 2013 Annual Conference, moderated by Kevin Urbatsch and featuring representatives of the Social Security Administration, the following exchange occurred:
- Question: will the SSA allow early termination of SNTs to comply with ACA?
- SSA Answer: right now, any early termination of a SNT will require payment of reversionary interest.
ASNP 2014 Annual Conference
The ASNP 2014 Annual Conference expanded previous ASNP educational programs about the ACA and coincided with news the ACA had exceeded enrollment expectations and achieved its primary objective of substantially expanding healthcare in America.
ASNP's 2014 conference featured two ACA presentations:
- A multi-professional "ACA Panel" consisting of: David Lillesand (attorney); Ann Koerner (life care planner); and Scott McDonald (investment adviser).
- "Special Needs Trust (SNT) Taxation" discussion by Bradley Frigon - focusing on strategies for maximizing health care coverage and minimizing costs.
Both of ASNP's 2014 ACA presentations highlighted the importance of health insurance education and the need for health insurance expertise as part of the settlement planning and/or special needs planning team. Some of the ACA resources and issues addressed:
- ACA's definition of "health insurance" - 10 key requirements.
- The ACA's definition of "modified adjusted gross income" (MAGI) - to determine eligibility for ACA premium tax credits and Medicaid expansion.
- Calulating MAGI - and whether structured settlements are included or excluded.
- ACA assessment questions - and how they expand "needs analysis".
- ACA flowchart - for determining the proper plan under the ACA.
- When to use a SNT vs. purchasing ACA insurance - four alternative strategies.
- Defining the settlement planning process.
- ACA's financial impact on settlement planning.
- Lump sums vs. structured settlements under the ACA.
- Coverage comparisons - based upon types of provider networks, services and authorization requirements.
- Coverage gaps - in states that do not adopt Medicaid expansion.
NAELA and SSP 2014 Annual Conferences
With permission from ASNP and acknowledgments to David Lillesand, Kevin Urbatsch, National Director of ASNP and 2014 Editor-in-Chief of the "NAELA Journal' repeated for both the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA) 2014 Annual Conference and the Society of Settlement Planners (SSP) 2014 Annual Conference substantial portions of ASNP's 2014 ACA Panel summarized above.
In addition, NAELA awarded its 2014 John Regan Writing Award, honoring the authors of the best article published in the "NAELA Journal" during the past year to Alfred Chiplin, Jr. and Bethany Lilly, for their article titled "Medicare’s Future: Letting the Affordable Care Act Work, While Learning From the Past" analyzing various ACA cost-saving components on Medicare.
NAMSAP 2014 Conferences
Roy Franco, a featured speaker at the National Alliance of Medicare Set-Aside Professionals (NAMSAP) 2014 Regional Conference, addressed the settlement planning changes likely to result from the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, implementation of the ACA and anticipated CMS rules for liability MSAs.
Franco predicted "workers' compensation, liability and no-fault insurers will all become primary payers vis a vis Medicare, Medicaid and ACA health providers" as part of integrated settlement planning models similar to WCMSAs. He added, however, that different state-specific models may develop as state Medicaid agencies begin responding October 1, 2014 to the new Medicaid reimbursement rules promulgated by the Budget Act of 2013.
Medicare Set-Aside Arrangements (MSAs) represent one strategic link between Medicare cost savings and future medical costs in both workers compensation and personal injury cases as well as the primary defining topic of every NAMSAP educational conference including NAMSAP's 2014 Annual Meeting.
The Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has calculated WCMSA amounts totaling approximately $1.8 billion in FY 2013. CMS published a WCMSA Reference Guide (WCRG) on March 29, 2013 plus a WCRG Version 2.0 on November 7, 2013. The WCRG's intended purpose: to help WCMSA professionals, beneficiaries and other stakeholders "understand CMS' [WCMSA] amount approval process and to serve as a reference for those electing to submit such proposals to CMS for approval."
Both the CMS policy memoranda and the WCRG address structured settlement issues and provide guidelines for their utilization in funding WCMSAs. WCMSAs represent one of the few submarkets where structured settlements sales have increased since 2008 - in large part because the method CMS requires for calculating WCMSA present values provides an inherent cost advantage for annuities compared with lump sum alternatives.
CMS has not yet published definitive rules for using MSAs in liability cases (LMSAs). CMS did publish an Advanced Notice for Proposed Rule Making (ANPRM) on June 14, 2012 in the Federal Register which included seven different option to satisfy obligations for future medicals in liability cases. CMS also published RIN: 0938-AR43 in Spring of 2013 outlining a timetable for the proposed rule. No such LMSA rule, however, has yet been published.
For S2KM's complete reporting about the ACA and structured settlements, see the structured settlement wiki.
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