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State Exchanges 2014 Readiness Status: An Interactive View

Published by hCentive on 19 Jan in Healthcare, Healthcare Reforms, Healthcare Technology Blog

January 1, 2014 is a date that evokes mixed emotions among the people in the U.S. healthcare industry. January 1, 2014 is the deadline by which all U.S. states are required to have fully-functional, federally approved Healthcare Insurance Exchanges – the web-based one-stop platforms for residents to search, compare and buy healthcare plans.

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Top 4 healthcare trends of 2012

Published by hCentive on 9 Jan in Healthcare Reforms, Healthcare Technology Blog

With several final rulings on ACA mandates, numerous takeovers and acquisitions, 2011 has proved to be a sprightly year. The U.S. healthcare landscape is marked for change again in 2012, as the Supreme Court announces its ruling on ACA’s constitutionality, thousands of baby boomers become eligible for Medicare and more insurers, physicians and providers enter into collaborative partnerships.

Here are some of the top healthcare trends that we believe, will affect change in 2012.

Increased enrollment in Medicare plans

The Medicare Advantage plan segment is expected to observe explosive enrollment figures in 2012. The very first baby boomers turned 65 on January 1, 2011. Over the next year, every day, thousands of baby boomers will reach the age of 65 and become eligible for Medicare plans. With hundreds of thousands of projected enrollments in 2012, the Medicare sector will see a significant boom.

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Why We Are Bullish on the Disruption of the Healthcare Industry

Published by hCentive on 5 Jan in Healthcare Reforms, Healthcare Technology Blog

The debate about Healthcare reform is unending and complex. We, at hCentive, have been following both sides of the debate keenly and acknowledge that the reforms are not an all-encompassing solution to all our problems, as is most often the case with other proposals in other industries.

But what we firmly believe in is the fact that the Healthcare Insurance industry; nay, the entire health care industry is riddled with inefficiencies. Inefficiencies owing to factors such as lack of technology use, too many middlemen, complicated laws etc., are contributing to the increasing cost of healthcare that every American is facing today. The industry has been ripe for disruption for a while now and the end beneficiary will be the consumer.

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De-bunking the Fears Surrounding the Medical Loss Ratio Ruling

Published by hCentive on 29 Dec in Healthcare Reforms, Healthcare Technology Blog

Most investors consider Medical Loss Ratio as the most important factor to gauge an insurance company’s present and future profitability. On December 2, 2011, HHS released its final ruling on the Affordable Care Act’s Medical Loss Ratio policy. Beginning 2012, the revised policy guarantees tax-free rebates to consumers if the percentage of premium spent on medical care and quality improvement by their insurers, falls below 85% in larger group insurance sectors and below 80% in the small and individual insurance markets.

Visible impacts of ACA’s standardized Medical Loss Ratio ruling

Availability of precise data

Before the latest MLR ruling, it was difficult to obtain financial reports or enrollment data for individual, small groups and large group markets, even more so at the state level. Unavailability of data made comparison among health plans difficult which further made the insurance process seem impervious.  The Supplemental Health Care Exhibits documents issued by NAIC requires uniform reporting standards to be followed that will make it easier to:

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Obamacare Helps Insure 2.5 Million Young Adults

Published by hCentive on 28 Dec in Healthcare Reforms, Healthcare Technology Blog

An issue brief released December 14th 2011 by the U.S. National Center for Health Statistics, establishes that the Affordable Care Act of 2010 has managed to secure health insurance for 2.5 million American youths.

In the U.S, young adults have traditionally been less likely to possess health insurance and before Obama’s healthcare overhaul, most were likely to be dropped from their parents’ dependent children coverage, as soon as they turned 19 years old.

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Private Exchanges will boost Healthcare Reform

Published by hCentive on 13 Dec in Healthcare Reforms, Healthcare Technology Blog

The establishment of the State Health Exchanges by 2014 may prove to be one of the more radical steps taken towards re-organizing the scattered and chaotic U.S healthcare industry. The state exchanges will serve as a central health care marketplace with the primary aim to empower small employers and individuals, to access, search, compare and purchase health insurance.

The purported efficacy of the state exchanges has inspired many health industry players like Walgreens with presence in many U.S states, to consider setting up their own private exchanges. Built on similar lines as state exchanges, these private health exchanges will serve as a one stop healthcare marketplace for their clients spread across different U.S states. Once set up, such private exchanges will help these private healthcare giants market and sell all their available health insurance plans at a single location, thus facilitating easy comparison and selection from a multitude of available options.

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Health Care Innovation Challenge – envisioning improved medical care at lower costs

Published by hCentive on 9 Dec in Healthcare Reforms, Healthcare Technology Blog

A successful government is one that learns from its’ past mistakes, infuses fresh ideas into the present and maintains a sharp eye on the market to prepare well for any probable future exigencies. The Obama administration faces an un-predictable future in the healthcare sector, as is evident from the study conducted by American Association of Medical Colleges. As per the AAMC research, US may be short by over 91,000 doctors in the next 10 years, with the worst spell expected to be around 2019-2020.

For the U.S Government, the need of the hour is to rake through the country’s healthcare industry and sift out compelling projects, ideas or successful community initiatives that can be instrumental in dealing with the imminent shortage of the number of practicing physicians over the next 10 years.

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Impact of PPACA on Medicare

Published by hCentive on 7 Dec in Healthcare Reforms, Healthcare Technology Blog

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) has introduced new measures to further fortify the Medicare health care plan for senior citizens.  The revised Medicare health plan provides preventive medical care benefits, offers discounts on prescribed drugs, and improves the controversial ‘Donut-hole’ coverage gap.

How the new plan benefits you?

Since January 1, 2011, Medicare has seen the introduction of many preventive care policies and benefits that include yearly wellness visit, counseling sessions for tobacco discontinuation and various free medical screenings.

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Deconstructing Health Exchanges – Part III

Published by hCentive on 31 Oct in Healthcare Reforms, Healthcare Technology Blog

In the previous blog posts, we looked at Private Exchanges and how they function. We’ve seen the functioning of Public Exchanges. We evaluated the pros and cons and we tried to put the two in perspective.

Finally, in this edition, we give you a low-down on the complicated lingo that is thrown around with the reforms and in the insurance industry in general.

Let’s dive right in.

The new Health Care Reform propose 4 levels of coverage – bronze, silver, gold and platinum. The coverage levels are based on the ‘actuarial value’, which is a measure of the level of protection that a policy offers and it indicates the percentage of health costs that would be covered by the health plan for an average population. Based on the actuarial value, the 4 levels and their coverage options have been defined as follows:

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Deconstructing Health Exchanges – Part II

Published by hCentive on 27 Sep in Healthcare Reforms, Healthcare Technology Blog

State or Public ExchangesIn the first edition, we looked at how Private Exchanges are expected to operate and the benefits that they might provide to individuals and small businesses.

In this post, let’s look at State or Public Exchanges. These exchanges, according to the PPACA, will be State or Federally operated exchanges where public and private plans will offer a number of options to the citizens of that given state. Although similar in concept, State and Private Exchanges have some significant differences.

The functions of a Public Exchange can broadly be defined as follows.

•    Certify health plan offerings as Qualified Health Plans (QHP) based on certain pre-defined standards
•    Assist employers and individuals with purchasing and enrolling in QHPs

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