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PA insurance increase

by "Gumbo" <Gumbo_toao1@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jan 22, 2008 at 08:00 PM

PA insurance increase


      Copyright:
     U.S. Newswire Corp.

      Source:
     U.S. Newswire

      Wordcount:
     1567



BC-PA-insurance-increase
To: STATE EDITORS
Contact: Chuck Ardo of the Pennsylvania Office of the Governor,
+1-717-783-1116

HARRISBURG, Pa., Jan. 22 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Governor Edward G.
Rendell today said that 29,000 uninsured adults who have been waiting for 
coverage since 2006 can now be added to the adultBasic insurance program
and 
said if his Cover All Pennsylvanians program had been enacted, more than 
70,000 people still on the waiting list would have also been able to
receive 
coverage.

During a Capitol news conference, the Governor also announced that the
state 
has taken steps to eliminate preventable, serious adverse events at acute 
care general hospitals participating in the Medical Assistance program.

Consistent with his Prescription for Pennsylvania health care reform plan,

the new policy places Pennsylvania at the forefront among state Medical 
Assistance programs in addressing these avoidable health care occurrences.

With my Prescription for Pennsylvania, we have been working hard to make 
sure that all Pennsylvanians have access to quality, affordable health 
insurance, Governor Rendell said. "Today we have given 29,000 uninsured 
adults the op****tunity to receive adultBasic health coverage at a monthly 
premium of about $33.50. We have also instituted a program to improve the
quality of hospital care that our Medical Assistance recipients receive. 
Both of these announcements are good news."

While the individuals who have been on the adultBasic waiting for up to 18

months can finally heave a sigh of relief, there are still 70,000 people
on 
the waiting list and hundreds of thousands more Pennsylvanians who have no

affordable options in sight. Of course, all these folks would be provided 
immediate access to coverage if the legislature were to pass my Cover All
Pennsylvanians proposal because that program would fold all current 
adultBasic enrollees as well as the waiting list into the program. And,
even 
more worrisome is the fact that nearly 5,000 eligible people apply for 
coverage, but end up on the adultBasic waitlist each month. The
application 
rate is growing at a rate higher than anytime in the program's history. We

must do more than offer a band-aid solution to stem the increasing flow of

the needs of the uninsured. CAP would do that.



The Governor also said that if the General Assembly had passed CAP last 
March when HB700 (the Rx for PA legislation) was introduced, the federal 
matching monies that the state would have received would have covered an 
additional 56,324 people per month on average. That means that without any

other proposed funding sources, 104,218 people would have been receiving 
some coverage.

"We could have pretty much wiped out the waiting list,"  the Governor
said. 
"That wouldn't have solved our entire problem, because there are hundreds
of 
thousands of people who haven't applied for adultBasic because of the huge

waiting list. And the adultBasic enrollees don't have prescription drug 
coverage, which CAP does. But it would have allowed us to start to make a 
dent."

People who are on the waiting list for adultBasic have the option to pay 
about $298 a month for this coverage. If they had to buy private health 
insurance, they would pay considerably more.

There are currently 50,117 Pennsylvanians enrolled in the program. With 
today's action, there have been 15 wait-list offerings to nearly 260,000 
individuals since the Governor took office. This latest offering will
likely 
reduce the adultBasic waiting list from 100,000 people to roughly 70,000.

Governor Rendell again urged the General Assembly to make expanded access
to 
health care a priority in the coming weeks and months.

It is my hope that we can sit down and work out an achievable plan for 
health care, certainly before the summer recess. We hope, eventually, to
add 
all 800,000 uninsured Pennsylvanians to CAP. If we can pass CAP in May or 
June, we can start enrolling Pennsylvanians in the fall. AdultBasic is a 
good, tem****ary stopgap...for those families, but it's not nearly enough."

AdultBasic offers necessary benefits -- including preventative care, 
physician services, diagnosis and treatment of illness or injury,
in-patient 
hospitalization, out-patient hospital services, emergency accident care
and 
medical care -- to uninsured Pennsylvanians between the ages of 19 and 64.

For eligibility and enrollment information, call 1-800-GO-BASIC or visit
the
Pennsylvania Insurance Department's Web site, http://www.ins.state.pa.us.

AdultBasic is funded by proceeds from the commonwealth's share of the 
national tobacco settlement and is augmented through General Fund 
allocations and through the Community Health Reinvestment Agreement 
negotiated by the state with Pennsylvania's four Blue Cross Blue ****eld 
plans.

The second announcement the Governor made today focused on making quality 
health care accessible to Pennsylvania's most vulnerable citizens.

"Too often we learn that during an extended hospital stay, patients have 
received care that poses serious and sometimes fatal health risks," the 
Governor said. "According to the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment

Council, these unnecessary errors are costing Pennsylvania businesses, 
consumers and taxpayers over $960 million annually. Through this
initiative,
we are taking steps to ensure that payment for services through the
Medical 
Assistance program is made to hospitals based on their efforts to provide 
quality care to our consumers.

Based on National Quality Forum standards, the Department of Public
Welfare, 
in collaboration with the Hospital and Healthsystem Association of 
Pennsylvania developed the new policy to help in identifying preventable, 
serious adverse events and provide a starting point for health care 
facilities to establish measures and actions to be taken to actively
improve 
the safety of patient care.

Under the newly established guidelines, preventable serious adverse events

can be identified as; surgical events, such as surgery performed on the 
wrong body part or patient; patient protection events, such as an infant 
discharged to the wrong family; environmental events, such as a patient 
death associated with a fall while being cared for in a healthcare
facility; 
and care management events, such as a patient death or serious disability 
associated with a medication error.

In making payments to acute care general hospitals, the department will 
consider whether the event was preventable, within control of the
hospital, 
occurred during an inpatient admission and/or resulted in significant
harm.

For more information on the Medical Assistance program or to view the 
Preventable Serious Adverse Events bulletin, visit 
http://www.dpw.state.pa.us.

For information about Governor Rendell's Cover All Pennsylvanians proposal

and the Prescription for Pennsylvania, visit http://www.rxforpa.com.

The Rendell administration is committed to creating a first-rate public 
education system, protecting our most vulnerable citizens and continuing 
economic investment to sup****t our communities and businesses. To find out
more about Governor Rendell's initiatives and to sign up for his weekly 
newsletter, visit his Web site at: http://ww.governor.state.pa.us.

Additional media contacts:

Amy Kelchner, GOHCR - 717-346-8379;
Rosanne Placey, PID - 717-787-3289;
Stacey Witalec, DPW - 717-787-4592



Editor's Note: The chart below shows the number of uninsured adults by 
county and the uninsured rate per capita. It also shows how many people in

each county currently receive adultBasic and how many are on the waiting 
list.

County Uninsured % Adults Adult Basic
Adults who are Enrollment 1/08
(19-64) Uninsured Waitlist
1/08 Adult Basic



Adams 6,472 12.8% 1,037 225

Allegheny 108,835 15.7% 7,882 5,101

Armstrong 5,247 13.2% 780 490

Beaver 13,734 14.1% 1,454 845

Bedford 3,327 11.8% 680 543

Berks 17,959 8.9% 3,276 757

Blair 9,817 13.8% 1,159 720

Bradford 4,690 13.5% 697 369

Bucks 17,655 5.0% 3,627 1,727

Butler 3,408 3.4% 1,596 954

Cambria 11,295 14.3% 1,400 1,160

Cameron 185 6.5% 51 38

Carbon 4,514 13.8% 683 364

Centre 8,307 10.6% 632 395

Chester 25,790 10.0% 2,166 935

Clarion 2,423 11.0% 317 238

Clearfield 6,121 13.5% 1,083 688

Clinton 2,764 14.1% 234 184

Columbia 4,374 12.8% 495 221

Crawford 8,814 18.7% 755 511

***berland 8,022 6.8% 2,085 441

Dauphin 12,505 8.6% 2,303 430

Delaware 23,815 8.0% 4,267 2,023

Elk 2,041 10.8% 266 227

Erie 10,340 7.2% 2,658 1,714

Fayette 11,833 14.8% 1,716 1,138

Forest 663 27.0% 45 45

Franklin 10,433 14.2% 834 294

Fulton 1,247 15.4% 97 58

Greene 2,637 12.5% 321 240

Huntingdon 2,525 11.1% 365 254

Indiana 6,376 13.4% 933 575

Jefferson 4,139 16.7% 361 343

Juniata 1,841 14.6% 257 111

Lackawanna 11,420 10.3% 1,315 780

Lancaster 11,278 4.4% 5,141 929

Lawrence 5,773 11.8% 751 601

Lebanon 7,231 10.7% 1,072 238

Lehigh 14,597 8.4% 3,572 869

Luzerne 17,661 10.6% 2,202 1,217

Lycoming 7,636 12.0% 599 340

McKean 1,500 6.5% 564 253

Mercer 10,039 16.5% 950 580

Mifflin 2,672 10.6% 575 229

Monroe 10,470 13.1% 1,625 757

Montgomery 23,060 5.3% 3,613 2,436

Montour 973 10.5% 66 34

Northampton 22,024 15.2% 2,034 538

Northumberland 4,503 9.0% 981 427

Perry 4,107 16.1% 457 136

Philadelphia 138,950 17.3% 14,298 7,661

Pike 3,714 13.3% 566 332

Potter 1,329 13.4% 232 160

Schuylkill 8,252 10.3% 1,139 482

Snyder 2,419 12.3% 328 127

Somerset 4,877 11.4% 902 725

Sullivan 352 10.8% 79 41

Susquehanna 4,025 17.0% 513 329

Tioga 7,721 35.6% 671 335

Union 2,444 13.9% 179 95

Venango 2,186 6.9% 566 409

Warren 5,325 22.6% 416 255

Wa****ngton 8,996 8.3% 1,252 942

Wayne 3,167 12.4% 573 325

Westmoreland 9,682 4.7% 3,032 2,297

Wyoming 1,054 6.7% 305 132

York 23,055 10.5% 3,136 748

TOTAL 746,640 100,216 50,117

Figures derived from the 2004 Health Insurance Survey conducted by Market 
Decisions LLC for the Pennsylvania Insurance Department. This chart does
not 
reflect what ****tion of the uninsured may be eligible or may qualify for 
CHIP, adultBasic, Medicaid, or any other government program.


CONTACT: Chuck Ardo 717-783-1116
SOURCE Pennsylvania Office of the Governor
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
PA insurance increase
"Gumbo" <Gum  2008-01-22 20:00:36 

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