Hi all,
Within the historic new Health Care Law, in addition to the reforms most talked-about in the mainstream media (extending insurance to 30+million people; barring insurers from using "pre-existing conditions" to deny coverage, etc.), this article summarizes an entire other facet that will dramatically improve health, and healthcare, in America.
I thought you folks on this listserve would be particularly interested--enjoy, and spread the good news!
-Abe
New Health Initiatives Put Spotlight on
Prevention
By ROBERT
PEAR
Published: April 4, 2010
(To read
full article, click
here.)
WASHINGTON — Amid all the rancor leading up to passage of
the new health care law, Congress with little fanfare approved a set of
wide-ranging public initiatives to prevent disease and encourage
healthy behavior.
...Under the law, chain restaurants will have to provide nutrition
information on their menus. Employers must provide “reasonable break
time” for nursing mothers.
Health insurance companies
will soon have to cover all recommended screenings, preventive care and
vaccines, without charging co-payments or deductibles.
Medicare beneficiaries will get free annual physicals. Medicaid will
cover drugs and counseling to help pregnant women stop smoking. And a
new federal trust fund will pay for more bicycle paths, playgrounds,
sidewalks and hiking trails.
...“When people have insurance,” Dr. Seffrin said, “they are much more
likely to receive screenings and treatment. And they are more likely to
seek screenings when they do not have to pay co-payments or
deductibles.” As a result of such screenings, he added, cancers are more
likely to be detected at an early stage, when they are treatable.
Under the law, insurers must provide coverage for all services
recommended by an independent panel of experts, the United States
Preventive Services Task Force, and cannot impose “any cost-sharing
requirements.”
In addition, each Medicare beneficiary will be entitled to an “annual
wellness visit,” in which a doctor can assess the patient’s condition,
check for signs of Alzheimer’s disease and draw up a “personalized
prevention plan” with a screening schedule for the next five or 10
years.
Senator Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa and chairman of the Senate health
committee, said: “We don’t have a health care system in America. We
have a sick care system. If you get sick, you get care. But precious
little is spent to keep people healthy in the first place.”
Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of health and human services, said the
measures, taken together, had immense potential to “save lives and to
save money.”
...The new law also allows employers to give stronger incentives to
employees who participate in programs to lose weight, stop smoking or
improve their health in other ways.
Employers can offer rewards equal to 30 percent of the cost of coverage —
up from 20 percent under prior law — to employees who participate in
such programs.
“This is exciting,” said Helen Darling, president of the National
Business Group on Health, which represents 300 large employers. “It puts
the emphasis on health improvement, not just paying for illness and
injuries.”...
(To read full article, click
here.)
Read
More...