Mobile Version
Subscribe
Newsletters
Contact Us
About Us
Advertise
Issue Archive
Jobs
Reprints
Video Ads
Home
News
Latest News
The Editor's Blog
Guest Columns
Newsletters
Products
RSS
Weekly Round Up
Reports
Career Guide
NIC Reports
Buyer's Guides
Rehab Perspectives
Medline Success Stories
Penner Patient Care
Evercare Supplements
SunDance Rehabilitation
Newsletters
Events
Webcasts
Online Expo
Jobs
Latest Jobs
Career Guide
Directory
Subscribe
CE/CME
Resources
SearchEldercare.com
Glossary
Industry FAQ
Directory
Magazines
Drug Database
Browse Drug Database
Long Term Care Drugs
Other links:
SearchEldercare.com
News
The Editors' Blog
Videos
Submit a story
RSS
|
Login
|
Register
Home
>
News
> CBO: Disability insurance program proposal would save $59 billion over 10 years
CBO: Disability insurance program proposal would save $59 billion over 10 years
June 29, 2009
Print
Email
Reprint
Permissions
Font Size:
A
|
A
|
A
Senior Democrats on the HELP committee held a press conference last week on healthcare reform.
More In News
McKnight's Daily Update to punch out for Labor Day
Mathematical model shows potential for new fracture-healing methods for the elderly
Employers passing cost of healthcare onto employees in tougher economy, Kaiser Foundation finds
Consultant pharmacists: Let nurses be doctors' agents for pain medications in nursing homes
National Center for Assisted Living award winners named
RELATED TOPICS
CLASS Act
Congressional Budget Office
Disability Insurance
HELP Committee
Medicaid
Company
American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging
The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that a legislative proposal for a disability insurance program would save $59 billion between 2010 and 2019. Also, if implemented, this program would lead to savings of $2.5 billion for the Medicaid program over that period, the public analysis agency said late last week.
The program, which is known as the Community Living Assistance Services and Supports (CLASS) Act, would allow workers to pay a monthly average of $65 into an "Independence Fund." The fund, in turn, would offer a payout of $50 a day for those who no longer can perform at least two activities of daily living. People would have to be vested in the program for five years to receive the cash benefit. The program is a part of the Affordable Health Choices Act, a bill proposed by the Senate Committee for Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP). A preliminary CBO estimate has placed the cost of the universal healthcare portion of this bill at $1 trillion over 10 years.
In response to the scoring, the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging, which helped craft the legislation, Friday released the following statement:
"The scoring issued today by the Congressional Budget Office on Section 191 of the Affordable Health Choices Act proves that our country can create a national insurance trust for long-term services and supports that is affordable for average Americans and does not drain government resources."
In a background call about the scoring held Friday, a senior democratic adviser on the HELP committee noted that the program is intended to work in tandem with long-term care insurance products, and not act as a replacement for them.
"This is not about competing with the industry. It's about gloving with them," she said.
The 10-year cost projection by the CBO is based on the knowledge that, while premium collections would begin in 2011, no one would be receiving benefits until 2016. Also, it is based on an assumption that premiums are set on average at $65 a month. But to be actuarially sound, the CBO said that premiums would have to exceed the average dollar amount of $65 set by the legislation by $35 to $45.
The adviser on the call noted that the legislation allows for the secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services to change the premium and also to project solvency for the program based on the previous year, and over a two-year, 50-year, and 75-year outlook. If she determines that it would not be solvent, she could stop enrollment. Two populations would only have to pay $5 premiums: those whose incomes do not exceed the poverty line, and students.
In response to a caller who asked how Medicaid could save $2.5 billion over 10 years, the adviser said she guessed it would be because the program would be the payer of first resort to Medicaid. Those who are impoverished and on Medicaid would pay into the program and thus receive cash from the disability program first.
|
Share
Related Directory Listing
American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging
Listed under:
Home
>
Associations
view the full directory »
Most Popular
Most Emailed
Most Recent
Officials detail MDS, RUG transition options for skilled nursing
CDC devises new way to estimate flu-related deaths
Providers, patient advocates decry Medicare's 48-hour 'observation' status
Pharmacists: Make special category for nursing home pain medication rule
American Association of Homes and Services to be no more
No mistrial for Skilled Healthcare—$677 million penalty stands
Patient advocates blast Stupak's nursing home survey improvement act
Brain games ultimately speed progression of dementia, study suggests
Hollywood nursing home's administrators cleared of wrongdoing
End-of-life care could depend on physician's religion, study suggests
Pharmacists: Make special category for nursing home pain medication rule
Officials detail MDS, RUG transition options for skilled nursing
Providers, patient advocates decry Medicare's 48-hour 'observation' status
Brain games ultimately speed progression of dementia, study suggests
No mistrial for Skilled Healthcare—$677 million penalty stands
Consultant pharmacists: Let nurses be doctors' agents for pain medications in nursing homes
CDC devises new way to estimate flu-related deaths
Epidemiologists: Flu vaccines should be condition of health workers' employment
American Association of Homes and Services to be no more
Matching demand to needs will bring LTC facility success
Consultant pharmacists: Let nurses be doctors' agents for pain medications in nursing homes
Employers passing cost of healthcare onto employees in tougher economy, Kaiser Foundation finds
Mathematical model shows potential for new fracture-healing methods for the elderly
McKnight's Daily Update to punch out for Labor Day
Providers, patient advocates decry Medicare's 48-hour 'observation' status
Brain games ultimately speed progression of dementia, study suggests
National Center for Assisted Living award winners named
Ask the treatment expert: treating eschar and blisters on the heels
Kentucky - State examines how it handles facility abuse cases
Smart Money: Take this to the bank
Popular Topics
48-Hour Rule
A Few Good Men
Alzheimer's
Antibiotics
Army Of Change
ASCP
Bill
Blood Pressure
Bone Marrow
Brain
Cap
Caregiving
Carol Cummings
Cat
CDC
Chicago
CMS
Complaints
Conference Call
Hospice
Legal
MDS 3.0
Medicaid
Medicare
Rug-IV
Sponsored Links