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  • The purpose of this blog is to provide information to people who have been injured due to negligence, and to those who have filed for Social Security disability benefits, or who are considering filing for Social Security disability benefits.
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  • This Blog and all materials on it have been prepared by Kraft & Associates for informational purposes only and not as legal advice. While we do attempt to keep our material up-to-date, we cannot guarantee that it is either complete or current, and it may not reflect the latest legal developments. Do not act upon any information contained in this Blog without seeking the advice of legal counsel licensed in your own state. Kraft & Associates does not wish to represent anyone who is in a state where this Blog fails to comply with all laws and ethical rules of that state. Transmission of this information is not intended to create, and receipt does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship. I am NOT your lawyer until you and I have each signed a written contract stating that I am your lawyer. The attorneys and employees of Kraft & Associates make every effort to reply to e-mail inquiries as promptly as possible. However, we cannot guarantee that we will always be able to quickly respond to your questions. If you have a time-sensitive inquiry, please call us at (214) 999-9999 or (800) 989-9999. Please feel free to send us e-mail with your comments, suggestions or questions. But understand that sending e-mail to our firm or to any attorney in the firm does not establish an attorney-client relationship. Communications between you and an attorney are not privileged until the parties have agreed upon legal representation and we cannot agree to maintain the confidentiality of such communications. Please do not send confidential information to us via e-mail without first communicating directly with us by telephone. E-mail is not a secure medium of communication. Links to other Blogs or to Web sites are not intended as endorsements of the linked sites. The linked sites are not under the control of Kraft & Associates and we are not responsible for the contents of any linked site. If you have read this whole disclaimer, congratulations on your perseverance. Please let us know any way we can help you. The entire contents of this Blog are copyright © 1997-2006, Kraft & Associates. All rights reserved. In addition, certain articles at this site are reprinted with permission as indicated therein.

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March 25, 2008

Danger Ahead For The Social Security System

According to a CNN story today, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is warning about the same dangers I mentioned in a January post on this blogwe're about to run out of money for Social Security and Medicare. Here are excerpts from the article:

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, saying that Social Security is "financially unsustainable," called Tuesday for quick action to keep the system strong and released a report detailing the program's funding shortfalls.

The federal government will have to start paying back what it owes the Social Security trust fund in 2017 so the program can continue paying 100% of benefits. By 2041, if the system is left unchanged, Social Security will only be able to pay out 78% of benefits promised to future retirees.

Shoring up Social Security is one of the main economic issues that will face the next president. Most proposals involve raising taxes or reducing benefits. Democrats typically have opposed benefit reductions while Republicans have opposed tax increases. 

"This year's Social Security Report again demonstrates that the Social Security program is financially unsustainable and requires reform," Paulson said at a briefing. "The sooner we take action ... the less drastic needed changes will be."

Borrowing from the future

For years, the Social Security program has been taking in more in payroll taxes from existing workers than it needed to fund benefits. The government borrowed that surplus and promised to pay it back with interest by issuing special issue bonds to the program.

But the proceeds from those bonds are finite, which is why the trustees estimate that the trust fund will run dry by 2041. Without that cushion, Social Security would only be able to pay out the money it collects in payroll taxes.

Demographics are a major reason for the funding shortfall. The number of workers, compared to retirees, has begun to shrink. That means the system will produce a smaller surplus, then none at all, and eventually it won't be able to pay out all benefits promised to future retirees.

Last year, the trustees also estimated that the government would need to start paying back the program in 2017, and that the Social Security trust fund would be exhausted by 2041.

Currently, the first $102,000 of wages are subject to the 12.4% payroll tax that funds Social Security. Typically, half the tax is paid by workers, and the other half is paid by employers.

To keep the system solvent over the next 75 years, the trustees estimated that the Social Security payroll tax rate would need to increase to 14.1%, up from the current 12.4%. Or lawmakers could bring it into balance by cutting benefits by 12%.

Nonpartisan experts say the pain of fixing Social Security can be lessened in two ways: Make changes soon so that they affect more people but in a less dramatic manner, and implement a combination of tax increases and benefit reductions so that neither is particularly steep.

Medicare a bigger problem

Medicare, which was also addressed in Tuesday's report, has an even larger and more immediate funding deficit to address.

The Medicare program is already taking in less than it has committed to pay out, and the trustees forecast that the Medicare trust fund will be depleted by 2019, at which point Medicare would only be able to pay out 78% of costs.

Medicare was designed to be funded by three sources: payroll taxes; Medicare premiums paid by beneficiaries; and general revenue or money from income taxes.

The payroll tax portion of that funding comes from a 2.9% tax on all wages - half of which is paid by workers and half by their employers. To make Medicare solvent over the next 75 years, the trustees estimate that 6.44% of wages would need to be taxed.



December 16, 2007

Link of the Day - Older Texans Hit By High-Pressure Medicare Insurance Tactics

The Dallas Morning News ran an article earlier this month about Medicare insurance sales people pressuring senior citizens to buy policies they don't want or need. Here are excerpts from the story:

The annual enrollment period for private Medicare plans has brought out overly aggressive and deceptive sales agents again, so consumer advocates and insurance regulators are warning seniors to be on guard.

The annual enrollment season for the private insurance, sold as "Medicare Advantage" plans, began in mid-November and runs until Dec. 31. In some cases, people may sign up until March 31.

The private insurance is an alternative to traditional Medicare and has grown in popularity in recent years because it offers enhanced benefits, such as preventive care and disease management.

About one in five Medicare beneficiaries is now in an Advantage plan.

Still, consumer advocates argue that the private coverage isn't as extensive as many traditional Medicare supplemental plans and may not be suitable for seniors with chronic or serious illnesses.

A common concern among advocates is that some physicians and hospitals don't accept patients on private Medicare plans – a point the advocates say isn't always explained to seniors before they enroll.

The recent complaints about unscrupulous agents come despite Medicare's efforts to curb hard-sell tactics.

This year, the federal agency began requiring insurance companies to make follow-up calls to beneficiaries to check whether the seniors understood the terms of the coverage they had just purchased from an agent.

Here are some tips from the article:

Don't join a plan until you've confirmed that your doctor and other health care providers will accept it.

Don't buy anything from a salesperson who comes to your home uninvited. It's illegal to sell Medicare Advantage plans door-to-door.

Don't be fooled if a salesperson claims to be with Medicare or Social Security. Neither agency makes home visits or unsolicited phone calls.

Don't say yes to a salesperson who tries to pressure you to make a quick decision.

Don't sign anything you haven't read or don't understand.

SOURCE: Texas Department of Insurance

If you think you've been misled or pressured into enrolling in a Medicare Advantage plan:

Call Medicare at 1-800-633-4227 or the Senior Source at 214-823-5700.

If you want to report fraud or other agent misconduct:

Visit the Texas Department of Insurance Web site at http://tdi.state.tx.us or call 1-800-252-3439.

If you need help with an insurance question:

Call the Texas Department of Insurance at 1-800-252-3439 or the local Area Agency on Aging at 211.

The Dallas Morning News provided a chart comparing various Medicare insurance plans.

August 20, 2007

Medicare Says It Won’t Cover Hospital Errors

In a surprising, but potentially helpful rule change, the Bush administration has announced that Medicare will no longer pay for medical bills resulting from doctor or hospital negligence.

This could save millions of dollars for Medicare, but my hope is that it will cause doctors and hospitals to be more careful with patients, and make fewer medical errors. Unfortunately, as personal injury lawyers have learned over many years, the quickest way to get hospitals to provide better patient care is to make it costly for them not to do so. Now, if they're not going to be paid for correcting their negligence, maybe they will commit fewer errors.

This story has been reported in many places. One especially good article appeared in the New York Times. Here are excerpts from that article:

In a significant policy change, Bush administration officials say that Medicare will no longer pay the extra costs of treating preventable errors, injuries and infections that occur in hospitals, a move they say could save lives and millions of dollars.

Private insurers are considering similar changes, which they said could multiply the savings and benefits for patients.

Under the new rules, to be published next week, Medicare will not pay hospitals for the costs of treating certain “conditions that could reasonably have been prevented.”

Among the conditions that will be affected are bedsores, or pressure ulcers; injuries caused by falls; and infections resulting from the prolonged use of catheters in blood vessels or the bladder.

In addition, Medicare says it will not pay for the treatment of “serious preventable events” like leaving a sponge or other object in a patient during surgery and providing a patient with incompatible blood or blood products.

“If a patient goes into the hospital with pneumonia, we don’t want them to leave with a broken arm,” said Herb B. Kuhn, acting deputy administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

The new policy — one of several federal initiatives to improve care purchased by Medicare, at a cost of more than $400 billion a year — is sending ripples through the health industry.

It also raises the possibility of changes in medical practice as doctors hew more closely to clinical guidelines and hospitals perform more tests to assess the condition of patients at the time of admission.

Hospital executives worry that they will have to absorb the costs of these extra tests because Medicare generally pays a flat amount for each case.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that patients develop 1.7 million infections in hospitals each year, and it says those infections cause or contribute to the death of 99,000 people a year — about 270 a day.

Intravenous catheters are widely used to provide hospital patients with medications, nutrition and fluids, but complications are relatively common.

One state, Michigan, has had spectacular success with systematic efforts to reduce infection rates in intensive care units.

Susan M. Pisano, a spokeswoman for America’s Health Insurance Plans, a trade group, said, “Private insurers will take a close look at what Medicare is doing, with an eye to adopting similar policies.”

Consumer groups welcomed the change. And while hospital executives endorsed the goal of patient safety, they said the policy would require them to collect large amounts of data they did not now have.

Lisa A. McGiffert, a health policy analyst at Consumers Union, hailed the rules.

“Hundreds of thousands of people suffer needlessly from preventable hospital infections and medical errors every year,” Ms. McGiffert said. “Medicare is using its clout to improve care and keep patients safe. It’s forcing hospitals to face this problem in a way they never have before.”

Christine K. Cahill, a registered nurse who used to inspect hospitals for the California Department of Public Health, said: “This is a great start. Infection-control specialists have been screaming for 20 years that federal and state officials should pay more attention to this problem because hospital infections hurt patients and cost money.”

The Bush administration estimates the new policy will save Medicare $20 million a year. But other experts say the savings could be substantially greater.

Nancy E. Foster, a vice president of the American Hospital Association, agreed that doctors and hospitals knew how to prevent the transfusion of incompatible blood products and should not be paid more if they accidentally left objects in patients during surgery.

But Ms. Foster said that some of the conditions cited by Medicare officials were not entirely preventable. Commenting on the proposed rules in June, the American Hospital Association said, “Certain patients, including those at the end of life, may be exceptionally prone to developing pressure ulcers, despite receiving appropriate care.”

In most states, Ms. Foster said, hospital records do not show whether a particular condition developed before or after a patient entered the hospital. Under the new rules, she said, hospitals will have to perform more laboratory tests to determine, for example, if patients have urinary tract infections at the time of admission.

Dr. Tammy S. Lundstrom, the chief medical officer at Providence Hospital in Southfield, Mich., said, “The rules could encourage unnecessary testing by hospitals eager to show that infections were already present at the time of admission and did not develop in the hospital.” Moreover, she said, “Serious, costly infections can occur even when doctors and nurses take all the recommended precautions.”

The rules, first reported in The Star-Ledger of Newark, carry out a directive from Congress included in a 2006 law. When they were proposed in May, consumer advocates said they feared that some hospitals might charge patients for costs that Medicare refused to pay.

But that is forbidden. “The hospital cannot bill the beneficiary for any charges associated with the hospital-acquired complication,” the final rules say.

Eileen O’Neill-Pardo of Everett, Wash., said her experience showed the need for the rules. Her 82-year-old mother, Margaret M. O’Neill, died of an infection that developed during intestinal surgery at a Seattle hospital in 2004.

“The operation — to remove scar tissue — was successful, but the patient died,” Ms. O’Neill-Pardo said. “The hospital staff did not take steps to control the infection, which took over her body. My mother died less than a week after the operation.”

Michigan hospitals have been extremely successful in reducing bloodstream infections related to such catheters, researchers reported recently in The New England Journal of Medicine. The hospitals did not use expensive new technology, but systematically followed well-established infection-control practices, like covering doctors and patients from head to toe with sterile gowns and sheets while the catheters were inserted.

Hospital executives said these techniques had saved 1,700 lives and $246 million by reducing infection rates in intensive care units since 2004.

Some of the complications for which Medicare will not pay, under the new policy, are caused by common strains of staphylococcus bacteria. Other life-threatening staphylococcal infections may be added to the list in the future, Medicare officials said.

Dr. Kenneth W. Kizer, an expert on patient safety who was the top health official at the Department of Veterans Affairs from 1994 to 1999, said: “I applaud the intent of the new Medicare rules, but I worry that hospitals will figure out ways to get around them. The new policy should be part of a larger initiative to require the reporting of health care events that everyone agrees should never happen. Any such effort must include a mechanism to make sure hospitals comply.”

July 23, 2007

Link of the Day - Benefits Checkup Site

The National Council on Aging has a helpful site called Benefits Checkup that lets people search or sign up for for more than 250 different types of medical and retirement benefits. Here is a description from the site:

About BenefitsCheckUp

Many older people need help paying for prescription drugs, health care, utilities and other basic needs. Ironically, millions of older Americans — especially those with limited incomes — are eligible for but not receiving benefits from existing federal, state and local programs. Ranging from heating and energy assistance to prescription savings programs to income supplements, there are many public programs available to seniors in need if they only knew about them and how to apply for them.

Developed and maintained by The National Council on Aging (NCOA), BenefitsCheckUp is the nation's most comprehensive Web-based service to screen for benefits programs for seniors with limited income and resources.

BenefitsCheckUp includes more than 1,550 public and private benefits programs from all 50 states and the District of Columbia, such as:

  • Prescription drugs
  • Nutrition (including Food Stamps)
  • Energy assistance
  • Financial
  • Legal
  • Health care
  • Social Security
  • Housing
  • In-home services
  • Tax relief
  • Transportation
  • Educational assistance
  • Employment
  • Volunteer services

Since 2001, millions of people have used BenefitsCheckUp to find benefits programs that help them pay for prescription drugs, health care, rent, utilities, and other needs. For more information on BenefitsCheckUp, contact us at comments@benefitscheckup.org.

January 13, 2007

Link of the Day - Medicare And You Handbook -- 2007 Edition

The government has released the 2007 edition of "Medicare and You." This is an Adobe Acrobat document, and you will need the free Adobe Reader to view it.

August 09, 2006

Link of the Day - Medicare Information From Families USA

You will find quite a bit of helpful information about Medicare at the Families USA Web site.

July 26, 2006

Change Proposed In Physician Reimbursement Under Medicare

A note at ModernHealthcare.com mentions the continual problem with Medicare reimbursement to doctors. Under the current system, reimbursements should be cut by about 5% each year. Of course if the government actually did that, no doctors would see Medicare patients. So Congress has to "fudge" the law each year. Here's the note from the Web site:

A House bill would tie Medicare physician payments to the Medicare Economic Index, yielding a 1.8% increase for 2007 instead of a scheduled cut of about 4.6%. Medicare's current system for valuing physician services -- known as the sustainable growth rate formula -- "doesn't work," said Rep. Michael Burgess (R-Texas), the bill's sponsor. The bill would replace the sustainable growth rate formula with the Medicare Economic Index "minus 1%," according to Burgess' office. It also would require physicians to report certain quality measurements to the CMS. A companion bill hasn't been introduced in the Senate.

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