The Departments of Health and Human Services (HHS), Labor, and the
Treasury issued new regulations today, requiring new private health
plans to cover evidence-based preventive services and eliminate cost
sharing requirements for such services. The new rules will help
Americans gain easier access to services such as blood pressure,
diabetes, and cholesterol tests; many cancer screenings; routine
vaccinations; pre-natal care; and regular wellness visits for infants
and children.
"Today, too many Americans do not get the
high-quality preventive care they need to stay healthy, avoid or delay
the onset of disease, lead productive lives, and reduce health care
costs," said HHS Secretary Sebelius. "From the Recovery Act to the
First Lady's Let's Move Campaign to the Affordable Care Act, the
Administration is laying the foundation to help transform the health
care system from a system that focuses on treating the sick to a system
that focuses on keeping every American healthy."
Chronic
diseases, such as heart disease, cancer, and diabetes, are responsible
for 7 of 10 deaths among Americans each year and account for 75 percent
of the nation's health spending - and often are preventable.
Nationally, Americans use preventive services at about half the
recommended rate. An estimated 11 million children and 59 million
adults have private insurance that does not adequately cover
immunization, for instance. Cost sharing, including deductibles,
coinsurance, or copayments, has been found to reduce the likelihood that
preventive services will be used.
"Getting access to early
care and screenings will go a long way in preventing chronic illnesses
like diabetes, heart disease, and high-blood pressure," said First Lady
Michelle Obama. "And good preventative care will also help tackle an
issue that is particularly important to me as First Lady and as a mother
- and that is the epidemic of childhood obesity in America today.
These are important tools, and now it's up to us to use them."
"One
of the best ways to improve the quality of your life - and control
health care costs - is to prevent illness in the first place," said Dr.
Jill Biden. "Focusing on prevention and early treatment makes more sense
than trying to play catch-up with a potentially deadly disease. Quite
simply, these preventative services will save lives."
Under the
regulations issued today, new health plans beginning on or after
September 23, 2010, must cover preventive services that have strong
scientific evidence of their health benefits, and these plans may no
longer charge a patient a copayment, coinsurance or deductible for these
services when they are delivered by a network provider. Specifically,
these recommendations include:
* Evidence-based preventive
services: The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, an independent panel
of scientific experts, rates preventive services based on the strength
of the scientific evidence documenting their benefits. Preventive
services with a "grade" of A or B, like breast and colon cancer
screenings, screening for vitamin deficiencies during pregnancy,
screenings for diabetes, high cholesterol and high blood pressure, and
tobacco cessation counseling will be covered under these rules.
*
Routine vaccines: Health plans will cover a set of standard vaccines
recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices ranging
from routine childhood immunizations to periodic tetanus shots for
adults.
* Prevention for children: Health plans will cover
preventive care for children recommended under the Bright Futures
guidelines, developed by the Health Resources and Services
Administration with the American Academy of Pediatrics. These
guidelines provide pediatricians and other health care professionals
with recommendations on the services they should provide to children
from birth to age 21 to keep them healthy and improve their chances of
becoming healthy adults. The types of services that will be covered
include regular pediatrician visits, vision and hearing screening,
developmental assessments, immunizations, and screening and counseling
to address obesity and help children maintain a healthy weight.
*
Prevention for women: Health plans will cover preventive care provided
to women under both the Task Force recommendations and new guidelines
being developed by an independent group of experts, including doctors,
nurses, and scientists, which are expected to be issued by August 1,
2011.
Today's announcement builds on other provisions in the
Affordable Care Act that support prevention, including the creation of a
first-ever National Prevention, Health Promotion and public Health
Council tasked with developing a national strategy and a Prevention and
Public Health Fund to invest in prevention initiatives and, this year,
policies to increase the number of primary care professionals to help
ensure access to these services. The Affordable Care Act also helps
make it easier and more affordable for Americans enrolled in Medicare or
Medicaid to access critical preventive screenings and services.
More
information on the Affordable Care Act's new rules on preventive care
can be found at: http://www.healthcare.gov/law/about/provisions/services/index.html.
The regulations can be found at: http://www.healthcare.gov/center/regulations/prevention/regs.html.
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