USMILNET
May 23, 2012, 07:47:24 am *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
 
News: We ask that you be careful to not post anything that may be considered as a copyright infringement. Please use your best judgement when posting information from other sites. A reference to that site is preferred.
 
   Home   Help Login Register  

WELCOME TO USMILNET
Pages: [1]   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: Officials explain proposed health plan increase, costs  (Read 1375 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
bill12353
Blaster
******
Offline Offline

Posts: 3333


United States Air Force RET. (Avatar is MMS patch




Ignore
« on: January 08, 2011, 08:17:30 am »

A little information from the secretary of defense which will affect those of you who are retired and on tri-care, whether as a primary or secondary.
Thank goodness this increase is only for those who are of working age, although I did not see where working age stopped at.
It seems to me that would have more to do with the individual and their health... But I assume there is an age such as 65 or 72 or whatever.
Anyway thought maybe someone would be interested.


Quote
Officials explain proposed health plan increase, costs
By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON (AFRNS) -- Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates is seeking modest premium increases for working-age military retirees who use the TRICARE Prime health plan.
Secretary Gates unveiled sweeping cost-cutting initiatives Jan. 6, including a recommendation to increase TRICARE Prime premiums for working-age retirees in fiscal 2012, the first increase in the plan's 15-year history.
"For some time, I've spoken about the department's unaffordable health costs, and in particular the benefits provided to working-age retirees under the TRICARE program," the secretary told reporters.
"Many of these beneficiaries are employed full-time while receiving their full pensions, and often forego their employers' health plan to remain with TRICARE," he said. "This should not come as a surprise, given that the current TRICARE enrollment fee was set in 1995 at $460 a year for the basic family plan, and has not been raised since."
Secretary Gates noted the dramatic increase in insurance premiums during that period for private-sector and other government employees. Federal workers pay roughly $5,000 a year for a comparable health insurance program, he said.
"Accordingly, with the fiscal year 2012 budget, we will propose reforms in the area of military health care to better manage medical cost growth and better align the department with the rest of the country," Secretary Gates said. "These will include initiatives to become more efficient, as well as modest increases to TRICARE fees for ... working-age retirees, with fees indexed to adjust for medical inflation."
These initiatives could save the department as much as $7 billion over the next five years, he said.
Military retirees automatically are enrolled in one of two TRICARE plans, program spokesman Austin Camacho explained. Retirees who join TRICARE Prime, the system's managed-care option that covers active-duty members, pay an annual enrollment fee of $230 per year for an individual or $460 for a family. Those in TRICARE Standard, a fee-for-service plan, pay no enrollment fee or premium. Instead, they pay a yearly deductible of $150 per person or $300 per family, as well as co-payments or cost shares for inpatient and outpatient care and medications, up to a $3,000 annual cap on out-of-pocket expenses.
TRICARE Prime, the managed-care option that covers all active-duty members and many retirees, costs the government $4,202 per beneficiary per year, said Mr. Camacho. TRICARE Standard, the program's fee-for-service plan, costs $3,584 per beneficiary per year. TRICARE for Life, for beneficiaries age 65 and older, costs the government $3,874 per patient per year.
Military retirees are not required to report whether they have jobs that offer insurance plans, Mr. Camacho said, noting that having other insurance does not take them off the TRICARE rolls. Rather, he explained, TRICARE becomes the "second payer" for health care, picking up co-payments and deductibles from the primary insurance plan.
Meanwhile, the senior TRICARE officer told American Forces Press Service the system is poised to support Secretary Gates' new efficiency measures and already is making progress as it strives to provide the best health care the best cost.
"All of these things help us work together to help us achieve the secretary's goals, and we are already starting to make progress," Navy Rear Adm. (Dr.) Christine S. Hunter said.
Dr. Hunter cited several initiatives already bearing fruit. More beneficiaries are using the lower-cost mail-order pharmacy option to fill prescriptions. They are getting their immunizations and increasingly participating in a new concept called "patient-centered medical homes" that provide more comprehensive and personalized health care. They are making greater use of online appointment services and health care education materials. And they are increasingly using expensive emergency-room services only for actual emergencies.
"We need to be very aware that there is a pressure [to improve efficiency and control costs] and the resources are not infinite,” said Dr. Hunter. “But we are all part of the solution."
For more retiree news and information, please visit www.retirees.af.mil <http://lyris.dmasa.dma.mil/t/2518397/4680413/511/0/>.
Logged

"We better be prepared to dominate the skies above the surface of the earth or be prepared to be buried beneath it."
General "Tooey" Spaatz's

"Suppose you were a member of congress. Then suppose you were an idiot. Ahh--but I repeat myself."
Mark Twain
Zoomer
Blaster
******
Offline Offline

Posts: 2211


The Bloody William Flint




Ignore
« Reply #1 on: January 14, 2011, 06:54:54 pm »

If ya think there was a change of hands in Congress this past election....go ahead and impliment that idea.  Watch for those that vote for it and then watch the next election Wink
Logged

Pages: [1]   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

E-Mail the Administrator

Custom Search

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.11 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines LLC
SimplePortal 2.1.1
Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Page created in 0.174 seconds with 38 queries.