New Study From National Fiscal Officials Concerns Seniors
The
co-chairmen of President Barack Obama's fiscal commission have offered
an ominous assessment of the Nation's economic future, calling current
budgetary trends a "cancer" that will destroy the country from within
unless checked by tough actions in Washington. The two
leaders - Alan Simpson and Erskine
Bowles - singled out Social Security,
Medicare, and Medicaid, saying that the three programs fully consume federal
revenue. The commission looks to reduce the deficit
primarily through spending cuts and additional revenue.
Separately, a new study by the Center
for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) finds that if the Social Security
benefit cuts and retirement age increases that have been widely suggested were
adopted, they would have a substantially negative impact on low- and -middle-income
families. The report, "The
Impact of Social Security Cuts on Retiree Income," is available at http://bit.ly/dplKBb.
"Social Security and Medicare have helped generations of seniors stay
healthy and out of poverty," Alliance Executive Director Edward Coyle argued.
"Balancing the budget on the backs of seniors is absolutely not the
solution."
Ohio Alliance Supports Delphi Workers
Ohio Alliance activists have appeared before a U.S. House Oversight and Investigations subcommittee hearing that addressed the slashing of pensions for Delphi salaried workers while maintaining those for hourly and UAW employees. U.S. Representative Charlie Wilson (Democrat-Ohio) arranged the hearing in Canfield, Ohio to review the challenges faced by Delphi retirees as a result of the corporate collapse in the auto industry and the effects of the fiscal crisis on retirees created by the implosion of the financial industry. Alliance members were there to support Delphi retirees who are fighting for fair treatment and to denounce the pervasive weakening of retirement income security. Ohio Alliance State Director Norm Wernet testified: "The Delphi workers are asking for some measure of economic justice for the compensation they have earned after a life of work. To allow those who managed this company into bankruptcy to walk away with huge sums of money that guarantee their livelihood at the expense of the retirees is not just an injustice but a structural weakening of the local and state economies." Wernet encouraged Congress to return the pensions and pass the "Protecting Employees and Retirees in Business Bankruptcies Act of 2010," which would bring relief to workers caught in a corporate bankruptcy.
The U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Unveils New Preventive Care Benefits
The U.S. Department
of Health & Human Services has released their new preventive care rules,
which are included in the new Health Care Law.
The rules make it easier and more
affordable for seniors on Medicare and Americans enrolled in Medicaid to access
preventive screenings and services. For seniors enrolling in a new health plan on
or after September 23rd, 2010, their plans will be required to cover
recommended preventative services such as mammograms, colonoscopies,
immunizations, and annual check-ups, without charging a co-pay, co-insurance,
or deductible. Some of the covered preventive services for
seniors include colorectal cancer screening for adults over 50, diet
counseling, as well as Type 2 Diabetes and cholesterol screening. To see the
full list of covered services, visit the official HHS website at http://bit.ly/asJydX.
Seniors At Hospitals For "Observation" Face Bills Not Covered by Medicare
According to Bloomberg Business Week, seniors are increasingly finding themselves hit with thousands of dollars in normally reimbursed hospital bills, because of an unintended glitch in Medicare rules. In December 2008, Medicare expanded a pilot auditing program Nationwide to cut fraud. Since then, the number of patients in long-term observation has increased. Under Medicare rules, patients listed under observation face 20% co-payments that would not be required if they were admitted and expensive aftercare isn't covered at all. The observation classification is designed to be used when there is not an immediate diagnosis or if it is determined the condition is not normally treated within an inpatient setting. However, hospitals sometimes extend the use of observation status in order to avoid being challenged by Medicare auditors on patient admissions when cases fall in a gray area between inpatient and outpatient. "In the past, hospitals and physicians were on their honor, but no more," Alliance President Barbara Easterling said. "Congress needs to make clear that anyone who is in a hospital for 24 hours or more is considered an inpatient."






















































