Rabu, 16 November 2011

FoIB Tax Update LexisNexis bleg

Our good friend Joe Kristan, whose outstanding Tax Update blog is always a must-read, is in the running for "LexisNexis Top 20 Tax Law Blogs." As Joe says, there's nothing else quite like the Tax Update: fresh material several times a day, and Joe's unique way of making even the driest of tax-related info interesting and fun.

Voting's easy: just click here, and sign in (you can even use your FaceBook or Twitter ID!).
Vote for Joe - you'll be glad you did.

Medicare Advantage - Gotcha!

When is a hospital admission not an admission? When you are not admitted. Confused? You should be.

Just because you stayed in the hospital 24 hours does not necessarily equal being admitted to a hospital and the difference in what YOU pay can be frightening.

Ralph went to Northwest Hospital to have stents placed in his coronary arteries.

He spent 24 hours in the hospital, he was in a hospital bed, but he was not admitted.

His bill for the 24 hour stay?

$124,241.67.
The good news for Ralph, who is 86 years old, is that his Medicare Advantage plan had to pay only $14,093.04 of the $126,241.67 hospital bill. This is because Medicare sets the price for each service, and $14,093.04 was the total of approved charges for services associated with Ralph’s 24-hour hospital stay – or rather, his observation stay.

The $126,241 bill is a made up number – unless you don’t have insurance.
Sounds like a good reason to buy insurance.

But wait, there's more.
The bad news for Ralph is that his Medicare Advantage plan requires him to pay 20% for “outpatient surgery”, so he had to pay $2,814.48.
Bummer.

That's one of the dirty little secrets you never hear about in those "information" meetings hosted by Advantage plans from carriers like Aetna, Humana, Blue Cross and others.

The low premiums, some as little as $0, come back to bite you when you least expect it.

And in Ralph's case, this was minor. Some plans can have as much as $6700 out of pocket.

Had Ralph had original Medicare and Medigap plan F his out of pocket would have been $0.

That is something to think about.

Selasa, 15 November 2011

Senin, 14 November 2011

This Sceptered Isle, Part CXLXXIII

Hullo, what's this then? "NHS managers have been banned from rationing treatments while patients wait to die".

I guess that practice was wrong after all - so kindly stop doing it, you NHS Managers.

For some people this little bit of news from the Sceptered Isle may come as a surprise, for others it will simply be a confirmation.

PowerLine Blog puts it this way: Under government medicine, the patient isn’t the customer, the government is. The patient is merely an inconvenience who can make things easier by going away

Sounds right to me.

And meanwhile on these "progressive" western shores of the Atlantic, the U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear arguments that Obamacare is brought to us by the federales for our own good.

ObamneyCare© meets SCOTUS

One supposes that we'd be remiss in not remarking on this news:

"The U.S. Supreme Court will hear a challenge to President Obama's signature law on health care ... The challenge in the case, brought by 26 states out of Florida, is based on the constitutionality of the individual mandate in the Patient Accountability and Affordable Care Act, which requires that all Americans purchase health insurance."

The case at hand is the "biggie" comprising 26 of the 58 states, and which argues that the (Evil) Individual Mandate is unconstitutional.

Dunh.

At this point, all we know is that the Supremes have agreed to hear the case, presumably next Spring. Given the Court's current make-up, and recognizing that IANAL, it's anybody's guess how they'll eventually rule.

Shall we set up a pool?