Posts Tagged ‘pre-existing conditions’

AMA: Lack of Competition Among Healthcare Insurers

Monday, October 31st, 2011

More than four out of five metropolitan areas do not have a competitive commercial health insurance market because mergers and acquisitions have allowed some insurers to increase their market share, according to a report issued by the American Medical Association.

The report studied 368 metropolitan markets and 48 states, and determined that 83 percent had minimal competition among health insurers.  In approximately 50 percent of markets, at least one insurer maintained a majority market share of 50 percent or more.  In half of the states studied, the two largest health insurers had a combined market share of 70 percent or more.  The data shows “the degree of anti-competitive market clout” that some insurers have accrued through mergers and acquisitions, which decreases competition for patients, physicians and employers, said AMA President Peter W. Carmel.  Alabama occupied the last place, followed by Alaska, Delaware and Michigan.

According to Carmel, “Our new report is intended to help regulators, lawmakers, researchers and policymakers identify markets where mergers among health insurers may cause competitive harm to patients, physicians and employers.”

This latest edition of Competition in Health Insurance: A Comprehensive Study of U.S. Markets is the most comprehensive analysis to date, reporting commercial health insurance market shares and federal concentration measures for all 48 states.  The scope of the analysis provides a comprehensive snapshot of fully-insured and self-insured enrollments for both health maintenance organizations (HMOs) and preferred provider organizations (PPOs).

One conclusion is “A significant absence of health insurer competition exists in 83 percent of metropolitan markets studied by the AMA.  These markets rated ‘highly concentrated’, based on the newly revised Horizontal Merger Guidelines issued last year by the U.S. Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission.

“The market power of health insurers places physicians and patients at a significant disadvantage,” Carmel said.  “When insurers dominate a market, people pay higher health insurance premiums than they should, and physicians are pressured to accept unfair contract terms and corporate policies, which undermines the physician role as patient advocate.”

Physicians are the least concentrated segment of the healthcare sector with 78 percent of office-based doctors working in practices with nine physicians or less.  The majority of those are in either solo practices or offices with between two and four physicians.

“The market power of health insurers continues to prompt anti-competitive concerns among physicians,” Carmel said.  “To help restore a competitive balance to health insurance markets, the AMA urges the federal and state agencies to prohibit harmful insurance company mergers and adopt policies that would level the playing field between small physician practices and large insurers.”

Writing in the Washington Post,  Ezra Klein points out that one of the major goals of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) is to create a competitive insurance market.  “This is the bill’s first, and most important, step.  Right now, the insurance market’s version of competition is pretty brutal.  Companies compete to avoid the sickest people and sign up the healthiest people.  Offering the best coverage for the lowest cost isn’t much of a priority, because most consumers don’t know whose coverage is best, and the ones who really do know are probably sick customers who spend their days researching this stuff.

“Outlawing the bad kind of competition while enabling the good kind, which the bill does, is more than just a humanitarian measure.  It’s a cost control.  The insurance ‘exchanges’ imitate the market in which federal employees (including congressmen) purchase their health insurance. In the exchanges, insurance products have to be above a minimum level of comprehensiveness (no more insurance that doesn’t cover anything) and their benefits have to be presented in a standard, comprehensible way.  The insurers themselves can’t discriminate based on pre-existing conditions, will have to answer to regulators if they attempt to jack up premiums, and will be rated by their customers — a rating that everyone else will see when shopping for their insurance,” according to Klein.

“If all goes well, consumers will be able to log onto the exchange’s website, compare insurance plans and choose their favorite.  That means insurers will have to compete for customers in a more transparent market, where shoppers have more information, and where the relationship between price and quality is more obvious.  As any free-market conservative will tell you, that should drive prices down and quality up.  If it doesn’t, insurers will have some annoyed legislators to answer to: The bill says congressmen and their staff members need to buy their insurance from these exchanges, too.”

No More Surcharges on Pre-existing Conditions

Tuesday, September 20th, 2011

There’s good news for Americans who lack healthcare insurance and have pre-existing medical conditions.  As of July 1, 2011, the Obama administration reduced the premiums  these people pay to purchase high-risk insurance plans that the federal government operates in 17 states and the District of Columbia.  Called pre-existing condition insurance plans (PCIPs), this coverage for people with medical conditions that often make then unable to buy insurance on the individual market was created by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA). 

Virginia and six other states will slash their premiums by 40 percent; other states and the District of Columbia will see cuts of between 15 and 25 percent; Mississippi will cut its rates by just two percent.  The revised rates give greater consideration to state-specific data and closely track the standard rates for individual policies in each state.  “Now, the program has been up and running for six to nine months, we’ve had an opportunity to redefine the methodology,” said Steve Larsen, director of the Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight at the Department of Health and Human Services. 

Advocates for consumers and federal officials hope that the reduced premiums will encourage additional people to opt into the plans.  Although approximately 375,000 people were expected to sign up for the PCIPs, just 21,454 had enrolled as of April 30, 2011.  The biggest roadblocks are seen as high premiums and a legal requirement that enrollees lack healthcare insurance for six months prior to joining the program.

Another provision of the law could have the potential to make the plans even more affordable.  Some insurers are already cutting premiums to meet the new “medical loss ratio” requirements.  (Medical claims paid are considered losses in insurance jargon.)  If difficult economic times continue and people cut back on medical care, other insurers may follow suit.  “Plans are getting nervous about how big the rebates they’re going to have to pay are,” said Timothy Jost, a law professor at Washington and Lee University who’s a consumer representative to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.

Compared to the legal requirement that people be uninsured for six months before signing up for the new plans, high premiums are probably a bigger stumbling block to enrollment, experts say. They can’t really do anything about the six months, because that’s in the law,” says Kansas Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger, who heads the health insurance and managed care committee for the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.  “But they can bring down the cost, which will help.”

The trend to ever-increasing healthcare premiums has led some organizations to ask for an extreme solution. Recently, the Greater Boston Interfaith Organization (GBIO) and Health Care for All issued a plea to freeze healthcare premiums for one year to sort out a better solution for healthcare companies and individuals alike.  The freeze’s supporters argue that the price hikes of health insurance have not evened out, despite the fact that more people are facing economic difficulties.  During the year-long freeze, the hope is that consumers will be better educated to find the best deals for their insurance and that companies could find ways to better meet their customers’ needs.

The cost reduction has made a major difference to Kathleen Watson of Lake City, FL, who had been uninsured since 2004 when COBRA coverage under her husband’s previous policy expired.  Because she has leukocytosis — a constantly elevated white blood cell count — locating affordable coverage was impossible.  Watson found herself in an even more difficult position in 2009 when she was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma and developed an antibiotic-resistant bacterial infection while hospitalized with pneumonia.

When the ACA created the new plans for people with pre-existing medical conditions, Watson looked into coverage.  Unfortunately, the $605 monthly premium was more than she could afford on what she earns running a medical transport business.  When she learned that rates in the three plans were being reduced by 40 percent, Watson checked out the plans again.  This time, she signed up for an affordable $363 a month that started July 1.  “I’m just happy to have insurance now,” Watson said, noting that she immediately needs a CT scan and a lung biopsy to check out enlarged lymph nodes in her right lung, bladder and colon.  “Hopefully it does what it says.”

Discussions about further reductions could be in the works.  “It’s possible,” that the medical loss ratio requirements might further depress PCIP premiums, Larsen said.  “I wouldn’t care to speculate about that.”

AMA Reaffirms its Support for the Individual Mandate

Wednesday, July 6th, 2011

Despite strong opposition from some member doctors, the American Medical Association (AMA) supports a key element of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) that requires Americans to buy health insurance.  By a 2 — 1 margin, the AMA’s policy-making House of Delegates voted to continue its support of the individual mandate, saying such responsibility for Americans who can afford to buy coverage was the best option to expand benefits to people who are currently uninsured.  The results of the vote were 326 in favor and 165 opposed.  Without an individual mandate, people will not purchase health insurance until they are sick; that would lead to a spike in premiums for all.

“The AMA’s policy supporting individual responsibility has bipartisan roots, helps Americans get the care they need when they need it and ends cost shifting from those who are uninsured to those who are insured,” said AMA president Dr. Cecil Wilson, a Winter Park, FL. internist.  “Important insurance market reforms, such as an end to denials based on pre-existing conditions, are only possible by having broad participation in the health insurance market.  The AMA reviewed alternatives and concluded that any approach to covering the uninsured that is in line with AMA policy cannot be fully successful in covering the uninsured without individual responsibility for health insurance,” Wilson noted.

After the civil, one-hour individual mandate debate,  Wilson said an “overwhelming” majority of physicians voted to continue the position the association has maintained 2006.  Some delegates raised the issue because the constitutionality of that portion of healthcare reform legislation is being challenged.  “Our concern is that if we are not able to have a requirement that people have an individual responsibility to purchase insurance, we’re not aware of another solution, except something that would say that the government would make a requirement and tax the individuals for that,” Wilson said.  “From our perspective, the concern would be raised that would take us down a path toward a government run system.”

Wilson criticized people who can afford health insurance but refuse to purchase it, “who then arrive in the emergency room having fallen off of their motorcycle – and they did not wear a helmet – and they end up with major life-threatening injuries, the treatment for which very few people could afford.  And the result of that is that all of pay for that, private as well as taxpayers.”  Those are the people who cause those who have health coverage to pay premiums that are “$1,000 a year more than they otherwise would be.”  The reaffirmation vote stipulates that for individuals and families who cannot afford health coverage, there would be government tax subsidies or credits inversely proportional to income.  When asked if the AMA might file an amicus brief to support the Obama administration’s fight to block challenges, Wilson said that is unlikely.

According to Wilson, the delegates’ vote emphasized that “We cannot walk away from the fact that some 32 million more Americans would be able to have insurance and who do not have it now, and that as a result of not having insurance, would live sicker and die sooner.”

Several physicians strongly opposed the mandate,  referring to constitutionality challenges, freedom issues, and the opposition of physicians and numerous medical organizations.  The AMA admits to having lost 12,000 members since 2009, many because of their endorsement of ACA.  “The AMA has turned 180 degrees since the 1950s, when it held that ‘the voluntary way is the American way,’” said Jane Orient, M.D., executive director of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS).  “Now it has adopted the ‘progressive’ left-wing stance of calling for compulsory purchase of government-prescribed insurance.”  People will no longer be able to choose how to pay their medical bills.  Many might opt for the most affordable way: self-payment of most bills, with low-cost, high-deductible insurance for the rare catastrophe.  “But that choice would deprive the government’s favored plans of some fat premiums,” Dr. Orient said.

With 250,000 of the nation’s physicians comprising its membership,  the influential AMA has historically been opposed to a bigger government role in healthcare.  Physicians who oppose the ACA attempted to convince colleagues that the AMA should change its position.  Some delegates have blamed the Association’s support of the individual mandate for a loss of membership in the AMA in their states.  “I believe that each state, working with the population it has and the specific problems it has, can craft a solution that works better for that state than perhaps the one next door,” said Michael Greene, M.D., a delegate with the Medical Association of Georgia.  Dr. Greene, a family physician, supported the amendment.

Ben Cutler: An Insurance Industry CEO Responds to Healthcare Reform

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

Is the healthcare insurance industry the scapegoat for rising premiums?  In the inaugural episode of the Chuck Lauer Show,  presented by Alter+Care, the former publisher of Modern Healthcare Magazine talked about the insurance industry’s take on healthcare reform with Ben Cutler, Chairman and CEO of USHEALTH Group, Inc., who previously led Fortis Healthcare.  Cutler currently serves on AHIP’s Executive Committee, serves on AHIP’s Board and is also the Chairman of AHIP’s Membership Committee.  The Chuck Lauer Show is an ongoing conversation about the future of healthcare with the leaders and thinkers who are shaping a new direction for healthcare in the United States. 

Cutler, who has spent more than 30 years in the healthcare insurance industry, recalled the ongoing national debate that began nearly 20 years over HillaryCare with the objective of how to provide universal coverage for the more than 50 million uninsured Americans.  Cutler believes that the Obama administration has chosen to focus on access and doesn’t sufficiently address affordability issues.  Healthcare industry groups recognized that the day would come when reform would be a top-line issue and that we would not be well served by just saying “no”.  Cutler says “We’ve worked hard on positioning the industry to accommodate reforms and tried to be very accommodating because getting more people covered is a laudable objective.”

As the healthcare reform bill was drafted, it soon became clear that the insurance industry would have a problem with some of the issues.  Unfortunately, according to Cutler, the politicians decided they needed an enemy and “that turned out to be us.  We continue to be vilified as an industry”, a situation that could – and should — have been avoided.  The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will have some unintended consequences in terms of how the legislation will affect the behavior of various stakeholders who comprise the healthcare economy – consumers, providers, insurers, regulators, etc.  It is inevitable that the insurance industry will have to raise rates if they are to comply with the healthcare law, which essentially constitutes a new tax on the American people.

Cutler cites the example of the $5 billion set aside to subsidize people in high-risk pools.  The government estimated that by this time, upwards of 500,000 individuals would be enrolled in these pools.  So far, just 8,000 people have signed up, an example of where government expectations were totally unrealistic.  Additionally, there is the issue of pre-existing conditions, which the government has characterized as an industry-abusive position, and one which relates to affordability of coverage.  According to Cutler, if people buy homeowners’ insurance only after their house catches fire, the premium obviously would be higher.

 
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Nearly 50 Percent of Americans Think the Healthcare Law Has Been Repealed – They’re Wrong!

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

Defying the odds – and facing President Barack Obama’s veto pen – the Republican-controlled House of Representatives voted to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA); a move that was DOA in the Senate.

Despite considerable evidence to the contrary, approximately 50 percent of Americans are convinced that the healthcare law has been successfully repealed.  A poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation found widespread public confusion about the law, with 22 percent of Americans incorrectly believing it has been repealed and another 26 percent unsure or unwilling to say. Even after extensive media coverage of the repeal effort, only 52 percent of Americans accurately responded that the healthcare law remained intact.  According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, “There remains no consensus about whether to keep, expand, replace or repeal the law.  Forty-eight percent are opposed to the law, while 43 percent favor it.  Sixty-one percent of those polled oppose Congress cutting off funding of the law in order to block it, as many Republican lawmakers are considering.”

The Republican-sponsored repeal bill, curiously named the “Repealing the Job-Killing Health Care Law Act,” passed 245 – 189 with assistance from three Democrats.  Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) has refused to bring repeal to the Senate floor for a vote.  President Obama has vowed to veto any repeal effort.  Republicans have not introduced an alternative bill, although Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-OH) said Republicans will ask congressional committees to make “common-sense reforms” to expand coverage and cut costs, but told reporters no “artificial deadlines” were needed.

“As has been true since early in the debate, individual provisions of the new law are more popular than the law itself, complicating the debate over repeal,” the study notes. “So while the public in general is divided over whether to keep or repeal the legislation, if they could pick and choose, the large majority (roughly eight in 10 Americans) would keep the provisions providing tax credits to small businesses, and upward of seven in 10 would keep the provisions that close the Medicare doughnut hole, provide coverage subsidies to those of low and moderate income, institute the new voluntary long-term care insurance program known as the CLASS Act, and prohibit insurance companies from denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions.”

According to a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll, 32 percent of Americans would like to see the law repealed; 13 percent want to see the bill left as it stands. The poll found that 29 percent of Americans want to see minor changes and that 24 percent want major changes.  Representative Ben Chandler, (D-KY), who voted against the law last year, said he voted against repeal because he thinks the law’s “bad” parts should be repealed piece by piece.  “I will not vote to repeal parts of the law that protect central Kentuckians by preventing insurance companies from dropping people if they get sick, ending lifetime caps on coverage and eliminating pre-existing condition exclusions,” Chandler said.

Implementation of the law is continuing as planned, according to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.  “I want the people who are benefiting from the Affordable Care Act — including families, seniors and small business owners — to know that this vote does not change the law and that this department will continue to work every day to implement this vital law.”

Pre-Existing Medical Conditions Impact As Many As Half of All Americans

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

A Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) study reveals that as many as half of all Americans under the age of 65 have pre-existing medical conditions, which could mean rejection by insurance companies or having to pay more for coverage.  According to HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, that totals approximately 169 million people.  The report says that, of those Americans who are uninsured, 17 to 46 percent have pre-existing medical conditions, depending on the definition used. Such health problems are particularly common among adults aged 55 to 64 – a group long recognized as a problem spot in the healthcare system, because people of that age tend to have higher medical expenses but are too young to qualify for Medicare.

A Democratic analysis, released last fall by Representative Henry A. Waxman (D-CA), then the chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said that between 2007 and 2009, the nation’s four largest private health insurers denied coverage to about 650,000 people based on their medical history.

“Not surprisingly, as people age, their likelihood of having – or having had – a health condition increases,” according to Sebelius.  “Looking only at pre-existing conditions used in determining eligibility for high-risk pools, the percentage of Americans with these health conditions ranges from five percent of children to 48 percent of people ages 55 to 64.  Adding in common conditions that major insurers generally use in medical underwriting raises the risk to 24 percent for children, increasing to 86 percent for people ages 55 to 64.”

Robert Zirkelbach, a spokesman for America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), the industry’s lobbying group, offers a different opinion, noting that “We’ve long supported reforming the individual insurance market so that everybody can have access to health-care coverage, regardless of their preexisting medical conditions.  But this report exaggerates the number of people who are impacted.”

Rick Ungar, who writes for Forbes, offers another perspective and asks if pre-existing conditions are an indication that the American Dream is dead.  According to Ungar — who is an attorney in Southern California, and a frequent writer, speaker and consultant on healthcare policy and politics – his initial reaction to the government report was “Yeah…it made me suspicious too.  Go figure that this extraordinary government revelation would surface on the very day the House is taking up debate on the repeal of healthcare reform.”

Ungar’s suspicion eased when he read this additional quote from Zirkelbach.  “Most of the Americans included in the figures currently have insurance. They would be at risk,” he said, “only if they needed to change coverage and buy it on their own.  People who get insurance through their jobs are guaranteed coverage.” Alter+Care Inspire notes that an additional reason might be people losing their jobs – something to consider at a time when the private sector has been so sluggish.

“And there it was,” according to Ungar.  “This spokesman for the nation’s pre-eminent health insurance lobby was not only acknowledging that there are millions upon millions of people with pre-existing conditions who could be denied healthcare coverage, he was actually telling us that we need not worry about them because – so long as they continue to get their insurance through their job – it’s all good.  But what if they want to leave their job to engage in some good, old-fashioned American entrepreneurialism?  Did Mr. Zirkelbach inadvertently direct our attention to the depressing reality that up to one-half of all Americans may not be free to pursue their futures and fortunes as they see fit because they are trapped in their jobs by their healthcare benefits?  You bet he did.”

Some Healthcare Insurers Refuse to Sell Child-Only Policies

Monday, October 4th, 2010

Insurers who refuse to sell child-only policies are creating a political firestorm.  Some of the nation’s largest insurers are in open rebellion against a provision contained in the new healthcare reform law that is already in effect.  The shot across the White House’s bow is a decision by several insurers to stop selling child-only policies instead of complying with the law that blocks them from turning away kids with pre-existing conditions.  Anthem Blue Cross, Aetna, Inc., and others are refusing to sell the policies in states such as California, Illinois, Florida and Connecticut – even though the law requires that insurers cover children under 19 even if they have a history of illness.  Approximately 500,000 children nationally are impacted by this action.

The insurers claim that the new requirement will result in unforeseen costs related to covering eligible children.  The scenario they envision is that parents might buy policies for their children only after they get sick, creating a surplus of kids who suddenly need insurance coverage.  The decision by some of the big insurers to abandon this niche marketplace means that just a few firms will be forced to share what could be an enormous financial burden.  The good news is that relatively few child-only policies are sold.

The Obama administration immediately denounced the action.  White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters “It’s obviously very unfortunate that insurance companies continue to make decisions on the backs of children and families that need their help.”

The stakes are especially high in California.  Legislation awaiting Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s approval would ban companies that refuse to sell child-only policies from selling insurance in the profitable individual market for five years.  Assemblyman Mike Feuer (D-Los Angeles), who wrote the bill, said “At a time when we are launching a national approach to ensure that all children have access to healthcare, Anthem’s actions represent a step backwards.  By threatening to drop child-only policies in California, the company jeopardizes the health of families and children.  I call on Anthem to reconsider its plan.”

High-Risk Pool Healthcare Has Hefty Premiums

Monday, July 19th, 2010

“High-risk pool” healthcare coverage comes at a steep price.  Healthcare coverage for uninsured Americans with pre-existing conditions won’t come cheaply. Premiums in the new “high-risk” pool could average $300 to $600 a month in certain states, according to a new government website.   The Department of Health and Human Services says that the premiums could range from $140 to as much as $900 a month.

According to Richard Popper, deputy director of the Office of Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight, “There are going to be meaningful premiums that are going to be required to stay in this plan…in the hundreds of dollars.”  HealthCare.gov estimates show that monthly premiums for a 50-year-old Floridian would be $552 to $675; for a New Yorker, the average cost would be $400 to $600; $491 to $600 for a Texan; and only $283 for a Pennsylvanian.  Coverage under the Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan begins on August 1.

Consumer advocates are advising the uninsured who have health problems to sign up quickly – despite the cost – because they cannot be turned down for coverage.  The high-risk pool is a temporary solution for at-risk individuals who cannot get healthcare insurance because of a medical condition.  The pool will be available until 2014 when healthcare reform takes full effect.  At that point, insurance companies will not be allowed to turn down people in poor health.  Low- and middle-income individuals will receive subsidized coverage.

Insurer Denies Teenage Girl Coverage Because She Was Diagnosed With an Overbite at Age 8

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

Insurance company cancelled teenager’s coverage because she was diagnosed with an overbite at age 8.  A suburban Chicago teenager had her healthcare coverage rescinded when her parents’ insurance company learned that she had been diagnosed with an overbite at age eight. An orthodontist and braces cured the overbite, but the insurer cancelled the girl’s coverage by claiming it was a pre-existing condition.  The girl’s parents fought back and – thanks to strong support from Illinois insurance regulators – the coverage has now been reinstated.

Thanks to healthcare reform legislation, this practice – known as rescission – will no longer be allowed as of late September except in cases where fraud is involved.  Illinois has one of the nation’s highest rescission rates with 12.9 for every 1,000 policies written.  The girl’s father, an attorney employed at a small firm, buys individual coverage for his family.  Insurance regulators say that rescission is most common in these circumstances.  People who are covered by company-sponsored programs rarely face rescission.  According to the girl’s father, “We didn’t try to hide anything.  Our orthodontist told us her mandibular hypoplasia was routine, and it was nothing the insurance company even asked us about on our application.  From our perspective, they didn’t even ask for the names of any of our children’s dentists or orthodontists.”

“There’s now a defined legal standard for when a rescission is appropriate,” said Michael McRaith, Illinois Insurance Director.  “In Illinois, our law was ambiguous, vague and left wide latitude and discretion with the insurance industry.”  The insurance industry defends rescissions as a necessary business practice when people misrepresented or lied about their medical histories on their applications.  Rescissions affect approximately seven percent of the population with private insurance who purchase individual policies.  Robert Zirkelbach, spokesman for America’s Health Insurance Plans, a lobbying group, said “Rescissions are very rare.  They are only used as a last resort.”

Congressional Democrats take another view.  “It was viewed by Congress as the tip of the spear,” said Representative Jan Schakowsky (D-IL).  “It typifies the practices of the insurance industry to maximize their profits that were so clearly anti-consumer and harmful to people who were counting on their health insurance at the moment they needed it the most.”

Ten Reasons Why Reform is Good for Americans’ Health

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

MoveOn.org has a new top 10 list on how healthcare reform will benefit Americans.  MoveOn.org, the non-profit, progressive, public policy advocacy group and political action committee, has put together a list of the 10 things they believe every American should know about healthcare reform. For those who have watched the events of the last 14 months unfold, it’s a useful reminder of what this arduous journey was all about.

1.  Once reform is completely implemented, more than 95 percent of Americans will have healthcare insurance, including 32 million who currently lack any coverage.

2.  Health insurance companies will not be allowed to deny people coverage because of preexisting conditions — or to drop coverage if someone becomes sick.

3.  People and small businesses who can’t afford to purchase insurance on their own will be able to pool together and choose from a selection of competing plans with reduced premiums.

4.  Reform will cut the federal budget deficit by $138 billion over the next 10 years; that rises to $1.2 trillion over the following decade.

5.  Healthcare will be more affordable for families and small businesses, thanks to new tax credits, subsidies, and other assistance – primarily paid for by taxing insurance and pharmaceutical companies, as well as the wealthiest Americans.

6.  Seniors receiving Medicare coverage will see lower costs for prescription drugs because healthcare reform closes the “donut hole” gap.

7.  By cutting employers’ healthcare costs, reform will create or save more than 2.5 million jobs over the next 10 years.

8.  Medicaid will be expanded to offer health insurance to 16 million more low-income people.

9.  Rather than losing coverage because they leave home or graduate from college, young adults will have the ability to remain on their families’ insurance plans until age 26.

10.  Community health centers will receive an additional $11 billion, doubling the number of patients who can be treated, even if they lack insurance or are unable to pay.