Saturday, July 13, 2013

A Few Examples of Unusual, Humane Senior Care

by LAS

Here are a couple examples of humane senior care programs around the country. These are not the only ones out there, but we just wanted to let you know that you have choices when it comes to placing an aging parent in some kind of facility.

DAY CARE – at NIGHT
The Elder-Serve at Night program offered by The Hebrew Home in the Bronx, New York.
Similar to senior day care where adult children drop off a parent while they go to work, this one allows adult children to sleep when the senior is prone to wandering at night.
Patients can just socialize with the other patients, paint, do yoga, listen to live music. Therapies are offered – physical therapy, light therapy, and even aromatherapy.
Staffers are present at all times to provide services, and dispense medications if needed.

NO RULES for DEMENTIA PATIENTS
The Beatitudes Campus in Phoenix is flexible enough to accommodate patients who want a late dinner and a bath at 3 am. There are nurses who can play the piano, so that patients who remember little else can sing the lyrics to old songs. If a patient does better without medications, then he or she may be taken off the drugs.
The Campus provides a calming atmosphere that helps everyone to remain calm and engaged in things that they enjoy.

RURAL RETREAT for SENIORS
The Life Care Cneter of Nashoba Valley is a rural facility in the Littleton, MA area. A resident llama named Travis allows residents to pet him.
Staffers work at figuring out what triggers upsets and what kind of prop or activity will soothe them. For one person, music is soothing. For another, who was a former librarian, just holding a book is comforting.

Best wishes in finding the right place for a beloved but brain-damaged or senile parent.


Friday, July 12, 2013

Hospital “Merger Mania” Leading to Higher Bills for Patients

by LAS

Nationwide, we are seeing more and more concentration of medical care via mergers, acquisitions, joint operating agreements, and partnerships with doctors and other providers. However, these mergers rarely result in a cost savings for either the consumer or the hospitals themselves.

Over 100 hospital mergers took place in 2012, and the pace shows little sign of slackening. What advantage does this have for the hospitals? One effect is that by banding together, hospitals have greater bargaining power – but not, as you might hope, to negotiate lower prices with suppliers. Nope. The hospitals band together to bargain with the insurers for HIGHER payments.

This is partly due to less competition in a given city or county. With fewer providers or networks, the consumer cannot just go across the street for a knee replacement.

Less competition translates as higher costs to the consumer – a study published in 2011 showed that private insurers paid 13 to 25 percent more for procedures done in areas with less competition.

The increased cost is often paid by hapless consumers in the form of higher copays, higher insurance premiums, higher deductibles, and miscellaneous fees.

The real insult is that the quality of care has little relationship to the cost of care. Studies have not found any improvement in quality to match the increase in costs. 
A similar hospital merger boom in the 1990s resulted in increased patient costs of anywhere from 5 to 40 percent.


Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Another End-Run Around ObamaCare that Employers May Try: Cutting Hours Down to Part-Time

By LAS

It is well for workers to be aware that if ObamaCare does in fact become the law of the land for group plans as currently scheduled, employers may try yet another end-run to get out of having to comply – a risky end-run, but nevertheless, they could be tempted to try it.

That end-run is to cut affected employees' hours to less than the mandated 30 hours-per-week work schedule which triggers qualification for benefits.

I am told that “countless” employers and advisors are seriously considering this game-playing, this strategy to undercut the unpopular (among corporations) costs of ObamaCare.

However, employees who face loss of eligibility for any benefit should know that this may trigger legal ramifications that could prove costly to the employer if he should try this strategy. 

Employees are covered by provisions of the ERISA law – specifically, Section 510 (which in turn refers back to Section 502).

The pertinent paragraph of ERISA Section 510 states:
It shall be unlawful for any person to discharge, fine, suspend, expel, discipline or discriminate against a participant or beneficiary for exercising any right to which he is entitled under the provisions of an employee benefit plan – or for the purpose of interfering with the attainment of any right to which such participant may become entitled under the plan.”

Aha! We gotcha now, you think. Well, maybe – depending on how much of a junkyard dog your attorney is.

Now, this is not affected by a short-term cut in hours due to a slow period. Many industries have slow periods in the spring or summer, and then ramp up sharply for the fall or winter. This is true of retail, for example, or of the tire business.

BUT if the SINGLE MOTIVE for cutting hours is to deprive employees of qualifying for any employment benefit – which includes ObamaCare – then the company faces legal shaky ground and fines for doing so.

The company stands to be assessed penalties for violating ERISA law. The Department of Labor can assess these fines if the company is found guilty of violating ERISA law, and these penalties are assessed FOR EACH INSTANCE of such violation of the law. Put into other words, the company will have to pay for each employee affected by their shenanigans.

How do you go about exercising your rights under the ERISA law? First you have to start a civil action against the company complaining of the loss of your ERISA rights, or complaining of their retaliation for exercising your rights under ERISA.

Keep a little diary or journal for each day from the moment that the company announces that some employees will have a cut in hours. Keep copies of any newsletters or memos related to this action. Note how many hours a day you worked. Keep this and other pertinent papers together in a little file or large envelope.
And good luck!


Tuesday, July 9, 2013

We Will Have to Watch Congress like Hawks to Keep Them from Repealing ObamaCare

by LAS

While the current political situation (i.e. – factional infighting) keeps any one party from being able to repeal the Affordable Care Act outright – that will not stop them from attempting the “death by a thousand cuts.” In other words, according to the National Association of Underwriters (an arm of the insurance industry), lobbyists will attempt to get individual provisions of the act repealed by inserting lines into other bills.


The insurance industry will be working with friendly members of Congress to insert language repealing just one given provision of the Affordable Care Act into bills that may about entirely unrelated matters. And they will do this for each provision of ObamaCare until it looks like Swiss cheese and totally useless for providing healthcare to those who need it.