The Seen and the Unseen, hosted by Amit Varma, features longform conversations that aim to give deep insights into the subjects being discussed. Timeless and bingeworthy.
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The Hope Reduction Act
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Manage episode 338435800 series 2606115
Content provided by Benjamin Day and Stephanie Nakajima - Healthcare-NOW, Benjamin Day, and Stephanie Nakajima - Healthcare-NOW. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Benjamin Day and Stephanie Nakajima - Healthcare-NOW, Benjamin Day, and Stephanie Nakajima - Healthcare-NOW or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Ben discusses the “Inflation Reduction Act,” which was signed into law by President Biden this past week! In last-minute negotiations between Senators Chuck Schumer and Joe Manchin, the Senate finally - after comical failures over and over this past year - passed a VERY scaled-down version of the Build Back Better bill. The “IRA” bill - clearly they intensively focus-grouped that title - is overwhelmingly a package of environmental policies, but does include some healthcare provisions for Medicare recipients. Joining us today, in a throwback-Monday episode, is Stephanie Nakajima, the Executive Director of Mass-Care: the Massachusetts Campaign for Single Payer Healthcare. https://youtu.be/IMUYN2p_Ymg Show Notes With Gillian on vacation, Stephanie rejoins to co-host this pod! Stephanie is currently the ED of Mass-Care, the Massachusetts Medicare for All organization, and through a massive grassroots effort they recently put M4A questions on the ballot in TWENTY state representative districts. The questions are non-binding, but powerful tools for convincing elected officials to support Medicare for All, if they don't already. As any show on the Inflation Reduction Act should, we begin by ridiculing the title of the bill, which has nothing to do with inflation, as well as the "IRA" acronym, which apparently no one thought about?!? Ben takes a sad walk down memory lane to recap the social provisions that HAD been included in the previous version of this legislation: the Build Back Better bill: A child tax credit up to $300 per child; child care subsidies; and free universal preschool - all out of the IRA;Paid family leave of up to 4 weeks - out;Tripling the earned income tax credit for low-income workers - out;Much of this was paid for by new taxes on the wealthy, and on big businesses Stephanie talks about the four things the Medicare for All movement pushed for to be included in Build Back Better: Let Medicare negotiate prescription drug costs, which should save billions of dollars and help pay for expanding Medicare in several ways, including;Lowering the eligibility age of Medicare to 60, or as low as we can get it;Giving traditional (public) Medicare enrollees an out-of-pocket cap, like most private insurance has; and finallyAdding dental, vision, and hearing benefits to Medicare. We had success in each of these categories except lowering the age of Medicare under BBB, but did any of this survive under the Inflation Reduction Act? Some! Here are the healthcare provisions included in the IRA: DOES allow Medicare to negotiate the prices of some prescription drugs - it starts with just 10 drugs in 2025, then increases to 20 drugs in 2029. (Medicare covers over 3,500 drugs - so less than a half of 1% of drugs will be negotiated!)We did NOT win a general out-of-pocket spending cap for Medicare recipients, but we DID win a couple of more specific caps.The bill creates an OOP prescription drug cap of $2,000 for Medicare recipients starting in 2025.The bill also caps insulin spending at $35/mo. Dems tried to extend this insulin spending cap not just to Medicare recipients, but to everyone in the country, but the Senate parliamentarian said they can’t do that through a reconciliation bill (limited to federal spending and income items).Finally, although this wasn’t one of our priorities in the M4A movement, the ACA subsidies that were expanded by the COVID relief bill, but were scheduled to expire at the end of this year, have been extended three more years. We had won some dental, vision, and hearing benefits under the original BBB bill, but all of that was taken out, so there is no expansion of Medicare benefits under the IRA, unfortunately! What's our overall assessment of the IRA? Stephanie says the climate provisions are enough to justify the existence of this bill. Yet it’s such a missed opportunity for Dems to shore up support on one of the issues that consistently ranks amo...
…
continue reading
98 episodes
MP3•Episode home
Manage episode 338435800 series 2606115
Content provided by Benjamin Day and Stephanie Nakajima - Healthcare-NOW, Benjamin Day, and Stephanie Nakajima - Healthcare-NOW. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Benjamin Day and Stephanie Nakajima - Healthcare-NOW, Benjamin Day, and Stephanie Nakajima - Healthcare-NOW or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Ben discusses the “Inflation Reduction Act,” which was signed into law by President Biden this past week! In last-minute negotiations between Senators Chuck Schumer and Joe Manchin, the Senate finally - after comical failures over and over this past year - passed a VERY scaled-down version of the Build Back Better bill. The “IRA” bill - clearly they intensively focus-grouped that title - is overwhelmingly a package of environmental policies, but does include some healthcare provisions for Medicare recipients. Joining us today, in a throwback-Monday episode, is Stephanie Nakajima, the Executive Director of Mass-Care: the Massachusetts Campaign for Single Payer Healthcare. https://youtu.be/IMUYN2p_Ymg Show Notes With Gillian on vacation, Stephanie rejoins to co-host this pod! Stephanie is currently the ED of Mass-Care, the Massachusetts Medicare for All organization, and through a massive grassroots effort they recently put M4A questions on the ballot in TWENTY state representative districts. The questions are non-binding, but powerful tools for convincing elected officials to support Medicare for All, if they don't already. As any show on the Inflation Reduction Act should, we begin by ridiculing the title of the bill, which has nothing to do with inflation, as well as the "IRA" acronym, which apparently no one thought about?!? Ben takes a sad walk down memory lane to recap the social provisions that HAD been included in the previous version of this legislation: the Build Back Better bill: A child tax credit up to $300 per child; child care subsidies; and free universal preschool - all out of the IRA;Paid family leave of up to 4 weeks - out;Tripling the earned income tax credit for low-income workers - out;Much of this was paid for by new taxes on the wealthy, and on big businesses Stephanie talks about the four things the Medicare for All movement pushed for to be included in Build Back Better: Let Medicare negotiate prescription drug costs, which should save billions of dollars and help pay for expanding Medicare in several ways, including;Lowering the eligibility age of Medicare to 60, or as low as we can get it;Giving traditional (public) Medicare enrollees an out-of-pocket cap, like most private insurance has; and finallyAdding dental, vision, and hearing benefits to Medicare. We had success in each of these categories except lowering the age of Medicare under BBB, but did any of this survive under the Inflation Reduction Act? Some! Here are the healthcare provisions included in the IRA: DOES allow Medicare to negotiate the prices of some prescription drugs - it starts with just 10 drugs in 2025, then increases to 20 drugs in 2029. (Medicare covers over 3,500 drugs - so less than a half of 1% of drugs will be negotiated!)We did NOT win a general out-of-pocket spending cap for Medicare recipients, but we DID win a couple of more specific caps.The bill creates an OOP prescription drug cap of $2,000 for Medicare recipients starting in 2025.The bill also caps insulin spending at $35/mo. Dems tried to extend this insulin spending cap not just to Medicare recipients, but to everyone in the country, but the Senate parliamentarian said they can’t do that through a reconciliation bill (limited to federal spending and income items).Finally, although this wasn’t one of our priorities in the M4A movement, the ACA subsidies that were expanded by the COVID relief bill, but were scheduled to expire at the end of this year, have been extended three more years. We had won some dental, vision, and hearing benefits under the original BBB bill, but all of that was taken out, so there is no expansion of Medicare benefits under the IRA, unfortunately! What's our overall assessment of the IRA? Stephanie says the climate provisions are enough to justify the existence of this bill. Yet it’s such a missed opportunity for Dems to shore up support on one of the issues that consistently ranks amo...
…
continue reading
98 episodes
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