Article and Policy Forum Examine Medicare, Health Reform and the Challenges Facing People With Disabilities
Wednesday, Sept. 8, the Foundation held a policy workshop examining Medicare, health reform and the challenges facing people with disabilities.
Younger Medicare beneficiaries with disabilities are much more likely than
seniors in the program to report problems accessing and paying for needed
medical services, Kaiser Family Foundation researchers report in this
Health
Affairs article.
Based on a national random-sample survey of people on
Medicare, the study finds that half of nonelderly disabled beneficiaries report
problems paying for health care in the previous 12 months — nearly three times
the rate reported by seniors (50 percent compared with18 percent). Similarly, 46
percent of nonelderly beneficiaries with disabilities report delaying or not
getting health care services because of cost, compared with 16 percent of
seniors.
The survey finds that nearly one in three younger Medicare
beneficiaries with disabilities report that they were uninsured for at least
part of the two-year waiting period before qualifying for Medicare coverage.
The recently enacted health reform law will provide new options for nonelderly
people with disabilities who are awaiting Medicare eligibility to obtain
coverage, through high-risk pools beginning this year, and other public and
private plans beginning in 2014.
The article, "Medicare Doesn’t Work As
Well For Younger, Disabled Beneficiaries As It Does For Older Enrollees," was
authored by the Foundation's Juliette Cubanski and Tricia Neuman and published
on Aug. 12, 2010.
On Sept. 8, 2010, the Foundation held a policy forum
examining the health care issues facing people with disabilities and the
opportunities and challenges presented by the new health care reform law enacted
earlier this year. Juliette Cubanski, study co-author and associate director of
the Foundation’s Medicare Policy Project, presented findings from the study,
followed by a panel discussion with Jeffrey Crowley, senior advisor on
disability policy at the White House; Joe Baker, president of the Medicare
Rights Center; Elizabeth Priaulx, a senior disability legal specialist with the
National Disability Rights Network. PBS NewsHour co-anchor Judy Woodruff will
moderate the discussion, and Tricia Neuman, Foundation vice president and
director of the Medicare Policy Project, will provide opening remarks.
Article (free access)
September 8, 2010, Forum Materials
Full Video — Speakers'
Slides Synced to the Video of the Briefing
NOTE:
- To
see the presentation by individual speaker, click on "Slide Index"
in the lower left and scroll to the title slide of that speaker.
Full
Video — All Other Browsers
Podcast
Agenda (.pdf)
Speaker Biographies (.pdf)
Neuman Presentation (.pdf)
Cubanski Presentation — Chartpack (.pdf)
Survey
Toplines (.pdf)
Fact
Sheet: Medicare and Nonelderly People With Disabilities
Transcript (.pdf)