Explaining Health Reform: Medicare and the New Independent Payment Advisory Board

Published: Apr 29, 2010

This brief describes how the new board created under the 2010 health reform law is expected to limit the growth in Medicare spending over time. Starting in 2014, if projected per capita Medicare spending exceeds targets set in the law, the board must recommend ways to reduce Medicare spending, while maintaining quality and access to care for beneficiaries. The board’s recommendations automatically take effect the next year unless Congress adopts an alternative plan to achieve an equivalent level of savings.

The brief examines the structure and processes of the board and outlines the key dates in the board’s operations through 2019.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

An April 2011 report provides an in-depth analysis of the Independent Payment Advisory Board, how it will control Medicare costs, and its implications for Medicare

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Setting Medicare Payment Policy: Is There a Role for an Independent Entity? – October 2009 (.pdf)

Explaining Health Reform: Key Changes in the Medicare Advantage Program

Published: Apr 29, 2010

This brief examines the changes in the 2010 health reform law affecting the Medicare Advantage program, which gives beneficiaries the option of enrolling in private insurance plans for their Medicare benefits, instead of the traditional fee-for-service program. The reform law will gradually reduce Medicare payments to these plans to bring the average payment closer to the costs of traditional fee-for-service Medicare, while rewarding plans with high-quality ratings. The brief also describes new benefit requirements for enrollees in Medicare Advantage plans, and a shift in the annual open enrollment period.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

News Release

MTV Asks Audience: Do You GYT?

Published: Apr 29, 2010

MTV, Kaiser Family Foundation, CDC, Planned Parenthood and Others Urge young People to GYT: Get Yourself Talking and Tested

Keri Hilson, Perez Hilton, Debi Nova, Emily VanCamp, Iyaz & More Help Carry the GYT Message

New York, NY — In response to the staggering rate of sexually transmitted infections (STDs) among youth in the U.S., MTV and the Kaiser Family Foundation, as part of a longstanding public information partnership, are working with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA) and its network of health centers, and other partners nationwide, to kick-off National STD Awareness month with the return of the award-winning campaign, GYT: Get Yourself Tested.

As many as one in two sexually active young people will contract an STD by age 25 — and most won’t know it .  GYT encourages Americans under age 25 to talk with health care providers and partners about getting tested for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). According to the CDC, this age group represents half of the estimated 19 million STDs occurring in the United States each year.  When left untreated, STDs can lead to an increased risk of HIV infection, infertility and cancer.

“The burden of STDs on young people in the United States is far too high, and it is urgent that we reach them with testing and treatment information to protect themselves from the long-term health effects of these infections,” said Kevin Fenton, M.D., PhD., director of the National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention. “A lack of information, misconceptions and social stigma keep many people from getting tested. Others mistakenly think they have been tested as part of routine health care. Since many STDs have no symptoms, most of those who are infected do not know it.  The only way to know for sure is to be tested.”

Playing off mobile and Web slang in young people’s everyday vernacular, such as “OMG” and “LOL,” GYT is an easy way for young people to talk about sexual health and getting tested for STDs. This year, GYT is rolling out a series of new initiatives on-air, online, on the ground at college campuses and in more than 4,000 health centers and clinics across the nation, including:

  • Celebs Talk GYT — In a series of on-air and online promotions, celebrities including Keri Hilson, Perez Hilton, Debi Nova, Emily VanCamp of Brothers and Sisters, Iyaz, and more join the campaign’s cast of all-star pop culture personalities spreading the GYT message far and wide.
  • GYT NOW Campus Challenge — To spur a social movement for students to start talking and to get tested on college campuses around the country, the “GYT NOW Campus Challenge” calls on young people to commit to getting tested by becoming a fan of GYT, and encouraging their peers to do the same.  The campus with the largest percentage of their student network to join the GYT Campus Challenge will be featured by MTV News special and highlighted on mtvU.  Additionally, MTV will award each of the top ten recruiters on the winning campus with an expense-paid trip for two and backstage passes to the Too Fast for Love Tour.
  • GYT Nation:  An extensive on-the-ground outreach effort is taking GYT to communities cross the country.  GYT promotional materials, including t-shirts, posters, buttons, and stickers are being distributed to more than 4,000 health centers nationwide, including Planned Parenthood’s network of 840 health centers.  The CDC is also working with state and local health departments, the American Social Health Association and the National Coalition of STD Directors to get out information about the campaign.  And, the American College Health Association (ACHA) has joined the GYT campaign to spread the word and distribute GYT materials through college health centers.

The campaign’s website, GYTNOW.org, provides a community toolkit with promotional materials that can be customized and localized for easy distribution. In this online gallery, the audience can flex their creativity and make “GYT” their own by uploading personalized GYT designs.

“We’re committed to partnering with our audience to reverse the course of the rising national youth STD trend,” said Stephen Friedman, General Manager of MTV.  “GYT connects with young people everywhere they are, and prompts them to take control of their sexual health — arming them with tools that make it easier to talk openly about testing and take action to know their status.”

Once again, GYT will be woven throughout MTV programming, making appearances in popular shows, music videos and more.  CDC provided assistance to ensure scientific accuracy of GYT health information.  Comprehensive informational resources — designed for web and mobile applications — provide facts and referrals to local health centers.   Additional campaign elements include:

Online & Mobile:

  • www.GYTNOW.org — The central hub of the campaign, GYTNOW.org is a comprehensive information resource that includes facts about STDs; talking tips on how to discuss STD testing with partners, parents, and health care providers; and a testing location finder that connects users to local testing resources by simply entering a zip code.  A wide range of GYT-based content, including all of the participating artists and celebrities, are also showcased on the site.  Additionally, fans can connect to GYT via Facebook or Twitter.
  • GYTNOW short code and MTV Movie Awards Sweepstakes — A mobile companion to GYTNOW.org, the GYT short code (498669) provides details about local testing locations to mobile phones by simply texting a zip code.  Users of the service during the month of April will become eligible to win a trip for two to the 2010 MTV Movie Awards in LA. Users can also enter the sweepstakes online by using the testing location finder at http://GYTNOW.org.

On-Air:

  • MTV News — MTV News Correspondent Sway Calloway goes inside a New York City college to talk to students about STD testing. The segment explores who is getting tested, who is not, and the reasons why young people don’t get tested. Dr. Michelle Cespedes, a doctor of infectious diseases at NYU, and Dr. Michelle Callahan, a relationship expert and on-air personality, will weigh in on the importance of knowing your status and offer young people tips on talking about STD testing with partners and doctors.
  • mtvU Dean’s List — A freshman at the University of Hartford takes over as host for a new episode of mtvU’s “Dean’s List.”  During this hour long countdown of the music that’s making an impact on her campus, the audience will also follow as Kayla gets tested, dispels myths about STDs and testing, and talks to young people about why it’s important to GYT in college today.
  • MTV’s “How To” Show — Iyaz and Debi Nova explore “how to talk to your partner about testing,” and “how to ask your doctor to be tested” in this short-form segment to live on GYTNOW.org.

“We have found that entertainment media partnerships can be a powerful force for change,” said Tina Hoff, Vice President and Director of Entertainment Media Partnerships, Kaiser Family Foundation. “By working with this coalition of partners with common goal and on a targeted message, we hope to reduce the spread of STDs among young people by normalizing communication and testing.”

In 2009, GYT helped fuel an increase in STD testing among of young people under the age of 25 at Planned Parenthood health centers nationwide, including a 36 percent increase in the number of male STD testing patients and an 18 percent increase in the number of female STD testing patients from the previous year in ten nationally representative Planned Parenthood health centers. These increases were particularly noteworthy in communities of color, with a 30 percent increase over 2008 in the number of African-American female STD testing patients and a 20 percent increase in the number of Latina STD testing patients.

“Planned Parenthood doctors and nurses understand that if a young person is going to decide to get tested, barriers to communication need to be overcome and common myths must be dispelled. The good news is that testing for many STDs is fast and painless, and, contrary to the fears of some young people, does not involve needles,” said Planned Parenthood Federation of America President Cecile Richards. “We know that the GYT campaign works. In the first year of the campaign, Planned Parenthood health centers saw an increase in testing, and we are committed to increasing the number of young people who get tested again this year.”

GYT is supported by a broad range of organizations including the National Coalition of STD Directors (NCSD), American College Health Association (ACHA), ASHA (American Social Health Association), the National Chlamydia Coalition (NCC), and various state and local health departments, colleges and universities, and other community groups and non-profits.

An ongoing extension of MTV and Kaiser’s Emmy and Peabody-winning “It’s Your (Sex) Life” partnership, GYT encourages young people to make responsible decisions about their sexual health.  Since 1997, the Kaiser Family Foundation and MTV have worked together on this extensive public information partnership to address HIV/AIDs, other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and related sexual health issues. The partnership includes targeted public service advertisements (PSAs), entertainment and other special programming, news segments, and free resources, including an informational guide developed especially for the campaign, and an extensive website www.itsyoursexlife.com. For more information visit http://www.GYTNOW.org.

MTV is the dynamic, vibrant experiment at the intersection of music, creativity and youth culture. For over 28 years, MTV has evolved, challenged the norm, and detonated boundaries — giving each new generation a creative outlet and voice that entertains, informs and unites on every platform and screen. On-air, MTV is the number one rated full-day ad-supported cable network for P12-24. Online, MTV.com averaged 24.6 million monthly unique visitors during the first quarter of 2010 — up +9% from Q4/2009 and up +13% year-over-year. Average video streams for the first quarter of 2010 increased +19% from the Q4/2009 and is up +18% over the same time period last year. And MTV’s successful sibling networks MTV2 and mtvU each deliver unprecedented customized content, super-serving young males, music fans, and college students like no one else. MTV is part of MTV Networks, a unit of Viacom (NYSE: VIA, VIA.B), one of the world’s leading creators of programming and content across all media platforms. Wanna know more? Come on in: http://www.mtvpress.com

The Kaiser Family Foundation is a non-profit private operating foundation, based in Menlo Park, California, dedicated to producing and communicating the best possible information, research and analysis on health issues.

Planned Parenthood Federation of America is the nation’s leading sexual and reproductive health care provider and advocate. We believe that everyone has the right to choose when or whether to have a child, and that every child should be wanted and loved. Planned Parenthood affiliates operate more than 840 health centers nationwide, providing medical services and sexuality education for millions of women, men, and teenagers each year. We also work with allies worldwide to ensure that all women and men have the right and the means to meet their sexual and reproductive health care needs.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, protects people’s health and safety by preventing and controlling diseases and injuries; enhances health decisions by providing credible information on critical health issues; and promotes healthy living through strong partnerships with local, national, and international organizations. For more information about CDC and its programs, visit http://www.cdc.gov.

News Release

KaiserEDU.org Selects Winning Student Essays Identifying Future Health Policy Challenges

Published: Apr 29, 2010

The Kaiser Family Foundation announced the winners of its fourth annual essay contest today, sponsored by the foundation’s educational health policy website, kaiserEDU.org. The contest invited students to identify the major health policy challenges the nation will face in the year 2015 and discuss how the top two priorities should be addressed.

Entries were received from more than 400 undergraduate and graduate students enrolled at colleges and universities across the country in a wide range of disciplines including public health, medicine, nursing, economics, and law.

“The passage of health reform brings a great opportunity for students to play a more active role in health care policy through their studies and after they graduate as our future policy analysts, health care providers, and policy makers,” said Kaiser President and CEO Drew Altman. “The interest in the contest this year shows that health reform has activated student interest across the country,” Altman added.

The winners from the graduate student entries are:

  • 1st Place:  Marilyn Michelow, Weill Cornell Medical College, studying Medicine (expected graduation 2012), whose essay was titled “Health Care Reform 5 Years Out: Payment, Pricing and Primary Care.”
  • 2nd Place: Sarah Katz, Georgetown University, studying Health Systems Administration (expected graduation May 2010), whose essay was titled “The State of Health Care in 2015: Access Problems and Health Disparities Persist.”

The winners from the undergraduate student entries are:

  • 1st Place: Catherine Denver, Johns Hopkins University, Major: Nursing (expected graduation May 2010), whose essay was titled “2015: Health Policy Issues of Our Time.”

Tied for 2nd Place:

  • Danielle De Luca, Georgetown University, Major: Healthcare Management and Policy (expected graduation May 2012), whose essay was titled “The Future of American Healthcare: What Lies Ahead.”
  • Yuri Hanada, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Major: Biology (expected graduation June 2010), whose essay was titled “Disparities and Shortages: Major Policy Challenges in American Medicine.”

The panel of final judges for the essay contest was comprised of leading national experts on health policy and politics, including Jonathan Cohn of the New Republic; Sheila Burke of Harvard Kennedy School of Government; Ruth Katz, Congressional staffer and former Dean of the George Washington University School of Public Health; Drew Altman, Ph.D., Kaiser president and CEO; and Diane Rowland, Sc.D., Kaiser executive vice president.

KaiserEDU.org is a free website for students, faculty and others interested in learning about health policy. The site presents a broad array of resources, including tutorials on health policy basics, issue modules on current topics under debate and a directory of internships and fellowships.

 

GreaterThanAIDS Media Partnership: Press Releases

Published: Apr 29, 2010
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Press Releases

Walgreens And Greater Than AIDS Team Up With Health Departments And Local AIDS Service Organizations To Provide Free HIV Testing In Support Of National HIV Testing Day2012-06-14

“I Got Tested” Campaign Encourages Americans To Know Their HIV Status2012-06-12

SiriusXM OutQ and Greater Than AIDS Empower Gay Community to “SpeakOUT”2012-03-16

Black Women from TV, Film and Music Speak Out in a Powerful New Message on National Women & Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (March 10th): “Make Every Moment, A Deciding Moment”2012-03-06

New Greater Than AIDS PSAs and Social Media Messages Mark National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (Feb. 7)2012-02-06

Leading Media and Other Corporate Allies Encourage Americans to Be “Greater Than AIDS” on World AIDS Day2011-11-30

Walgreens HIV Centers of Excellence Pharmacies Now Top 500 Nationwide in Areas Most Impacted by HIV/AIDS2011-11-10

B Holding Group Teams Up With Greater Than AIDS for First Annual HBCU b Healthy Tour2011-09-08

Walgreens, EBONY Encourage Americans to “Be Greater Than AIDS”Free HIV Testing, Targeted HIV/AIDS Resources at Walgreens Stores in Heavily Affected Areas2011-06-21

Greater Than AIDS, GYT Campaigns Join Forces To Get Out the Word About HIV Testing2011-05-26

The LA Clippers Join With Supervisor Ridley-Thomas, The LA County Public Health Department and HIV/AIDS Organizations to Mobilize Fans to be “Greater Than AIDS”2011-03-30

The Miami Heat Join With Local Health Department and AIDS Organizations to Mobilize Fans to be “Greater THAN AIDS”2011-03-24

The Houston Rockets Join With Mayor Parker, Local Health Department and AIDS Organizations to Mobilize Fans to be “Greater Than AIDS”2011-03-17

The San Antonio Spurs Join With Mayor Castro, Local Health Department and AIDS Organizations to Mobilize Fans to be “Greater Than AIDS”2011-03-08

Here Media Empowers Gay Community to be “Greater Than AIDS”Here Media Empowers Gay Community to be “Greater Than AIDS”2011-03-01

The Sacramento Kings Join With Mayor Johnson and Local Organizations to Mobilize Fans to be “Greater Than AIDS”2011-02-11

The LA Clippers Join With Local Organizations to Mobilize Fans to be “Greater Than AIDS”2011-02-02

Oakland Mayor, Danny Glover, & the Golden State Warriors Join With Local Organizations to Mobilize Fans to be “Greater Than AIDS”2011-01-26

NBA, Walgreens, Major Media, Among Those Who Declare “We Are Greater Than AIDS” on World AIDS Day2010-11-30

A “Deciding Moment” for AIDS After 30 Years – New National Media Campaign Inspires Black Americans to Take Action to Stem Spread of HIV2010-10-05

Be Greater Than AIDS: Get Yourself Tested Week Promotes Free HIV Testing in 10 Cities from June 19-June 27, 20102010-06-16

Clear Channel Makes a Bold Commitment to HIV/AIDS in Lead Up to National HIV Testing Day2010-04-02

San Francisco AIDS Foundation Introduces HIV Testing to Sixth Street2010-03-22

Black AIDS Institute and The Magic Johnson Foundation Announce New Collaboration to Fight Black HIV2010-02-03

New Media-led Effort Responds to AIDS Crisis in Black America2009-06-25

GreaterThanAIDS Media Partnership: Resources and Materials

Published: Apr 29, 2010
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Greater Than AIDS Toolkit

An abundance of community materials are avialable on GreaterThan.org.

The Greater Than AIDS toolkit offers promotional and informational materials which are available rights-free for educational purposes and to extend the reach of Greater Than AIDS on the ground and online. Materials are available to download on the spot or hard copies can be requested right from the toolkit

. Materials subject to available quantities.

Custom materials, including t-shirts, bannerstands, and fans can be purchased direct from vendors. Greater Than AIDS does not profit from custom merchandise sales.

Organizations are finding innovative ways to be Greater Than AIDS. To find out what you can do in your community, read their success stories:

For more Resources, visit http://www.greaterthan.org/take-action/resources/.

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Health Care Reform and the CLASS Act

Published: Apr 28, 2010

This issue brief examines the Community Living Assistance Services and Supports (CLASS) program, a component of the health reform law that establishes a national, voluntary insurance program for purchasing community living services and supports that is designed to expand options for people who become functionally disabled and require long-term help. This brief describes the major components of the CLASS program including its financing, eligibility criteria, benefit design and interaction with Medicaid.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

Expanding Medicaid under Health Reform: A Look at Adults at or below 133% of Poverty

Published: Apr 22, 2010

This issue brief from the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured examines the key characteristics of the 17.1 million low-income uninsured adults who currently have incomes that would qualify them for Medicaid under the expansion of the program in health reform.

The planned expansion of Medicaid to all individuals with incomes at or below 133 percent of the federal poverty level will establish a national foundation of coverage based on income. Adults whose incomes will make them eligible for Medicaid under health reform compromise 37 percent of all the uninsured in the United States. The majority of them do not have dependent children, and about half have family incomes below 50 percent of the federal poverty level. The members of this group have problems accessing health care and about one third of them have been diagnosed with a chronic condition.

This analysis does not take into account immigration status. Some of the adults in the analysis will not gain Medicaid eligibility either because they are undocumented immigrants or because they have not legally been in the U.S. for five years. Additionally, some of these adults may already be eligible for Medicaid.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

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Expanding Medicaid: Coverage for Low-Income Adults Under Health Reform (.pdf)