Now that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPAC) is law, there are some important dates and timelines for how this sweeping new health care reform will be implemented. Of course these are deadlines, and it is up to the Federal Government to implement.
According to a recently released Rutgers study by Stuart Shapiro, the mean time for completing a regulation from start to finish is 831 days or about two and a third years. This being a piece of immensely complicated legislation (3000+ pages with the reconciliation package) we anticipate that this time frame may be even longer
Below are some of the important provisions and when they will take effect:
Medicare Physician Payment
Congress will address the sustainable growth rate formula in separate legislation this summer. Currently, physician payments are frozen at 2009 levels through March 31.
General Surgery Bonus Payments
Effective this year, the legislation establishes the “floor” on the work geographic practice cost indice (GPCI) at 1.0 for all localities for 2010. Medicare will begin making a separate adjustment for the practice expense portion of physician payments in 2010 and 2011. This provision also increases the practice expense GPCI adjustment for physicians in North Dakota, Montana, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming to the national average beginning in 2011.
Effective 90 days after the bill was enacted, eligible individuals will have access to coverage that does not impose any coverage exclusions for pre-existing health conditions. The provision ends when Insurance Exchanges are operational.
– New group health plans and plans in the individual market must provide first dollar coverage for preventive services; and
– Extends coverage until children turn 26 years of age;
Kaiser Foundation Summary of Health Reform Law
Kaiser Foundation Time Line of Health Reform Law
Speaker’ Office Implementation Timeline.