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Medicare changes and more expense on the horizon

03.01.12

Dial down the partisan rhetoric and surprising similarities emerge from competing policy prescriptions by President Barack Obama and leading Republicans such as Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan.

Limit the overall growth of Medicare spending? It’s in both approaches.

Squeeze more money from upper-income retirees and some in the middle-class? Ditto.

Raise the eligibility age? That too, if the deal is right.

With more than 1.5 million baby boomers a year signing up for Medicare, the program’s future is one of the most important economic issues for anyone now 50 or older. Health care costs are the most unpredictable part of retirement, and Medicare remains an exceptional deal for retirees, who can reap benefits worth far more than the payroll taxes they paid in during their careers.

“People would like to have what they used to have. What they don’t seem to understand is that it’s already changed,” said Gail Wilensky, a former Medicare administrator and adviser to Republicans. “Medicare as we have known it is not part of our future.”

Two sets of numbers underscore that point.

First, Medicare’s giant trust fund for inpatient care is projected to run out of money in 2024. At that point, the program will collect only enough payroll taxes to pay 90 percent of benefits.

Second, researchers estimate that 20 to 30 percent of the more than $500 billion that Medicare now spends annually is wasted on treatments and procedures of little or no benefit to patients.

Taken together, that means policymakers can’t let Medicare keep running on autopilot and they’ll look for cuts before any payroll tax increases.

Privatization is the biggest divide between Democrats and Republicans.

Currently about 75 percent of Medicare recipients are in the traditional government-run, fee-for-service program and 25 percent are in private insurance plans known as Medicare Advantage.

Ryan’s original approach, part of a budget plan the House passed in the spring, would have put 100 percent of future retirees into private insurance. His latest plan, developed with Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., would keep traditional Medicare as an option, competing with private plans.

Older people would get a fixed payment they could use for private health insurance or traditional Medicare. Proponents call it “premium support.” To foes, it’s a voucher.

Under both of Ryan’s versions, people now 55 or older would not have to make any changes. GOP presidential candidates Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich praise his latest plan.

How would it work? Would it save taxpayers money? Would it shift costs to retirees as Ryan’s earlier plan did? Would Congress later phase out traditional Medicare? Those and other questions must still be answered.

“I’m not sure anybody has come up with a formula on this that makes people comfortable,” said health economist Marilyn Moon, who formerly served as a trustee helping to oversee Medicare finances.

White House spokesman Jay Carney says the Wyden-Ryan plan “would end Medicare as we know it for millions of seniors,” causing the traditional program to “wither on the vine.”

But what administration officials don’t say is that Obama’s health care law already puts in place one of Ryan’s main goals by limiting future increases in Medicare spending.

Ryan would do it with a fixed payment for health insurance, adjusted to allow some growth. In theory that compels consumers and medical providers to be more cost-conscious. Obama does it with a powerful board that can force Medicare cuts to service providers if costs rise beyond certain levels and Congress fails to act.

Like several elements of Obama’s health care overhaul, the Independent Payment Advisory Board is in limbo for now, but it is on the books. If the board survives Republican repeal attempts, it could become one of the government’s most important domestic agencies.

The White House wants to keep the existing structure of Medicare while “twisting the dials” to control spending, said a current Medicare trustee, economist Robert Reischauer of the Urban Institute think tank.

Ryan’s latest approach is arguably an evolution of the current Medicare Advantage private insurance program, not a radical change, Reischauer said. That’s particularly so if traditional Medicare remains an option.

“In the hot and heavy political debate we are in, participants are exaggerating the difference between the proposals,” he said.

During failed budget negotiations with Republicans last summer, Obama indicated a willingness to make more major changes to Medicare, including gradually raising the age of eligibility to 67, increasing premiums for many beneficiaries, revamping co-payments and deductibles in ways that would raise costs for retirees, and cutting payments to drugmakers and other providers.

“I was surprised by how much the president was willing to offer in terms of Medicare changes without a more thorough vetting and discussion,” said Moon. Obama says he will veto any plan to cut Medicare benefits without raising taxes on the wealthy.

Democrats are still hoping to use Ryan’s privatization plans as a political weapon against Republicans in 2012, but the Medicare debate could cut both ways. For the 76 million baby boomers signing up over the next couple of decades, it will pay to be watching.

From the associated press as seen in the new York times.

Online:

Medicare: http://www.medicare.gov

Ryan-Wyden plan: http://tinyurl.com/ct7utja

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Don’t Forget Your Carbon Monoxide Alarms

14.11.11

Winter is just around the corner and sometimes we like to use alternative heat source in our homes.  One think that might save you and your families lives is a Carbon Monoxide Alarm.  Below is information that you might find useful about carbon monoxide poisoning and alarms.

More than 400 people are killed each year in the United States from carbon monoxide poisoning, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The American Medical Association reports that carbon monoxide poisoning is the leading cause of accidental poisoning deaths in the United States.

Other CDC studies indicate that more than 20,000 people are hospitalized each year from this gas, and these poisonings are on the rise due in part to economic reasons. With a stressed economy and high unemployment, more families face utility shutoffs. As a result, they employ other sources of heat, such as kerosene heaters, gas generators, and improperly maintained wood stoves and fireplaces. Such heat sources carry a heavy risk of carbon monoxide poisoning.

Carbon monoxide alarms are essential protective devices in homes with gas appliances, gas heaters, and fireplaces. Here are some tips to consider concerning these important alarms.

  • To ensure a high-quality alarm, look for the Underwriters Laboratories certificate on any detector you purchase.
  • Connect these alarms to the smoke alarm system so that any alarm in the house becomes activated if a problem arises.
  • Periodically test these devices according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Batteries should be replaced at least once per year. Replacement of the alarm itself is often necessary after a few years since the average life span of carbon monoxide alarms is relatively short.
  • Verify that you have alarms in bedrooms and other locations where people may sleep since people who are sleeping can die from carbon monoxide poisoning without experiencing any symptoms.

Get more personal lines insurance and risk management tips and ideas from IRMI.

Copyright 2011
International Risk Management Institute, Inc.

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Coat-A-Kid Campaign kicks off today!

14.11.11

Worth Insurance Group is conducting a Coat-A-Kid campaign beginning today.  We’re collecting new and gently used children’s coats to provide to our local elementary and middle school family resource offices.  So, please go through your children’s closet and find last year’s too small coat and drop it off at Worth Insurance Group at 601 Carlton Drive in Owensboro or call Gayle at 926-4438 and provide details for someone to pick it up.   Don’t have last year’s coat anymore?  While you’re shopping for Christmas, please throw a coat into your cart for someone who doesn’t have one!

So many children go the winter without a warm coat, let’s help each other during these hard economic times and share the warmth!  We’ll be collecting coats from now until December 15th!!! Let’s Coat-A-Kid!

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Countdown to Halloween!

26.10.11

Here are some tips to help keep your kids safe.

http://blogs.mutualofomaha.com/articles/2011/10/24/safety-first-take-the-scary-out-of-halloween/

 

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Shun those Cell Phones

19.10.11

I am as guilty as the next person when it comes to cell phones and driving.  After looking at these statistics on distracted driving I hope you will think twice about using your cell phone while driving.

More than 20 percent of injury crashes in the United States involve reports of distracted driving, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). Of those killed in distracted-driving related accidents, 18 percent involved the usage of a cell phone. Another study indicates that using a cell phone while driving, whether it is a hand-held or hands-free device, delays a driver’s reactions as much as having a blood alcohol concentration at the legal limit of .08 percent.

Cell phones, and particularly smart phones, are considered one of the leading driver distractions. As a result, more and more communities are placing restrictions on drivers’ use of cell phones. The following tips are offered to motorists with regard to cell phone use in vehicles.

  • You should wait until the car trip is complete before placing a call. Your cell phone’s voicemail feature should answer a call while you are driving.
  • Absolutely essential calls should only be performed while stopped. However, it is not wise to pull over on the side of the road where a rear-end collision is possible. Instead, you should pull into a parking lot to perform this task.
  • The phone should be placed where it is easy to see and reach.
  • You should take advantage of speed-dialing capabilities.
  • You should never drive and talk on the cell phone during stressful, emotional, or complex discussions since the risk of an accident is heightened.
  • You should consider using a hands-free cellular phone since some studies indicated that these are safer to use.
  • You should never text message while driving.

Get more personal lines insurance and risk management tips and ideas from IRMI.

Copyright 2011
International Risk Management Institute, Inc.

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Anthem network news for group and individual health plans

06.10.11

Walgreens, a pharmacy retailer, has announced its intent to exit the Express Scripts pharmacy provider network when its current contract expires on December 31, 2011.

What does this mean?
Unless an agreement is reached between Express Scripts and Walgreens, our members will no longer be able to receive coverage for their prescription medications from Walgreens pharmacies, beginning January 1, 2012. This will also affect members who are using other pharmacies owned by Walgreens, most notably Duane Reade Pharmacy in the New York City metro region, Happy Harry’s Pharmacy in several northeastern states and OptionCare.

Access to other retail pharmacies within the pharmacy provider network will be available, as the Express Scripts pharmacy network contains more than 56,000 pharmacies without Walgreens. On average, there is another network pharmacy within one-half mile of a Walgreens pharmacy.

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Bad Weather Driving

04.10.11

One of the lessons I guess nearly all of us can remember from our school days is the Aesop’s fable of the tortoise and the hare. The basic message is: slow and steady beats fast and furious.

Well, okay, maybe that isn’t always true, but I often think of it when some tail-gater pulls out and zooms past me on the highway only to meet up again at the next traffic signal. They never seem to learn the lesson or realize the unnecessary risks they take.

Bad weather driving adds to those risks by throwing all sorts of extra hazards at us – earlier darkness in most places, rain, snow and ice, plus road surfaces pitted and pot-holed either by the weather or studded/chained tires.

This calls for extra caution when you’re driving and though I’m not urging you to travel at tortoise speed, it is important that you allow extra time for your journey and ease off on the gas, no matter how rushed you feel.

I thought it might be helpful to pass on a few more weather safety driving tips. Even if you already know them – most are commonsense anyway – sometimes re-reading them helps fix them in your mind before your next road trip.

This is especially important if you happen to be traveling to an area, for the Holidays or a vacation say, where the roads will be unfamiliar and perhaps the driving conditions tougher than those you’re used to.  Here are my Top 10 rules:

  1. Put your headlights on, even during daytime. Many vehicles now do this automatically but if yours isn’t one of them, get into the habit of switching on.
  2. Leave more space between you and the vehicle in front. If it’s wet, you need at least twice the normal stopping distance. In snow and ice it can10-times, yes 10 times, the distance!
  3. Following on from the above point, always brake slowly when roads are slippery; slamming on the brakes leads to skids.
  4. Keep your eyes peeled for cyclists and walkers who will not be as visible during rain or darkness, especially if they don’t wear reflective gear.
  5. Don’t try to drive through a flooded area. You may see others driving through deep water; before following them, just think of the consequences of breaking down there.
  6. Take a cellphone and an emergency breakdown kit that includes a lighted warning triangle; if your car breaks down erect the triangle use your car’s flashing warning lights.
  7. Take weatherproof clothing. Even if you don’t intend to get out of the car, you may not have a choice.
  8. If you’re planning a long journey or driving through an isolated area, take extra clothing, food supplies and water.
  9. If weather conditions are severe, or there’s a storm warning, think twice about whether the journey is really necessary. If you do go, take chains if there’s ice or snow.
  10. Bad weather driving demands extra concentration. Turn the music (and the cellphone) off and limit potential distractions, from children, even noisy adults, and pets.

Plus, of course, leave early and take your time. Meeting hurriers at the traffic signal is one thing. Seeing them in the aftermath of an accident is another. I don’t want you to be one of them.

Jason Worth
Worth Insurance Group (800) 537-7968

Worth Insurance Group, 601A Carlton Dr., Owensboro KY, 42303© 2011 All rights reserved.

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Pursue Those Auto Insurance Discounts

15.09.11

Its easy to throw out numbers like 40% savings and 15% in 15 minutes but what does all those savings really mean.  Actually there are so many factors that go into rating your Auto & Home that if you hit all the right buttons you could get up to 60% or more in savings.  One way to avoid paying too much for your personal automobile insurance is to insure you are getting all the discounts you deserve. The following are discounts you should inquire about. Some may not be available in all states and from all insurers, but it doesn’t hurt to ask. These discounts may significantly affect your insurance premium.

  •  “Defensive Driving Discount.” This discount can save you 10 percent on most of the major coverages under your auto policy, such as liability, medical payments, and collision coverage. Defensive driving courses can cost as little as $20 and last as few as 5 or 6 hours. However, the discount normally applies for 3 years. For example, if your auto insurance premium is $100 per month, the premium is $3,600 for 3 years. If liability, collision, and medical payments or personal injury protection coverage constitute 85 percent of this $3,600 premium, the resulting premium subject to this discount is $3,060. In this scenario, the actual premium savings would be $306 (10 percent of $3,060) for that 3-year period. To get the true savings, you must deduct the cost of the defensive driving class. If the cost is $26, the savings in this example would be reduced to $280. If you spend 6 hours taking the class, you are earning $47 per hour in savings—not an unproductive way to spend a Saturday!
  • “Good Student Discount.” Statistics show that good students tend to be more reliable and mature than students with marginal grades, leading to better driving decisions. Therefore, many states allow a 5 to 10 percent discount if your student driver makes good grades, usually an overall “A” or “B” average in high school or college. If your child has to pay his or her own automobile insurance, this will be another motivator for him or her to make good grades.
  • “Home/Car Discount.” Many insurers offer discounts of 10 percent or more if they provide both your homeowners and personal automobile insurance. This can lower your costs on both policies.
  •  “Auto Safety Features.” Most insurers recognize that owners with cars containing safety features may have fewer accidents and reduced injuries. Many insurers encourage drivers to purchase cars with anti-lock brakes by giving small discounts for these safety features. Other insurers give discounts for vehicles with airbags and daytime running lights.
  •  “Auto Club and Professional Organizations.” Some insurance companies offer auto insurance discounts if you are a member of AAA or similar organizations.
  •  “Multi-car.” Many insurance companies provide generous discounts up to 15 percent if you have multiple cars on your policy. This reduces the insurance company’s administrative costs, on a per-vehicle basis, in issuing the policy.
  •  “Long-Term Customer.” More insurance companies are offering discounts of 5 to 10 percent if you stay with them at least 5 years.
  • “Claims-Free Customer.” If you have been insured with the same insurance company for at least 3 years and have not experienced any losses, inquire about a claims-free customer discount. These discounts help insurers retain customers with excellent driving records.

Copyright 2008, International Risk Management Institute, Inc.

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Helping Parents and Teenage Drivers

06.09.11

Here lately I have been getting a lot of questions about teenage drivers.  There are  many things parents and teens can do to make sure that it is a safe, cost effective and enjoyable experience for both.

1. First teens make sure you are a A/B student.  Grades are the biggest discount to a teen drivers rate.  They also show responsibility to the insurance carrier that the teen is more concerned about grades than driving.

2. Drivers training is a good way for the teen to learn road rules and get comfortable behind the wheel under the guidance of a certified instructor.  Drivers training also gives a discount to the teen drivers rate.

3.  When choosing a car make sure that it is a nice used car!  I know all  teens want the latest sport car but they are just not particle for a teen driver.  Make sure it is something reliable that if all possible you don’t have to add full coverage to.  Some models to think about are the Ford Focus, Toyota Camry, Honda Accord, Hyundai Sonata and so on.  Some small SUV s are okay but make sure they are not the short wheel based models.

These are things that help your pricing but there are also other things as parents you can do to help your teens.

  • Help coach your son or daughter.  Don’t just getting them involved in a  Drivers training class and think everything is okay.  Have open and frank discussion about there driving and also set rules like curfews, number of people in the car, where the car can go and can’t go, and so forth.
  • Utilize Emergency Roadside Service.  If you do not belong to a motor club, you should consider joining one that provides 24-hour emergency road service.  That way your teenager may call for help at any time if they need it.
  • Have an Open Discussion about DUI.  While no one wants to think about the possibility of their teenager drinking and driving- or being in a car with an impaired friend at the wheel-we need to be realistic.  History has shown that teenagers will experiment with alcohol.  You should make it clear to your teen that driving after drinking is not acceptable.  However, if they ever do drink, or are in a car with someone else who is impaired, make it clear to your teen that he or she can call you at any time of the day or night and that you will come to get them-no questions asked.

When your son or daughter gets a drivers license, call us to help you review various options for both of you.  It is important for you-and your son or daughter-to remember that, yes, your auto insurance rates will go up, but they will come down after a couple of years of driving experience.  However, the rates will go up if your teenager has tickets or gets into accidents also.

copyright 2008, International Risk Management Institute, Inc.

 

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Personal Catastrophe Planning

29.08.11

The prevalence of major catastrophes such as tornadoes, floods, hurricanes, and earthquakes drive home the point that personal catastrophe planning is an essential part of any personal risk management program.  Catastrophes, whether natural or man-made, can strike individuals and families at any time without warning.  You should develop a comprehensive disaster plan that addresses the following nine items.

  1. Identify hazards in your home, such as frayed wires or large amounts of gasoline stored in the garage.  Hazards should be reduced as much as possible.
  2. Learn first aid and CPR skills, which can lessen injuries after they occur.
  3. Make certain your children learn your full name, address, and phone number at the earliest possible age.
  4. Develop an emergency evacuation plan.  For example, you should work with family members to establish escape routes and rehearse these periodically.
  5. Establish a disaster meeting place and an outside family contact.  For a sudden emergency, a location right outside the home should be arranged.  Consider designating a friend or relative in another city as a common contact through whom the family can communicate if separated by a disaster.
  6. Keep an adequate water storage supply to use in the event you become stuck in your home.  Several days’ worth of bottled water should be stored in a cool, dark location.
  7. Prepare a food supply, including canned meats, fruits, and vegetables.  You should include a manual can opener and disposable utensils and plates along with the food.
  8. Store emergency supplies, such as a first aid kit, flashlights, batteries, prescriptions, and a lantern.
  9. Prepare a portable pet disaster supply kit for pets, including dry food, portable water, and proof of vaccination.  Proper identification on the pets is essential.
  10. Practice, modify, and maintain the plan every 6 months.

Copyright 2008, International Risk Management Institute, Inc.

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