Senate to Put LTCI Under the Microscope 04/16/12

By Allison Bell

The Senate Special Committee on Aging wants to look for ways to save money on long-term care (LTC), and also to talk about the future of private long-term care insurance (LTCI).

The committee has scheduled an LTC hearing to start at 2 p.m. EDT Wednesday.

The people of the United States spent $294 billion on paid LTC in 2009, and LTC services accounted for 14% of all U.S. spending on personal health care services that year, committee staffers note in the hearing announcement.

Medicaid spent $209 billion on LTC, Medicare spent $63 billion, and patients and their families spent $52 billion the staffers say.

"The hearing will focus on the long-term care system and opportunities for improving the quality of care while at the same time achieving significant cost savings," the staffers say. "The hearing will also highlight the need, risks and costs of long-term care insurance, especially for working Americans. "

The chairman of the committee, Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wis., has put out an initial hearing witness list that includes Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former Congressional Budget Office (CBO) director; John O'Brien, the director of health care and insurance at the U.S. Office of Personnel Management; Loren Colman, the assistant commissioner in charge of LTC at the Minnesota Department of Human Services; Judy Feder, a professor at Georgetown University; and Dr. Bruce Chernof, president of The SCAN Foundation, Long Beach, Calif.

None of the witnesses on the initial witness list appears to have significant experience with designing, pricing, underwriting, selling or administering private LTCI products.
 
By Allison Bell

The Senate Special Committee on Aging wants to look for ways to save money on long-term care (LTC), and also to talk about the future of private long-term care insurance (LTCI).

The committee has scheduled an LTC hearing to start at 2 p.m. EDT Wednesday.

The people of the United States spent $294 billion on paid LTC in 2009, and LTC services accounted for 14% of all U.S. spending on personal health care services that year, committee staffers note in the hearing announcement.

Medicaid spent $209 billion on LTC, Medicare spent $63 billion, and patients and their families spent $52 billion the staffers say.

"The hearing will focus on the long-term care system and opportunities for improving the quality of care while at the same time achieving significant cost savings," the staffers say. "The hearing will also highlight the need, risks and costs of long-term care insurance, especially for working Americans. "

The chairman of the committee, Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wis., has put out an initial hearing witness list that includes Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former Congressional Budget Office (CBO) director; John O'Brien, the director of health care and insurance at the U.S. Office of Personnel Management; Loren Colman, the assistant commissioner in charge of LTC at the Minnesota Department of Human Services; Judy Feder, a professor at Georgetown University; and Dr. Bruce Chernof, president of The SCAN Foundation, Long Beach, Calif.

None of the witnesses on the initial witness list appears to have significant experience with designing, pricing, underwriting, selling or administering private LTCI products.



run for the hills!

:swoon:
:goofy:
:no:
:1baffled:
:1rolleyes:
:skeptical:


mred
 
This only serves to prove that LTCi, just like health insurance and life insurance is a ripoff. Insurance companies should not be allowed to make a profit.

Rick
 
Re: Senate to Put LTCI Under the Microscope: Update

LTCI hearing: All politics is personal
4/23/12
By Allison Bell

The Federal Long Term Care Insurance Program (LTCIP) played a direct role in shaping thinking at this week's Senate hearing on long-term care (LTC) financing.

John O'Brien, the director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) and the manager of the FLTCIP, was one of the witnesses, and Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., talked about his own conflicted feelings about the brochure toward the end of the hearing, which was organized by the Senate Special Committee on Aging.

Udall, who was born in 1950, asked about concerns about a possible growing lack of competition in the private LTCI market, and strategies that could be used to get baby boomers to think about LTC planning and buying LTCI.

O'Brien acknowledged that OPM has questions about the state of the LTCI market.

The current vendor has done a good job, but "when we re-upped our contract, we only had one active bidder," O'Brien said. "The market has stayed relatively static. It is one of the challenges for us."

O'Brien said he hadn't yet responded to the FLTCIP brochure he himself has from OPM.

"I keep on thinking I'll find a moment when I want to do that," O'Brien said.

Later, O'Brien said he could help FLTCIP enrollment numbers if he signed up.

"You can sign up any time," O'Brien said. "You can do it in the hearing."

Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former Congressional Budget Office (CBO) director, said getting voluntary employer programs like the FLTCIP to get potential participants sign up may be important to making the private LTCI market more sustainable.

Creating the broadest possible risk pool is always an issue in individual insurance markets, and, for private LTCI, "this is a very thin individual market at the moment," Holtz-Eakin said.
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Comment:
It's interesting that there are senate hearing taking place about LTCi and not one person from the LTCi industry is involved.

Why doesn't that surprise me?

 
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