The Gerontological Society of America has published a summary of how the health care reform bills will impact older adults.
http://www.geron.org/HCRprovisions.pdf I mentioned the Class Act before, but his also has a clear summary of how Medicare Advantage will change etc.
Snip:
H.R. 3590 contains several beneficial Medicare provisions. It will:
o Provide a 50 percent discount on brand-name drugs and biologics filled in the Medicare Part D coverage gap (doughnut hole) for enrollees with incomes below $85,000 per individual and $170,000 per couple;*
o Eliminate Part D cost-sharing for full-benefit dual eligible beneficiaries receiving home- and community-based services;
o Reduce the Medicare Part D coverage gap (doughnut hole) by $500 in 2010 (2010 only);*
o Cover, with no co-payment or deductible, an annual wellness visit and creation of a personalized prevention assessment and plan. Prevention services include referrals to education and preventive counseling or community-based interventions to address risk factors.
o Tie Medicare Part D premiums to income, and will move more Part B and Part D beneficiaries into higher-income categories — meaning higher premiums —due to a freeze on thresholds.*
* NOTE: Medicare Part D (e.g. closure of the Medicare Part D doughnut hole) and Medicare Advantage payment provisions will be modified by the Reconciliation Act of 2010 (H.R. 4872) if passed by the Senate.
Insurance Reforms
• Six months after enactment, insurance companies can no longer deny children coverage based on a preexisting condition.
• Starting in 2014, insurance companies cannot deny coverage to anyone with preexisting conditions.
• Effective six months after enactment, insurance companies must allow dependents up to age 26 to remain covered on their parents’ insurance plans.