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The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Young Adult Outreach and Education.

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Presentation on theme: "The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Young Adult Outreach and Education."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Young Adult Outreach and Education

2 Who are Young Invincibles?

3  How does the ACA affect young adults  Young adult outreach Overview

4 How many people in Texas lack health insurance? Texas currently has the highest uninsured population of any state in the country

5 Uninsured Young Adults in Texas  Currently over 2.5 million uninsured 18-35 year olds  38% of young people are uninsured

6 What Parts of the ACA Affect Young Adults?

7  Under 26 can stay on parent’s plan  Under 19 – no denial for pre- existing conditions  Free Preventive Care – no co-pays on screenings and check-ups Wins for Young Adults

8  Previously unregulated  Now subject to standardized ACA requirements  Must include certain benefits  80/20 Ratio Student Health Plans

9 Women’s Health  Well-women visits  Support for breastfeeding  Domestic violence screening and counseling  Mammograms and cancer screenings

10 Contraception  As of Aug 2012, new health insurance plans must cover contraception with no co-pay  Religiously-affiliated institutions get 1 year delay  After Aug. 2013, employees and students get coverage directly from insurance companies  Religious institutions exempt

11 What Changes Will Come in 2014?

12  Medicaid Expansion  Subsidies  Exchanges/Marketplaces  Growth of CHCs  Individual Mandate Changes to Come

13  Currently eligible:  Low-income children and pregnant women  Working parents only if income = or <26% of FPL  Eligible in 2014:  EVERYONE <133% of FPL  States can decide whether to expand  Gov. Perry opposed, state legislature will decide  1.5 million young adults Texas and Medicaid

14  Those making 133-400% of the federal poverty level (FPL) will qualify for subsidies (tax credits) to buy insurance on the exchange  133% of FPL for 1 person is $14,900  44% of FPL for 1 person is $44,000 Subsidies/Tax Credits

15 How Much of a Subsidy? FPLIncomePremiumTax CreditActual Cost 133%$1,238$282$243$40 250%$2,327$282$101$181 Subsidies based on Silver healthcare plan. Individuals can receive subsidy but apply to Bronze plan to save money.

16  Can shop for insurance  Each state is different, some will have federally- facilitated exchanges (FFEs)  Subsidies applied directly Ex-cha-cha-cha-Changes

17 Exchanges in the States  In July 2012, Governor Rick Perry informed HHS that Texas will not create a state exchange program  TX, AK, LA, FL, SC, NH, and ME will have a federally-facilitated exchange programs Picture Source: Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

18  Currently 7,000 CHCs provide care to 20 million individuals  Collectively financed at $2.2 billion  Provisions in ACA expected to finance 14,000 CHCs at $11 billion, doubling patient population Growth of Community Health Centers (CHCs)

19  No Annual Limits  Tax Credit for employers  Catastrophic plans  Marketed to the young  Targets those with financial hardship Other important parts of the ACA Picture Source: http://wymancenter.org/the-importance-of-bulking-up-the-muscle-of-perseverance/

20  Individuals must have qualifying health insurance  If not, penalties  $95 the first year  Rises by 2016  Exemptions Individual Mandate and Penalties Picture Source: http://thepinkleague.com/2012/08/30/so-whats-the-lowdown-the-basics-of-football-part-2/

21 Jessica, 19 years old  Part-time student, part-time job  $10,000/year before taxes ~ 90% of poverty  Without Medicaid expansion, she doesn’t qualify for Medicaid and would not have health insurance

22 Jeff, 21 years old  Part-time student, full-time construction worker  Earns $23,000/year  Takes home: $1,580/month  Total health premium: $282/month  With tax credits he pays: $120/month

23 Outreach and Education for Young Adults in Texas

24  Health Care Outreach  Mobile Technology  Social Media  Challenges  Navigators  Timeline Overview

25  Traditional Outreach  Tabling  Group Presentations  Hosting events  New Outreach Strategies Health Care Outreach

26  Your Healthcare Finder  Find doctors in the area  For Android and iPhoneAndroidiPhone  Mobile Website  Text Message Services  QR Codes  Can be scanned and direct users to your website Mobile Outreach

27  Facebook  Create events  Send news updates  Twitter  Connect with new people  Coordinate plans  Retweet  Be fun! Using Social Media Picture Source: Wikimedia Commons

28  It’s expensive  ACA offers new options  I’m young and healthy  Injuries can happen to anyone  Make it personal  I don’t believe in health insurance  Uninsured drives up health care costs  Individual mandate requires insurance Why do I need Insurance?

29  State exchanges – formal “Navigator” program  States with federal exchanges – likely assistance on outreach Navigators & Assisters

30  Present – end of 2012:  Educate young adults about ACA  Ensure young adults are on dependent coverage  Jan 2013 – Oct 2013:  Educate young adults about the upcoming Exchanges.  Oct 1 st, 2013 – March 31 st, 2014  Open enrollment for exchanges  Ensure young adults are getting subsidies and Medicaid, if possible Timeline: What to Look For

31  ACA is phasing in, some changes already underway  Many uninsured young adults in Texas  Outreach and education  Traditional outreach  Social media and mobile technology  Big changes in 2013 Key Takeaways


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