UPMC and Highmark Reach Agreement
December 22, 2011 No Comments
Paul O’Neil now is the time for action
December 21, 2011 No Comments
Coverage defended!
Alas, the Super Committee failed. Now, we wait for the next dance step in this dysfunctional, disagreeable, and disappointing collection of legislators, whom, lest we forget, are there to work for us……sigh……
For the critical programs of Medicaid and Medicare we remain in defense mode and we continue our creativity as evidenced in our “Keep Pennsylvania Covered Advocacy Quilt.” If only, a “stitch in time” could save Medicaid and Medicare…….
Advocates gathered and rallied in front of Senator Pat Toomey’s (he of the failed Super Committee) office and displayed the quilt squares from the western part of the Commonwealth. Our squares will be joined with those from advocates efforts in the eastern part of the state and the full quilt will be given to Senator Toomey.
Our vision is that when Senator Toomey contemplates and legislates, he will read these messages from his unique advocacy quilt:
“Don’t hurt the people that need your help the most”
“Cost shift to states will put us in reverse”
“Help put the pieces of the health care system together instead of taking them apart.”
We will continue to write, visit, call, rally, and be creative in our advocacy. Our message is spoken most clearly in the lives of those who rely on Medicaid and Medicare. Persons like Denise, a dual-eligible, who lives with multiple chronic health conditions and who is fierce in her independence and shared, “I worked hard my whole life, raised my three kids, and I need these programs to continue my independence and to live my life fully. I am not ‘those people.’ I have a name, a story, a life and I plan on living it well and building my community so others can too.”
The advocacy continues……join us.
sj;
November 23, 2011 Comments Off
St. Margaret Mary Church Health Fair
Title: St. Margaret Mary Church Health Fair
Location: One Parish Place, Moon Twp (Coraopolis), PA 15108
Description: Our outreach staff will be available at this health fair to answer questions and and help families apply for free or low-cost public health programs. Stop by and see us!
Start Time: 10:00am
Date: 2011-11-05
End Time: 12:30pm
October 24, 2011 Comments Off
Editorial asks Gov. Corbett to weigh in on UPMC v. Highmark
Dear Gov. Corbett: We’re about to lose our affordable UPMC access …
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Yet we never thought it could happen. Not in Pittsburgh, the home of so much world-class medicine. The city where sheiks and princes come to be healed. The place where relatives and friends drive in from out of state for cancer care, children’s surgery and specialty treatment not available where they live.
We used to take pride in having quality care that was close at hand, so much so that we’ve given willingly every year to Children’s Hospital, we’ve been happy to see taxpayer-provided grants go to UPMC facilities and we’ve watched our well-endowed neighbors offer tremendous philanthropy to build new UPMC centers.
But now we’re caught between two feuding giants — UPMC, which controls most of the region’s health care, and Highmark, which issues most of the region’s health insurance — and it’s the average folks of Western Pennsylvania who are about to be trampled. That’s because UPMC, its CEO Jeffrey Romoff, its executive officers and supposedly its 24 directors are against negotiating a new service agreement with Highmark.
After June 30, when the current 10-year contract lapses, we, as Highmark customers, will not be entitled to in-network access at most of UPMC’s 20 hospitals. A one-year rollout, or grace period, after that will let us continue to receive affordable care for 12 more months under our Highmark plans. UPMC insists, however, that the grace doesn’t apply to our relationships with its doctors. All those years of care, treatment and support — “life changing medicine” as UPMC calls it — will end eight months from now, says the hospital network.
Highmark is willing to talk about reaching a new agreement, but all UPMC wants to discuss is terms of the divorce. Well, we’re not interested. Nor do we buy the Romoff Remedy: Just switch health plans, which the $4-million-a-year executive says plenty of people do anyway “once a year.”
We won’t because we helped build the empire that is UPMC and our premiums helped create the near-monopoly that is Highmark. As so-called nonprofits under the state public charities law, they each had a bundle left after expenses last year — $406 million at UPMC and $462 million at Highmark. The way we see it, those profits, reaped from large companies and small firms, rich and poor families alike, oblige them to work things out.
Trouble is, UPMC doesn’t see it that way. That’s why Pennsylvanians must turn to their elected officials. Various members of the Legislature, thank goodness, have gotten active on the UPMC-Highmark split to try to drive the parties back to negotiations.
Rep. Dan Frankel, a Squirrel Hill Democrat, has introduced a bill that would require binding arbitration if UPMC and Highmark fail to reach an agreement covering Children’s Hospital, Magee-Womens Hospital, Hillman Cancer Center, Western Psychiatric, UPMC cancer centers and the health care workers who provide care at those facilities. The bill has 73 co-sponsors — 57 Democrats and 16 Republicans — who blanket Western Pennsylvania.
Rep. Tony DeLuca, D-Penn Hills, has a bill with bipartisan support from 60 co-sponsors that would give the state insurance commissioner power to order that a contract between a feuding hospital and insurer be continued if it were in the public’s interest.
These bills are unusual. But the pressure is critical, necessary and a reminder to UPMC that it can’t profess to serve patients in one breath, then treat them like chattel in the next. Here’s where you come in, Gov. Corbett.
It’s time for you to use the power of your office. It’s why you were elected, after all. We know that, as a Republican, it goes against your grain to interfere in what some might call a business dispute. But this is no mere disagreement — it’s a public war, and a war on the public, that will take its toll on the medical treatment of innocent people, that makes this region look dysfunctional on how its health care and health insurance intersect and that will hurt Pennsylvania from an economic development standpoint.
If this kind of crisis, unfolding in your city, doesn’t call for a governor’s intervention, then we can’t imagine one that does. Gov. Corbett, it’s up to you to bring them to the table, for the health of Pittsburgh, for the sake of Pennsylvania.
Sincerely wishing it weren’t true,
3 million Highmark customers
Read more:
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11296/1183974-192-0.stm?cmpid=newspanel6
October 24, 2011 Comments Off












