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National Health Insurance Act (644): Difference between revisions

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== '''DrugNational DependencyHealth Treatment and RehabilitationInsurance Act (644)''' ==
''An replacement to Article 3 under the The Public Hospitals and Healthcare Act (635) to ensure that all Kodiak citizens have absolute universal access to affordable health insurance. The National Health Service Amendment has the potential to improve individual health and ultimately population health by providing healthcare for citizens based on need and not the ability to pay while also slowing the rising cost of healthcare. The budget range is estimated to be 18000 - 22000 million.''
''A resolution to reduce Kodiak citizen drug dependence rates. Punishing people for taking illegal drugs only goes so far. What people need is treatment, and a long term plan to get people off their dependence on drugs. These schemes aim to fight the drug issue by reducing demand and assisting rehabilitation, instead of limiting supply and introducing penalties. While some may think of this as enabling, research has proven that this is a good way to fight drug abuse in the long run. The budget range is estimated to be in between 43-138 million.''
 
=== '''Article 1 - DrugThe DependencyRemoval Rehabilitationof Article 3 Under the Public Hospitals and TreatmentHealtcare Act (635)''' ===
1.1 - Hereby strikes said Article of said Act and render it null and void.
1.1 - Mandate suspected drug dependents to be subject to testing in health facilities if drugs can be proven to be in their system during the time of arrest.
 
=== '''Article 2 - Mandatory Purchase of Private Comprehensive Health Insurance and Subsidization of Such Purchase''' ===
1.2 - Mandate medically diagnosed drug dependents to attend treatment and rehabilitation procedures.
1.1 - Mandates all Kodiak citizens to upgrade their insurance package from their choice of private insurer to a comprehensive package within thirty days.
 
* 1.1.1 - Regulations implemented under this act include dependents that no longer live with their parents, are not a dependent on a parent's tax return, are no longer a student, or are married.
=== '''Article 2 - Right Of Anonymity for Drug Dependents''' ===
1.1 - Obligate medical diagnosis of drug dependence and related procedures to grant suspected dependents or diagnosed dependents the right to remain anonymous through test exchange programs between facilities so each facility does not know the identity of the subject they're testing. Each subject and test are to be assigned an identification number to preserve the confidentiality of the subject. After testing, the tests are then to be sent back to the original facility into numbered lockers corresponding to the subject's identification number for the subject to collect.
 
* 1.1.2 - Should a Kodiak citizen choose to be insured by a health care association plan provided by their employer, their insurance contributions shall be deducted automatically from their salary.
=== '''Article 3 - Approaches to Drug Dependency Rehabilitation and Treatment''' ===
1.1 - Legalize methadone, buprenorphine and naltrexone, opioids that acts on the same targets in the brain as drugs such as heroin and morphine solely for medicinal purposes to treat opioid addictions, help re-establish normal brain functions and decrease cravings. All medications help patients reduce drug seeking and related criminal behavior and help them become more open to behavioral treatments.
 
1.2 - Mandates all non-residents residing in Kodiak for over a calendar year purchase comprehensive health insurance from their choice of private insurance for the duration of their stay.
* 1.1.1 - Methadone and buprenorphine suppress withdrawal symptoms and relieve cravings.
 
1.3 - Allows residents who are citizens of nations with public health services maintaining an agreement of reciprocity with the Kodiak Republic Department of Health exemption from the mandates of this Article.
* 1.1.2 - Naltrexone blocks the effects of opioids at their receptor sites in the brain and should be used only in patients who have already been detoxified. 1.1.3 - Both a buprenorphine/naloxone combination and an extended release naltrexone formulation are similarly effective in treating opioid addiction. Because full detoxification is necessary for treatment with naloxone, initiating treatment among active users will be difficult, but once detoxification is complete, both medications have shown similar effectiveness under testing circumstances.
 
2.1 - Should any qualified person fail to oblige with the mandates of this Article, they are mandated to pay a fine. The fine will be either 1000 Kodiak Florins or 2.5% of a person’s annual income, whichever means of being fined is available to the person.
1.2 - Approve bupropion and varenicline to be available over the counter for nicotine dependents.
 
* 2.1.1 - A person who fails to pay the penalty shall not be subject to any criminal prosecution or penalty and cannot have liens or levies placed on their property, but the Ministry of Revenue and Treasury will be able to withhold future tax refunds from them.
* 1.2.1 - Varenicline and bupropion work differently in the brain, but both help prevent relapse in dependents trying to quit nicotine addiction.
 
3.1 - Mandates the Kodiak government subsidize the purchase of insurance for all consumers.
1.3 - Approve naltrexone, acamprosate and disulfiram to treat alcohol addiction. While these drugs are experimental, they have shown great potential and promise in clinical trials.
 
* 3.1.1 - Consumers within the lower-income bracket will have their purchase of health insurance subsidized fully by the Kodiak government.
* 1.3.1 - Naltrexone blocks opioid receptors that are involved in the rewarding effects of drinking and in the craving for alcohol. It reduces relapse to heavy drinking and is highly effective in some patients. Genetic differences may affect how well the drug works in certain patients.
 
* 3.1.2 - Consumers within the middle-income bracket will have their purchase of health insurance subsidized seventy five percent (75%) by the Kodiak government, with the consumer having to pay twenty five percent (25%) themselves.
* 1.3.2 - Acamprosate may reduce symptoms of long-lasting withdrawal, such as insomnia, anxiety, restlessness, and dysphoria. It may be more effective in patients with severe addiction.
 
* 3.1.3 - Consumers within the upper-income bracket will have their purchase of health insurance subsidized sixty percent (60%) by the Kodiak government, with the consumer having to pay forty percent (40%) themselves.
* 1.3.3 - Disulfiram interferes with the breakdown of alcohol. Acetaldehyde builds up in the body, leading to unpleasant reactions that include warmth and redness in the face, nausea, and irregular heartbeat if the patient drinks alcohol. Compliance, meaning taking the drug as prescribed, may be a problem, but it may help patients who are highly motivated to quit drinking.
 
4.1 - A 1000 Kodiak Florin per employee penalty will be imposed on employers with more than fifty (50) full-time employees who do not offer health insurance to their full-time workers.
1.4 - The practitioner, before dispensing medicinal drugs to patients for treatment, is mandated to submit to the Ministry of Health and Education a notification of intent to begin dispensing such drugs for that purpose, including certifications that the practitioner is a qualifying physician, defined to mean a physician who is licensed under State law and meets specified training and experience requirements, has the capacity to refer the patients for appropriate counseling and other appropriate ancillary, and that drugs have been approved for use in maintenance or detoxification treatment and have not been the subject of an adverse determination, including requiring additional standards regarding the qualifications of practitioners to provide such treatment or requiring standards regarding the quantities of the drugs that may be provided for unsupervised use.
 
* 4.1.1 - "Full-time" is defined as, with respect to any month, an employee who is employed on average at least thirty (30) hours of service per calendar week.
2.1 Mandate the Ministry of Health and Education to issue a treatment improvement protocol containing best practice guidelines for the treatment and maintenance of opiate-dependent patients and to develop the protocol in consultation with the consulted parties and other substance abuse disorder professionals, with the protocol guided by science. Mandate the Ministry to set forth specified procedural requirements to make the guidelines effective.
 
5.1 - A Kodiak state may apply to the Ministry of Health and Education for a renewable five-year waiver. The decision of whether to grant the five-year waiver is up to the ministry. A state with the waiver would be exempt from the requirements of this act. However, the state will not receive compensation for any federal subsidies, tax credits and such for which its residents and employers would have been eligible under the amendment.
3.1 - Increase investment programs training specialists to manage behavioral treatments, such as group and individual therapy as well as telephone quitlines.
 
=== '''Article 42 - CleanGovernment Needle,Regulation CleanUpon LifePrivate ProgramInsurers''' ===
* 3.1.1 - Behavioral therapies help patients by modifying their attitudes and behaviors related to drug use, increasing healthy life skills and assists them to persist with other forms of treatment, such as medication. Patients may receive treatment in many different settings with various approaches, all proven by scientific testing to be serviceable.
1.1 - Mandates Ministry of Education and Health publish, annually, a document known as the mandate which specifies healthcare coverage requirements which insurers should seek to meet.
 
1.2 - Mandates regulations be published annually to give legal force to the mandate.
* 3.1.2 - Mandate the total number of patients of either a sole practitioner or of a group to 30 patients at any one time/authorize the Ministry of Health and Education to set different numerical ceilings according to the number of practitioners in the group practice.
 
2.1 - Insurers are prohibited from imposing lifetime Kodiak Florin limits on essential benefits.
* 3.1.3 - Encouragement of participation may be achieved by granting scholarships to interested students in related fields. This may balance out the specialist deficit once 3.1.2 is executed.
 
3.1 - Insurers are prohibited from excluding pre-existing medical conditions.
=== '''Article 4 - Clean Needle, Clean Life Program''' ===
1.1 - Approve and roll out the Needle and Syringe program (NSP), to renamed Clean Needle, Clean Life (CNCL), a social service to be staffed with paid volunteers that allows injecting drug users to obtain clean and unused hypodermic needles and associated paraphernalia for free.
 
4.1 - All new insurance plans must cover preventive care and medical screenings.
1.2 - It is based on the philosophy of harm reduction that attempts to reduce the risk factors for blood-borne diseases such as HIV/AIDS and hepatitis that will spread through infected needles.
 
5.1 - Insurers are prohibited from charging co-payments, co-insurance, or deductibles for all services provided.
1.3 - Oblige the volunteers to hand out pamphlets issued by the Ministry of Health and Education encouraging them to join the rehabilitation programs.
 
6.1 - Insurers' abilities to enforce annual spending caps are to be restricted.
 
7.1 - Prohibit insurers from dropping policyholders when they get sick.
 
8.1 - Insurers are mandated to reveal details about administrative and executive expenditures.
 
9.1 - Mandate insurers permit dependants to remain on their parents' insurance plan until their 26th birthday.
 
10.1 - Mandate all new insurance plans cover childhood immunizations and adult vaccinations without charging co-payments, co-insurance, or deductibles when provided by an in-network provider.
 
11.1 - Mandate insurers spend 80% (for individual or small group insurers) or 85% (for large group insurers) of premium dollars on health costs and claims, leaving only 20% or 15% respectively for administrative costs and profits, subject to various waivers and exemptions.
 
11.2 - Insurers that fail to meet this requirement are mandated to issue a rebate to the policy holder.
 
12.1 - Prohibit insurers from denying coverage or charging higher rates to any individual based on pre-existing medical conditions or discrimination of any sort.
 
13.1 - Prohibits patient eligibility waiting periods in excess of 90 days for group health plan coverage. The 90-day rule applies to all insurers.
 
* 13.1.1 - Plans will still be allowed to impose eligibility requirements based on factors other than the lapse of time; for example, a health plan can restrict eligibility to employees who work at a particular location or who are in an eligible job classification. The waiting period limitation means that coverage must be effective no later than the 91st day after the employee satisfies the substantive eligibility requirements.
 
=== '''Article 3 - Goverment Funding of Employer Healthcare Association Plans''' ===
1.1 - Companies that provide early retiree benefits are eligible to participate in a temporary program that reduces premium costs.
 
2.1 - Two years of tax credits will be offered to qualified small businesses. To receive the full benefit of a 50% premium subsidy, said business must have at least five full-time employees.
 
* 2.1.1 - Seasonal employees, owners and their relations are not considered as an employee under this amendment.
 
=== '''Article 4 - Transparency of Insurers''' ===
1.1 - Mandate the Ministry of Health and Education provide consumer insurance information for individuals and small businesses in all states.
 
2.1 Mandate Insurance companies use simpler, more standardized paperwork with the intention of helping consumers make apples-to-apples comparisons between the prices and benefits of different health plans.
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