|
NORD’s Washington Office
NORD provides advocacy for all members of the rare-disease community. We strive to
focus public attention on the need for funding for research, for access to treatments,
and for fair and reasonable insurance and reimbursement options. Every voice is
important in this process, and the NORD staff encourages everyone to become educated
about the issues and involved in solving them. You are invited to visit this Web page
often to read about ways you can become an advocate. Current areas of interest are
listed below. For additional information on these and other topics related to
rare-disease advocacy, contact:
Diane Dorman
NORD Vice President for Public Policy
ddorman@rarediseases.org
(202) 496-1296

Diane Dorman testifying on Capitol Hill
Diane welcomes your questions related to policy issues.
Medical questions should be directed to NORD’s Registered Nurse
(RN@rarediseases.org) or NORD’s genetic counselor
(Genetic_Counselor@rarediseases.org).
Lifetime Insurance Caps Bills Introduced in Congress
NORD recently sent the following Legislative Alert to its member organizations:
Health Insurance Coverage Protection Act
HR 6528 Sponsored by Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-14th CA)
S 2706 Sponsored by Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-ND)
Rep. Anna Eshoo and Senator Byron Dorgan have introduced legislation to address
the aggregate spending limits placed on insurance policies after which the
policy no longer provides coverage. This issue is of particular interest to
those with rare diseases who require often high cost orphan drug therapies and
chronic care.
Background
According to a 2007 Kaiser Family Foundation survey of employer-sponsored health
plans (2007 Annual Survey of Employer Health Benefits):
- Over half of the employer-sponsored health plans and seventy percent of
private individual insurance plans set aggregate lifetime caps on covered
benefits.
- In some cases smaller firms' health plans lifetime caps are set at a higher
level than large firms.
- 76% of employer-sponsored HMO plans and 33% of PPO plans have no lifetime
caps.
- Employer-sponsored plans with caps are most typically set at $2-$3 million.
The Health Insurance Coverage Protection Act will phase in an increase in
minimum lifetime caps in private insurance plans to $10 million with an annual
inflationary index thereafter. This legislation will allow people with high cost
chronic conditions who have private insurance to maintain their coverage and not
have to seek public assistance such as Medicaid or state high-risk pools. For
many with rare diseases, a lifetime cap of $1 million is sometimes inadequate.
Specifically, HR 6528 and S 2706:
- Sets the minimum level of a lifetime cap placed on a group health plan at $5
million for the first two years and $10 million in years three and four.
- Provides for an annual inflationary adjustment to a group insurance plan's
lifetime cap based on the consumer price index in subsequent years.
- Exempts health plans offered to businesses with few than 20 employees, but
would require that health plans meeting the parameters of the bill be offered to
a small business at the employer's request.
- Calls for an Institute of Medicine (IOM) study to determine the number of
individuals who reach their lifetime caps.
How you can help
Contact your Representative and Senators asking them to cosponsor HR 6528 or S
2706:
- Visit www.congress.org and enter your zip code in the small box at the top
right and click "GO". The next page directs you to your elected officials.
- Call the U.S. Capitol switchboard at (202) 224-3121 and ask for your
representative's or senators offices. When connected, ask to speak with the
legislative assistant (LA) who handles the issue.
- After identifying yourself, including where you are from in the
district/state, tell the LA that you support H.R. 6528/S 2706. State the reasons
why you support the bill.
- Ask for their position and request that your Representative/Senator cosponsor
the legislation. You may request a written response to your call.
For more information, please contact Diane Edquist Dorman, Vice President for
Public Policy at ddorman@rarediseases.org.
Social Security Administration Seeks Input on Rare Diseases
Regular visitors to this website may recall that the Social Security Administration under Commissioner
Michael Astrue has launched an initiative to identify problems encountered by people with rare diseases
when they apply for disability assistance through Social Security. Because these diseases are not on the
approved list, the severity of their impact may be underestimated. As a result, patients often are initially
turned down but later approved. Many people go through unnecessary delay, frustration, and expense in seeking
to have an initial decision re-visited.
Commissioner Astrue spoke about this at NORD's annual conference last fall. He also spoke briefly at the 25th
Anniversary Gala in May. In December, NORD Vice President for Public Policy Diane Dorman testified at hearings
hosted by the SSA, and several of our member organizations provided input for her testimony.
Now the SSA has asked for input on questions related to diagnostic criteria for rare diseases, functional
impairment, and criteria for determining when patients are functionally disabled. These are primarily medical
issues, and NORD will be distributing a survey to medical professionals.
In the meantime, to assist the SSA in sorting out these issues, we are also interested in stories of individual
experiences that help identify problem areas within the current system. If you, a loved one, or a patient have
such a story to share, please feel free to contact Diane Dorman in NORD's Washington Office at
ssa@rarediseases.org.
The questions for medical professionals working with rare diseases on which SSA is currently seeking input are:
- Are there any generally accepted functional scores or scales of progression that medical professionals rely
upon in determining functional impairment?
- Are there any generally accepted clinical tests (including genetic or other bio-markers) which can be relied
upon to diagnose a disorder or to determine a patient's stage of disease or level of functional impairment?
- Given the natural history of the disorder generally, is there a certain age (or time since onset) at which
the person's functional impairments typically become severe?
Anyone wishing to submit responses to any or all of these questions regarding specific diseases or types of diseases
should email their responses to Dorman in NORD's Washington Office
(ssa@rarediseases.org).
|