Obama Administration Takes Critical Step to Help Smokers Quit and Save Lives
Friday, May 2, 2014
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
May 2, 2014
Contact: Gregg Tubbs
202-715-3469
Gregg.Tubbs@lung.org
Obama
Administration Takes Critical Step to Help Smokers Quit and Save Lives
Important ACA
guidance could help millions of smokers get the help they need to quit.
Washington, D.C. (May 2, 2014) – Today, the Obama
Administration issued guidance on quit smoking benefits available through the
Affordable Care Act (ACA). This important announcement from the Departments
implementing the ACA (Health and Human Services, Labor and Treasury) clarifies
what treatments insurance plans should cover for quitting smoking as part of
their preventive services benefit. This guidance will help to ensure that
employers and insurance plans are doing everything they can to get smokers they
help they need to quit.
"The American Lung Association commends the Obama
Administration for today’s lifesaving announcement,” said Harold Wimmer,
National President and CEO of the American Lung Association. "Quitting is
hard and the Lung Association knows that making sure everyone has access to all
quit smoking medications and counseling is critical to saving lives.”
The guidance issued today defines what an appropriate
comprehensive quit smoking benefit is. According to the Obama Administration, a
comprehensive benefit includes coverage of:
1. All
medications approved by the FDA as safe and effective for smoking cessation
2. Individual,
group and phone cessation counseling
3. These
quit smoking benefits should be offered at least twice a year to smokers,
recognizing not everyone quits on their first try
4. Plans
should not require prior authorization for these benefits
The ACA also requires that these benefits be provided at no
cost to the patient – so no copays, coinsurance or deductibles should be
charged.
It is crucial that each smoker who wants to quit has access
to all treatments that will help. Quitting smoking is not a "one-size-fits-all”
process. The American Lung Association and its partners have urged the Obama
Administration to provide this guidance on quit smoking benefits since
2010. Most recently, the Lung Association and 29 public health and
medical organizations sent this letter
in February 2014 calling for the Administration to clarify the benefit.
Prior to this guidance, most insurance plans have not
implemented comprehensive cessation benefits. The Lung Association believes
this clarification will help rectify the wide variation in how insurance
companies have previously implemented this requirement in the private insurance
market. One study by the Georgetown University Health Policy Institute,
commissioned by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, found that only four of 39
private plans analyzed covered even close to a comprehensive benefit. Also
troubling, some of the plans analyzed included cost sharing for tobacco
cessation treatments – something prohibited by the ACA. Another survey in
Colorado found that there has been significant variance in the ways health
plans in Colorado have implemented the requirement. Interestingly, these
variances were seen in the area of tobacco cessation more so than other areas
of preventive services.
The recent Surgeon General’s
report on smoking and health concluded that more than 42 million Americans
still smoke. Today’s guidance will affect health coverage provided to
all populations that smoke including those that smoke at higher rates than the
general population; like low-income Americans, Medicaid expansion enrollees and
Americans who were previously uninsured According to
the same survey, 69 percent of current smokers in America want to quit.
The Lung
Association has been successfully helping smokers quit for more than 30 years
with ourFreedom From Smoking®program. In addition, the Lung
Association's Not-On-Tobacco®
(N-O-T)program is designed for smokers aged 14 to
19 who want to quit and is America's most popular smoking cessation program for
teens. For assistance with quitting smoking or for additional questions about
lung health, please call the American Lung Association's Lung HelpLine at
1-800-LUNGUSA (1-800-586-4872).
The American Lung Association also
provides many resources on Affordable Care Act implementation and lung health.
Please visit www.lung.org/acatoolkit for more information. To read American Lung Association
letters and comments submitted on this issue, please visit http://www.lung.org/get-involved/advocate/advocacy-archive.html.
# # #
About the American Lung Association
Now in its second century, the American Lung Association is the leading
organization working to save lives by improving lung health and preventing lung
disease. With your generous support, the American Lung Association is "Fighting
for Air” through research, education and advocacy. For more information about
the American Lung Association, a holder of the Better Business Bureau Wise
Giving Guide Seal, or to support the work it does, call 1 800 LUNG USA (1 800
586 4872) or visit www.lung.org.
American Lung
Association • 1301 Pennsylvania Ave., NW • Washington, DC 20004-1725
1-800-LUNG-USA
(1-800-586-4872) • www.Lung.org
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