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Hoosier Congressman Honored by AARP

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Monday, August 29, 2016   

INDIANAPOLIS – A lawmaker from Indiana is being honored for authoring a bill that benefits older Americans and their families.

U.S. Rep. Todd Young of Bloomington helped to sponsor the bill, signed into law by President Barack Obama, that requires hospitals to inform patients and their families if they are there under observation, but haven't been formally admitted.

The reason it matters is the cost. How much Medicare pays depends on whether a patient is formally admitted or just being watched by doctors.

Sarah Waddle, state director for AARP Indiana, says Young has been named a 2016 Champion of the 50 Plus, because his legislation takes the sticker shock and surprise out of a hospital bill.

"It all comes down to billing and how it's billed,” Waddle explains. “So if they're under observation status, it's under Medicare Part B, and so that could impose some high out-of-pocket costs for any testing and care preformed while they're in the hospital."

Young's legislation is called the Notice Act. It requires hospitals to give written notice that must include why the patient was not admitted to the hospital, and the financial implications of it.

Waddle says in an emergency, people don't have time to think about cost. They just want their loved one to get treatment.

"For a family who is most likely taking a loved one to the hospital under traumatic circumstances they're probably not thinking a lot about Medicare regulations and how billing is going to happen,” she point out. “So the Notice Act is really there to inform and help families and patients navigate their care."

A number of states, including Connecticut, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania and Virginia, required hospitals to give patients notice about observation care prior to Young's bill.






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