August 13, 2019
DREDF is gravely concerned with HHS' proposed amendments to the Section 1557 regulations. While we appreciate that HHS seeks to reduce costs and improve health plan sustainability, these goals cannot be sought at the expense of the civil rights of health care consumers—and particularly those individuals and families who already face pervasive physical, programmatic, and attitudinal barriers in the health care context.
Fight with DREDF for Nondiscrimination in Health Care
August 8, 2019
When the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was enacted in 2010, Congress intended to provide equal and comprehensive access to health insurance coverage to all Americans, including Americans with disabilities. Many people with disabilities and their families remember being denied or terminated from health coverage, being unable to afford health insurance, and facing specialized annual and lifetime benefit limits. Before the ACA, if a disabled person found health insurance, it would often leave out coverage of any pre-existing condition and fail to offer important benefits such as mental health coverage, durable medical equipment, or maternity care. The ACA banned many of these enrollment practices and coverage limitations.
Stop Blaming Gun Violence on Mental Illness
August 7, 2019
We grieve with all those harmed by recent mass shootings in Dayton, El Paso, and Gilroy.
DREDF unequivocally rejects attempts to scapegoat mental illness in all areas – including gun violence – and stands in solidarity with our friends, colleagues, and allies who seek real, effective policy solutions to racism, xenophobia, mental health stigma, and mass murder.
Health Advocates Defend ACA in Fifth Circuit Oral Argument
July 12, 2019
On July 9, 2019, the U.S. Court of the Appeals for the Fifth Circuit heard oral argument in the latest lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The three-judge panel critically questioned the lawyers defending the ACA, leaving advocates concerned that the circuit court may uphold the district court ruling invalidating the health care law.
Ronnie Maurice Stewart, et al., v. Alex M. Azar II, et al.,
June 27, 2019 DREDF submits amicus brief in appeal of Kentucky Medicaid work requirement case.
Doe v. CVS Pharmacy, Inc.
July 2, 2019
DREDF Files Amicus Brief In Ninth Circuit ACA Discrimination Case
On July 1, 2019, DREDF filed an amicus brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit clarifying the proper standard of disability discrimination under Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act ("ACA"). The case, Doe v. CVS Pharmacy, Inc., challenges CVS Caremark's practice of only providing HIV/AIDS drugs via mail-order or drop-shipment to a CVS store (without the opportunity for an in-person pharmacy consultation). DREDF's brief provides an objective analysis of how disability nondiscrimination legal principles apply to the private health insurance context, with a focus on how benefit exclusions and limitations can serve to inhibit people with disabilities from accessing the services and devices that they need to equally participate in their communities. Joining DREDF as amici was Disability Right Advocates, Disability Rights Legal Center, the National Health Law Program, and the American Civil Liberties Union.
Statement of Appreciation: Larisa Cummings
June 1, 2019
It is with mixed emotions that the Disability Rights Education & Defense Fund announces the retirement of Larisa Cummings, senior staff attorney, who began her legal career at DREDF in 1987, working with us for a brief period, and then returning for another 19 years in 2000.
DREDF and Disability Rights California comment on the California Department of Health Care Services draft update for the Facility Site Review (FSR) and Medical Record Review (MRR) Survey Tools and Guidelines
May 29, 2019
DREDF submitted comments on May 29, 2019 in response to the California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS), Managed Care Quality and Monitoring Division (MCQMD) draft update for the Facility Site Review (FSR) and Medical Record Review (MRR) Survey Tools and Guidelines. The FSR and MRR survey tools and their associated guidelines set forth important measures that directly relate to barriers that affect the health and wellbeing of disabled individuals in California who receive health care through managed care organizations (MCOs). However, the ability of MCO's to collect needed information, and synthesize and report it accurately depends both on the clarity of the survey instruments and the categories of information being collected. Thus, we asked DHCS to consider several substantive additions to the FSR and MMR tools and guidelines. Our comments also responded to the 2019 drafts as compared with the survey tools and guidelines found in DHCS Policy Letter 14 – 004.
DREDF Amicus Brief in New Hampshire Medicaid Work Requirement Case
June 3, 2019 DREDF, with Justice in Aging and the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys, filed an amicus brief supporting a challenge to HHS' approval of New Hampshire's 1115 Medicaid Waiver, which conditions Medicaid eligibility on meeting work requirements for many persons under 65, and eliminates retroactive Medicaid coverage. The challenge argues that waiver restrictions are unrelated to, and actually impede, the goals of the Medicaid program.
California Highlights Disability Social Service Expectations in Landmark All County Letter
May 23, 2019
On May 16, 2019, the California Department of Social Services (CDSS) released, and the California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) signed on to, All County Letter (ACL) No. 19-45 to emphasize the obligations that County Welfare Departments (CWDs) owe people with disabilities accessing the gamut of social service programs administered locally. Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund (DREDF) along with a coalition of legal service advocates across the state have been working on this effort since 2008.
