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Medicare’s new $2,000 prescription drug cap goes into effect Jan. 1. Here’s how it works.

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Medicare’s new ,000 prescription drug cap goes into effect Jan. 1. Here’s how it works.


Weight loss drugs like Wegovy, Ozempic would be covered by Medicare, Medicaid under Biden proposal


Weight loss drugs like Wegovy, Ozempic would be covered by Medicare, Medicaid under Biden proposal

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Starting Jan. 1, millions of Americans who get their prescription drugs through Medicare could get a major financial break when a $2,000 out-of-pocket spending cap on medications goes into effect. 

The yearly price cap has been in the works since President Joe Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act into law in 2022, with that legislation including provisions tackling drug costs for seniors as well as other Americans. While some of those other rules have already kicked in, such as a $35 price cap on insulin for seniors, Medicare’s $2,000 drug cap will become effective starting next month. 

The out-of-pocket cost cap could be a “game changer” for many seniors, Ryan Ramsey, the associate director of health coverage and benefits at the National Council on Aging (NCOA) told CBS MoneyWatch. In the first year of the cap, about 3.2 million Medicare recipients are likely to see lower costs due to the new rule, particularly seniors who take multiple medications or have high-cost prescriptions, according to an analysis from AARP. 

Before the law, there was no out-of-pocket cap for Medicare’s Part D, the section that covers prescription drugs, which left seniors at risk of “significant financial burdens,” the AARP noted.

“Having a cap where somebody can know, ‘Hey, this is what my maximum out of pocket will be for my medication,’ that will be an enormous deal,” Ramsey noted. 

Here’s what to know about the new Medicare prescription drug spending cap. 

Who is covered by the new Medicare drug cap? 

The new $2,000 out-of-pocket cap on prescription drugs covers everyone with a Medicare Part D plan, which is the section of Medicare that covers most pharmaceutical products. The annual new cap also includes people with drug plans through Medicare Advantage, which are health plans offered by private insurers. 

There are more than 50 million older Americans who have either Part D or prescription plans through Medicare Advantage, according to health policy site KFF. 

Will Medicare’s so-called “donut hole” still exist? 

No, according to Medicare. “Because of the prescription drug law, the coverage gap ends on Dec. 31, 2024,” its website states.

The so-called “donut hole,” or coverage gap, has affected almost all prescription plans. In the current calendar year, seniors could enter the donut hole once they and their plans had spent more than $5,030 on drug costs, at which point they were on the hook for out-of-pocket drug costs until they hit $8,000 in spending. Catastrophic coverage would kick in above that amount and cover additional spending.

Which prescription drugs are covered by the Medicare cap?

The $2,000 cap includes all the prescriptions that are in a Medicare recipient’s Plan D formulary, or a plan’s list of covered drugs. That means that if a doctor prescribes a drug that’s not on your formulary, it won’t be covered by the $2,000 cap, potentially adding to your costs. 

Medicare enrollees can ask their doctors to prescribe drugs that are covered on their formulary, Ramsey noted. 

“What I advise, in a situation where you are prescribed a new prescription, take your formulary to the doctor’s office. Say it’s a drug pressure medication, and you can say, ‘Can you make sure you can prescribe something that’s on my plan?,'” he noted. 

In other cases, such as for new medications or drugs for which there aren’t alternatives, Medicare enrollees can ask for a drug exception, which can be granted if deemed medically necessary, according to Medicare.

Because formularies can change their coverage each year, and people’s prescriptions can also vary over time, it’s important to check your Part D plan during open enrollment each year to ensure you’re in the best drug plan for your needs, Ramsey added. Open enrollment typically occurs between mid-October to early December. 

Do I need to sign up for the $2,000 out-of-pocket cap?

No, the cap will automatically be applied to your Part D plan, and the plan will track your spending. Once you hit $2,000, the new cap will go into effect and cover your eligible drug costs beyond that amount. 

What costs are covered in the $2,000 Medicare Part D spending cap? 

The new measure will cover medications included in your formulary, as well as your deductible, copayments and coinsurance for drugs that qualify for the cap. 

However, the cap doesn’t include coverage for drugs outside of your Part D plan, which means that it also doesn’t apply to pharmaceuticals covered by Medicare Part B, which include drugs you typically wouldn’t give to yourself, such as injectables that you’d get at a medical office. 

It also doesn’t cover your Part D premiums. 

The cap will allow people “to make better decisions on how to get their health care,” Ramsey noted. Prior to this change, “I have had discussions with people, ‘Am I going to buy groceries late in the year or pay for my prescriptions?'”



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Corals depend on near neighbors to reproduce, research reveals

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Corals depend on near neighbors to reproduce, research reveals


Corals depend on near neighbours to reproduce
Coral spawning in Palau. Credit: Peter Mumby

A study reveals corals must be within only a few meters of each other to successfully reproduce, leaving them vulnerable in a warming world.

The international research, led by The University of Queensland’s Professor Peter Mumby, measured the success of a natural spawning event in March this year.

The research is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“In what came as a surprise, we saw that corals needed to be within 10 meters of one another, and preferably closer than that for fertilization to take place,” Professor Mumby said.

“We knew corals couldn’t be too far apart, but we found they need to be closer than we’d expected.

“Climate change impacts like bleaching are killing and reducing the density of corals, so we’re concerned that individuals may end up too far apart to reproduce successfully.”

To quantify reproduction success, the team placed containers above 26 coral colonies on a reef in Palau, Micronesia during a time when the mostly hermaphroditic corals released eggs and sperm.







Coral-spawning-Palau-UQ. Credit: University of Queensland

“The containers captured some of each corals’ eggs and drifted to the surface where they followed the tide,” Professor Mumby said.

“Although the eggs could not escape, sperm could enter the container and fertilize the eggs.

“After an hour of drifting, the proportion of fertilized eggs was noted for each type of coral along with the distance to similar established corals.”

Fertilization averaged 30% when corals were very close, but it declined to less than 10% at a separation of 10 meters and was virtually zero by 20 meters.

Co-author Dr. Christopher Doropoulos of the CSIRO, Australia’s national science agency, said coral reproduction was fundamental to population resilience and evolution.

“In the future we may need to help corals continue this key part of their lives,” Dr. Doropoulos said.

“Understanding the importance of local neighborhoods provides tangible targets for interventions like coral restoration.

“Ideally, the density of corals would be monitored at important locations and restoration carried out to return the density back to the levels required for successful reproduction.”

Corals depend on near neighbours to reproduce
Reef research site in Palau. Credit: Peter Mumby

Professor Mumby has been working on efforts to repair damaged coral reefs.

“Our work over the past five years on the Great Barrier Reef through the Reef Restoration and Adaptation Program is also helping to define these critical thresholds to help restoration practitioners set targets for density to help maintain coral populations,” he said.

More information:
Peter J. Mumby et al, Allee effects limit coral fertilization success, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2418314121

Citation:
Corals depend on near neighbors to reproduce, research reveals (2024, December 17)
retrieved 22 December 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-12-corals-neighbors-reveals.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.





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Aerosols could be weakening summertime circulation in the Northern Hemisphere

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Aerosols could be weakening summertime circulation in the Northern Hemisphere


Aerosols could be weakening summertime circulation
Spatial structure of JJA cosine-weighted trend from 1980 to 2020 of clear-sky surface shortwave radiation in ensemble-mean simulations. Credit: AGU Advances (2024). DOI: 10.1029/2024AV001318

Over the past several decades, summer jet streams (or west to east wind flow) and weather systems in the Northern Hemisphere have weakened. Projections suggest the trend will continue, which could make extreme heat events more likely and affect air quality.

Some studies have hypothesized that the weakening is related to Arctic amplification, or the way the Arctic is warming more quickly than the rest of the planet, because this phenomenon reduces the temperature difference between the equator and the North Pole. But others have suggested that anthropogenic emissions of aerosols, which lead to a similarly weakened gradient, may be more directly to blame.

Using Detection and Attribution Model Intercomparison Project (DAMIP) data, Joonsuk Kang and colleagues studied how anthropogenic factors may have influenced summertime circulation patterns between 1980 and 2020.

They found that aerosols play just as big a role as greenhouse gases in the slowdown of wind patterns and atmospheric flow during the summer months. Changes in aerosol emissions can influence the strength of the weather systems by altering the flow of energy between land and ocean. The study is published in the journal AGU Advances.

A reduction in aerosol emissions in North America and Europe during this period meant more sunlight reaching the surface, causing a greater energy contrast between these land surfaces and the ocean. This caused energy export to the air over the ocean.

As a result, the energy converged over the higher-latitude ocean (40°N–70°N), weakening the gradient between the poles and the equator, as well as the weather systems. This effect is about twice as pronounced over the Pacific because aerosol emissions were reduced more in Eurasia than in North America.

Increased aerosol pollution from South and East Asia had the same weather-weakening effect, but through the opposite process: The increased pollution decreased the amount of solar energy that reached the surface and reduced the energy transport between land and the lower-latitude (25°N–40°N) Pacific Ocean. Ultimately, less energy converged over the lower-latitude Pacific, further weakening the energy gradient and the weather systems.

Because aerosols have shaped summertime circulation patterns over the past 40 years, it will be important to continue research on how they may shape future summer climate trends, the researchers write.

More information:
Joonsuk M. Kang et al, Anthropogenic Aerosols Have Significantly Weakened the Regional Summertime Circulation in the Northern Hemisphere During the Satellite Era, AGU Advances (2024). DOI: 10.1029/2024AV001318

This story is republished courtesy of Eos, hosted by the American Geophysical Union. Read the original story here.

Citation:
Aerosols could be weakening summertime circulation in the Northern Hemisphere (2024, December 18)
retrieved 22 December 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-12-aerosols-weakening-summertime-circulation-northern.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.





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Man admits threatening to kill Bishop Auckland MP Sam Rushworth

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Man admits threatening to kill Bishop Auckland MP Sam Rushworth


grey placeholderPA Media Benjamin Clarke is waving as he walks out of the court building. He is wearing black fingerless gloves and a long, grey coat. He has long brown hair and a beard.PA Media

Benjamin Clarke will be sentenced in January at Durham Crown Court

A man has admitted threatening to kill his MP after saying he wanted to lock him in a building and set fire to it.

Benjamin Clarke, 31, of Bishop Auckland, County Durham, appeared at Newton Aycliffe Magistrates’ Court.

He pleaded guilty to making threats to kill MP Sam Rushworth, and a malicious communications offence.

Clarke, of Durham Street, was granted bail with the condition he must not contact the Labour MP ahead of his sentencing on 16 January at Durham Crown Court.

Sara Kemp, prosecuting, said Clarke contacted the MP in August on social media, saying: “I cannot wait for your next public appearance, you will be lucky to leave it in one piece.”

Rushworth then blocked him, preventing any further malicious communications offences, Ms Kemp said.

‘A matter of time’

The following month, Clarke told two mental health practitioners he wanted to find the MP and smash his head off a pavement, to set fire to a building he was in and then “lock all the doors so I could hear him screaming”.

Clarke added: “I’m going to do it, it’s just a matter of time.”

Ms Kemp said the MP had made a victim statement and was particularly concerned for the safety of his family.

Amrit Jandoo, defending, said Clarke had no political views or malice towards Rushworth, “but it is quite clear he has taken umbrage against the MP”.

He asked for a pre-sentence report to be made before Clarke’s crown court appearance.

Mr Jandoo said his client had a history of mental health treatment.

He added: “He would fully accept that his behaviour on these occasions has been very poor.”



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Belfast City Airport flights cancelled after plane emergency

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Belfast City Airport flights cancelled after plane emergency


grey placeholderPacemaker An Aer Lingus plane on the runway at Belfast City Airport.  Emergency crews in high viz clothing are standing close to the plane which appears to have suffered a collapse of its nose wheel.Pacemaker

Emergency services attended the Aer Lingus plane at Belfast City Airport

All flights in and out of Belfast City Airport have been cancelled on Sunday evening after an Aer Lingus plane suffered an emergency incident while landing during strong winds.

The plane had flown from Edinburgh to Belfast at about 16:00 GMT with four crew members but no passengers on board.

It appears the plane’s nose wheel collapsed during landing, with pictures showing its nose resting on the runway tarmac. It is understood no-one was seriously hurt.

The airport’s runway has been shut and is not expected to reopen until Monday.

The emergency incident happened to what was described as a “positioning flight” which was operated by Emerald Airlines on behalf of Aer Lingus.

Emerald Airlines said the aircraft “experienced a hard landing upon arriving into Belfast City Airport due to adverse weather conditions”.

The police, fire service and ambulance crews were immediately deployed to the airport.

grey placeholderPacemaker Fire crews on the runway at Belfast City Airport, parked in front of an Aer Lingus plane which suffered a hard landing.  A number of emergency workers are standing next to the plane. Pacemaker

Four fire appliances and a number of specialist crew members were deployed to the runway

Fire Service Area Commander David Doherty said firefighters responded at 16:15 GMT after the airport “declared a full emergency”.

They sent several units as part of their expected response to an airport emergency, but he said firefighters did not have to take any immediate action.

Their resources were quickly redeployed but some crews remained at the scene as a precaution, Mr Doherty added.

Belfast City Airport told passengers not to travel to the airport on Sunday evening due to the runway closure.

Instead it advised them to “contact their airline”.

The live flight information section of its website is showing that several planes due to arrive on Sunday evening have been cancelled.

Earlier, at least four planes were diverted to Belfast International Airport, including flights from London City and Leeds Bradford.

But just before 18:30 GMT, Belfast International Airport posted on social media that it was “close to capacity” because of those diversions and its already heavier than usual schedule.

It warned it was “limited in how many redirected flights we can take this evening”.

A further five flights were diverted from Dublin Airport.

Air accident inspectors deployed

The Dublin Airport Authority (DAA) is also assisting Belfast City Airport with the process of moving the damaged plane, according to the DAA’s Media Relations Manager Graeme McQueen.

He told BBC News NI that “members of Dublin Airport’s airfield operations team are currently travelling to Belfast with aircraft recovery equipment”.

“We are happy to help our neighbouring airport,” he added.

The Air Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB) confirmed that it has been notified of the emergency incident in Belfast.

Its spokesperson said: “An investigation has been launched and a team of inspectors is being deployed to the site.”



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