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The health-care overhaul has taken some of the flex out of flexible spending accounts, which let workers pay medical expenses with pretax dollars. Starting in January, you'll no longer be able to use your FSA for over-the-counter drugs and medicines unless you have a doctor's prescription.

Experts agree that the new rules will likely discourage people from tapping their FSAs for routine purchases of aspirin, vitamins, cough medicine and other drugstore essentials. Whether they also inhibit people from taking needed allergy or heartburn medications, for example, or from picking up nicotine replacement gum to help them quit smoking, remains to be seen.

In any case, as you calculate during the fall insurance enrollment period how much to deposit in your FSA next year, it's important to keep the new restrictions in mind.

Money prompted the change, experts say. "I think [federal officials] were just looking for revenue raisers," says Mike Thompson, a human resource services principal with PwC (PricewaterhouseCoopers). Since employee contributions to FSAs are made on a pretax basis, they reduce taxable earnings and thus the amount workers pay in income tax.

Under the law, reimbursement changes apply to expenses incurred for an over-the-counter "medicine or a drug," although it specifically exempts insulin. In addition, the IRS says the new restrictions don't apply to such medical equipment and supplies as crutches and bandages or to diagnostic devices such as blood sugar test kits. The IRS has posted further details on its website.

According to Mercer's annual survey of employer-sponsored health plans, 27 percent of all employers offer FSAs; but among companies with 500 or more employees, 85 percent do so. The average employee contribution last year was $1,424, according to Mercer.

People with allergies, those who suffer from heartburn and people on low-dose aspirin therapy for cardiovascular problems are among those who will be most affected by the new restrictions, says Roland Goertz, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. Now they'll need a prescription for that antacid or antihistamine if they want to use their FSA accounts.

"I have some concerns about if this adds more complexity to the system," Goertz says. On the other hand, he adds, it's better for quality of care if a doctor knows about all a patient's medications, including those purchased over-the-counter.

Kim Schmidl-Gagne says there's no way she's going to call the nurse hotline in the middle of the night to get a prescription for cough medicine if one of her kids, who are 4 and 10, gets sick. "This has taken away one of my mechanisms to purchase those items and do it in a way that's cost-efficient for me," she says.

Schmidl-Gagne, a program coordinator at Keene (N.H.) State College, says she and her husband live paycheck to paycheck. At the end of a pay period when money's tight and they need over-the-counter medicines, it's been helpful to be able to tap the $500 they deposited in an FSA. "I don't get how this [change] helps working families," she says.

A spokeswoman for the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America says the advocacy organization is also disappointed with the new requirements. More than 50 million Americans have allergies, and many can control their symptoms with over-the-counter medications, says Angel Waldron. "You save time by not having to go to the doctor's office, and co-pay money and prescription money."

About 6 million to 8 million people use OTC or prescription drugs each year to try to quit, says Thomas Glynn, director of science and trends at the American Cancer Society. He says that the advocacy organization hopes that the health-care overhaul will open up other avenues for better access to such medications, including the expansion of Medicaid eligibility.

Consumers and advocates who are unhappy with the new rules may not realize that the looser reimbursement standards were themselves fairly recent. FSA reimbursement for over-the-counter medicine has been permitted only for the past seven years, says Stephen Huth, a senior writer/analyst with Wolters Kluwer, a business publisher. When the more-generous standards were implemented, "there were complaints about it," he says. "People said we were going to lose all this tax revenue." Now, the pendulum has swung back.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40115654/ns/health-health_care/

"The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies."

Senator Barack Obama
Senate Floor Speech on Public Debt
March 16, 2006



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Posted

1.) FSAs are quite useful!

2.) OTC meds are not going to be entirely cut from FSA's. If you want to pay for an OTC using your FSA, you need to have a note or prescription from the doctor and send that in along w/ your claim.

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Posted

1.) FSAs are quite useful!

2.) OTC meds are not going to be entirely cut from FSA's. If you want to pay for an OTC using your FSA, you need to have a note or prescription from the doctor and send that in along w/ your claim.

If I had a prescription, I'd be buying prescription meds, not OTC.

Plus the doctor visit co-pay would probably negate any tax benefits.

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Posted (edited)

If I had a prescription, I'd be buying prescription meds, not OTC.

Plus the doctor visit co-pay would probably negate any tax benefits.

I'm not suggesting you go to the doctor to get a script for OTCs. If you happen to already be at the doctor for, say, a cold or something, ask for a script for any OTCs they recommended for treatment of your condition.

Edited by rsn

K1: 01/15/2009 (mailed I-129F) - 06/23/2009 (visa received)

AOS: 08/08/2009 (mailed I-485, I-765, & I-131) - 10/29/2009 (received GC)

Posted

In other words, FSAs are going to be even more useless than they already are?

FSAs (medical and dependent care) can and do save people money. Although, I'd rather have an HSA.

"The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies."

Senator Barack Obama
Senate Floor Speech on Public Debt
March 16, 2006



barack-cowboy-hat.jpg
90f.JPG

Filed: Country: United Kingdom
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Posted

FSAs (medical and dependent care) can and do save people money. Although, I'd rather have an HSA.

I know - I have one. I mostly use it for co-pays, OTC meds and misc. things like condoms.

If they exclude OTC meds, I won't bother next year.

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Posted

Mark hits the Mark once again! +1

I've handily ignored my Co's FSA for the past 9 years, and had more $ in my pocket because of avoiding the FSA racket.

{:^D

I don't see how an FSA can do anything but save you money. It's a very simple concept: deduct money from your paycheck for medical expenses pre-tax.

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Posted

I don't see how an FSA can do anything but save you money. It's a very simple concept: deduct money from your paycheck for medical expenses pre-tax.

Because it's "Use it or lose it". If you don't spend everything in the account during the calendar year - it's gone. For people who have known expenditures for expensive prescriptions it's a good idea. For those of us who only get a scrip for the occasional antibiotic or something, there's simply no point.

 

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