ObamaCare uncertainty driving premium hikes

ObamaCare uncertainty driving premium hikes

ObamaCare uncertainty driving premium hikes

Uncertainty among insurers about how the Trump administration will handle the Affordable Care Act could translate into double-digit premium increases for 2018.

Insurers are beginning to file rate requests with state insurance regulators, and some states could see premium increases of 50 percent or more.

Insurers are worried about how President Trump’s plans for -ObamaCare — particularly whether the requirement for individuals to buy insurance will remain and whether insurer subsidies for covering low-income enrollees will continue.

“It’s a significant factor in pricing this year,” said Cynthia Cox, a health insurance expert with the Kaiser Family Foundation.

“I think it’s fair to say these rates are higher than we would have expected to see in the absence of uncertainty.”

Insurers also blamed rate increases on an unbalanced risk pool — which means there are too many sick, expensive patients and not enough healthy ones — higher claims for medical care and drugs, and the reinstatement of an -ObamaCare tax on health insurers.

Maryland’s largest health insurer, CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield, is proposing an average rate increase of more than 50 percent.

In a statement, CareFirst said the “lack of clarity” about whether the individual mandate would be enforced played a “significant role” in its proposed rate increases.

“Failure to enforce the Individual Mandate makes it far more likely that healthier, younger individuals will drop coverage and drive up the cost for everyone else,” CareFirst said in a statement.

The company is also requesting premium increases of 35 percent in Virginia and 29 percent in Washington, D.C.

Another Maryland insurer, Evergreen Health, is requesting rate increases of 27 percent, blaming uncertainty about -the ObamaCare insurer payments and the enforcement of the individual mandate as the “primary driver.”

In Connecticut, Anthem is requesting an average premium increase of 34 percent for plans on the -ObamaCare exchanges. The state’s other exchange insurer, CTCare, is requesting a 15 percent increase.

Rate requests must be reviewed and approved by state regulators and can often change.

Connecticut and Maryland both have earlier filing deadlines than most other states, which align more closely with the federal deadline of June.

Still, these states have been a good indicator of how insurers in other states will set their premiums, Cox said.

Because -ObamaCare subsidies are designed to increase as premiums go up, the people most affected by rate hikes would be those with higher incomes getting insurance through the exchanges and people getting insurance in the individual market.

It is difficult for insurers to price plans when they don’t know what will happen to -ObamaCare next year.

Financial Performance of Health Insurers: State-Run Versus Federal-Run Exchanges

http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/in-the-literature/2017/may/financial-performance-state-federal-exchanges?omnicid=EALERT1204178&mid=henrykotula@yahoo.com

Synopsis

Researchers compared health insurers’ profitability in 2013 and 2014, the years before and after the introduction of the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) insurance marketplaces. The median loss for insurers overall in both years was 4 percent. Insurers performed better in states that operated their own health insurance marketplaces than in states that used the federal marketplace, with the difference largely driven by medical loss ratios.

The Issue

“Millions of newly covered beneficiaries presented insurers a golden business opportunity, but the new restrictions on medical underwriting meant that insurers faced uncertain actuarial risk in pricing their products.”

The ACA changed the dynamics of the individual health insurance market with rules intended to expand coverage and reforms to how individual insurance is priced and sold. In the years since the law went into effect, there have been concerns over insurers’ profitability, as some companies have sustained losses or left the market entirely. A Commonwealth Fund–supported study published in Medical Care Research and Review examined insurers’ key financial measures over two years (2013 and 2014) to assess profitability, identify factors driving financial performance, and compare performance in states that ran their own health insurance marketplace and those that used the federal marketplace.

Key Findings

  • For established insurers with significant enrollment, profit/loss levels remained statistically the same, with median losses of about 4 percent in both 2013 and 2014.
  • Insurers did better in states that operated their own marketplaces. In states with state-run marketplaces, 24 insurers went from a negative profit margin to a positive one in 2014, while 10 were positive in both 2013 and 2014. In total, 34 out of 76 insurers (45%) had positive profit margins in the state-run marketplaces in 2014.
  • In the federal marketplace, only four insurers went from a negative to a positive margin in 2014; 15 insurers were positive in both 2013 and 2014. Nineteen of 68 insurers (28%) had positive profit margins in the federal marketplace.
  • In states that used the federal marketplace, insurers’ median medical loss ratio—the percentage of insurance premium dollars spent on medical expenses and quality improvement—increased by 10 percentage points, while their median administrative cost ratio dropped by five percentage points. In states with their own marketplaces, there was no significant change in insurers’ medical loss ratio, but the administrative cost ratio dropped three percentage points.

The Big Picture

The authors conclude that the ACA’s implementation in 2014 “did not substantially disrupt the individual market among existing insurers of credible size.” However, they noted differences, largely driven by medical loss ratios, between states that operated their own marketplaces and those using the federal marketplace. Factors that likely contributed to higher profitability include:

  • greater efforts by some states to publicize their exchange and generate more enrollment, which may have resulted in a more balanced risk pool;
  • political cultures that were more supportive of the ACA in general;
  • greater accuracy in actuarial projections; and
  • a higher likelihood of expanding Medicaid, which takes higher-risk people out of the marketplace pool.

By focusing on the more manageable of these factors, like expanding outreach and enrollment efforts or improving actuarial projections, states might be able to improve the financial outlook for insurers participating in the marketplaces, the authors say.

About the Study

The authors used two data sets maintained by the Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight, based on mandatory reporting by all regulated health insurers. The final sample included 144 insurers with a total of 7.8 million members. The authors looked at medical loss ratios, administrative costs, and operating profit.

The Bottom Line

The median insurer reported losses of 4 percent in the individual market in both 2013 and 2014, suggesting that the ACA did not substantially disrupt the individual market among established insurers.

Obamacare 101: Are health insurance marketplaces in a death spiral?

http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-obamacare-101-marketplaces-20170223-story.html

Obamacare website

It’s been a rocky few months for the health insurance marketplaces created by the Affordable Care Act.

Even if you’re not one of the roughly 11 million Americans who rely on these online exchanges to get your health insurance, you’ve probably seen the headlines about rising premiums and insurance companies pulling out of the system.

Last week, national insurance giant Humana announced it would stop selling plans on the marketplace. Aetna’s chief executive claimed the marketplaces are in a “death spiral.” Republicans say the marketplaces are Exhibit A that Obamacare is collapsing.

So what’s the real story? Are these things really kaput or can they be fixed? Here’s a rundown of where things stand.

How do marketplaces work?

Buying health insurance on the marketplaces was set up to be like shopping online for a hotel room. The Obamacare marketplaces, such as HealthCare.gov, allow people who don’t get health benefits at work to compare a variety of competing plans that all have to offer a basic set of benefits.

Low- and moderate-income consumers — currently about 80% of the 11 million Obamacare enrolees — get federal subsidies to help pay their monthly premiums. And the plans are prohibited from turning away customers who are sick.

This was a big deal. Before Obamacare, insurance companies were free to reject sick people. And even customers who could get a plan often found it didn’t cover what they thought because health plans didn’t have to meet the same standards they now must.

What went wrong?

Like all insurance markets, the Obamacare marketplaces rely on having a good mix of customers. Younger, healthier people, who typically have lower medical costs, offset the higher cost of older, sicker people.

 Unfortunately, many insurers discovered that the people who were signing up were sicker and more costly than they expected. That meant some insurers were losing money. Nobody likes that.

Insurers basically had two ways to deal with this. They could raise premiums. Or they could bail on the marketplaces.

There’s been a little of both over the past year. In some states, average 2017 premiums shot up more than 50%, though premium increases were more modest in other places.

Some insurers — like Humana, Aetna and UnitedHealthcare, all of whom are for-profit companies that have to answer to shareholders — pulled out of marketplaces altogether.

That’s created a lot of angry customers in some parts of the country.

So are the marketplaces going to collapse?

Probably not.

In a traditional “death spiral,” younger, healthier customers flee as premiums rise. That leaves behind sicker people, who are willing to pay higher premiums to keep coverage they need. Because the remaining customers have high medical costs, premiums tend to rise further, pushing away even more customers until the cycle destroys the market.

To date, there is little evidence this is happening. Enrollment on the marketplaces this year has remained relatively steady, even with the premium hikes.

Nonetheless, the departure of insurers has left consumers in some parts of the country with few options to choose from. In a handful of places, there may be no insurer next year unless something changes.

Many industry officials and independent experts believe that the marketplaces need some fixing.

What would it take to fix the marketplaces?

Everyone agrees that the key is attracting more young, healthy people into the market.

Insurers say too many people are gaming the system by signing up only when they are sick. The industry wants tighter restrictions on when consumers can enroll in coverage on the marketplaces. The Trump administration just gave the industry some of what it wanted by limiting when people could sign up.

Insurers also say they could make health plans cheaper and more attractive to younger people if they could charge those people less, though that might mean charging older customers more. That, of course, doesn’t sit well with groups like AARP.

Others say that offering consumers more financial assistance to pay their premiums would help, though that would naturally cost the government more money.

What do Republicans want to do?

We don’t really know yet.

Many GOP lawmakers are talking about completely overhauling the way Americans who use the marketplaces get coverage.

Instead of making insurers all meet basic standards, for example, Republicans would let states set their own standards. That means that insurers in some places might no longer have to offer the same sets of benefits.

As importantly, many GOP plans would also replace the way that marketplace consumers get financial assistance with their premiums.

The Obamacare subsidies are linked both to consumers’ incomes and to how much health plans cost in their states.

Republicans are talking about linking the value of the subsidy to age, with older consumers getting more financial assistance than younger consumers.

Will that work?

It’s difficult to say since Republicans haven’t offered many details about their plans. What’s important to understand is that everything involves tradeoffs.

Reducing requirements on which benefits insurers must offer, for example, might allow more plans with limited benefits. Those could be cheaper.

But they might also leave consumers without vital protections they need. That was common before Obamacare, when insurers routinely sold policies that limited treatment of some conditions or excluded some benefits, such as prescription drugs.

Similarly, a new system of financial aid that is based only on a consumer’s age would be much simpler than the current system.

But it also would mean that young people with low incomes might have a hard time affording a health plan. That would deprive insurance markets of the healthy enrollees they most need.

 

Obamacare 101 — What’s the big debate over health insurance cost-sharing subsidies?

http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-obamacare-101-cost-sharing-reductions-20170425-story.html

USC patient

As President Trump and congressional leaders scrambled to put together a spending bill to keep the government from shutting down at the end of this week, negotiations almost collapsed over an arcane, but critical part of the Affordable Care Act: cost-sharing reduction payments, or CSRs.

If you’ve never heard of this piece of the Obamacare puzzle, here’s a rundown of what they are, why they were pulled into Trump’s first budget fight and what their fate may be in the future.

What are the cost-sharing reduction payments?

One of the pillars of Obamacare are the insurance marketplaces that allow Americans who don’t get coverage through an employer to shop among health plans that must all cover a basic set of benefit.

Low- and moderate-income shoppers with annual incomes between 100% and 400% of the federal poverty level — between about $12,000 and $48,000 — qualify for subsidies that offset the cost of their monthly insurance premiums.

Less well-known are the so-called cost-sharing reductions. Consumers who make between 100% and 250% of the poverty line can get this additional assistance to cover co-pays and deductibles if they select certain health plans on the Obamacare marketplaces.

These cost-sharing reductions mean that someone who might otherwise face an annual deductible of $2,000 or more would potentially have no deductible at all. This additional assistance can be especially important as many low-priced health plans force consumers to pay high deductibles before their medical care is covered.

This year, the CSR payments will cost the federal government about $7 billion, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

Why are they an issue now?

Most spending in Obamacare is mandatory, which means that it does not require Congress to appropriate it every year in a spending bill. But there has been some debate about whether the CSR payments fall into this category.

The Obama administration initially sought congressional approval for CSR payments but later maintained this was not necessary. And since 2014, Obama administration has made CSR payments to lower deductibles for millions of low-income consumers.

Republicans have argued this usurped Congress’ authority over spending. Last year, a federal judge agreed with them, though she suspended her order while the case was being appealed.

What would happen if the CSR payments are stopped?

Health insurers and other experts have been warning for months that eliminating the payments could destabilize the Obamacare marketplaces and cause some insurers to stop offering health plans.

That is because the payments currently go to insurers, who use them to offset the losses they incur from covering medical expenses that consumers would normally have to pay until they reach their deductibles.

If the payments are stopped, insurers would still be barred from charging low-income consumers for deductibles. But insurers would no longer be able to get financial aid for the costs they are bearing.

Some insurance companies would likely decide that it was no longer worth selling health plans on the marketplaces. Others might conclude that they have to raise premiums to cover the additional losses.

That could cost some consumers more, particularly those who don’t qualify for government assistance.

It could also cost the federal government more as higher premiums would mean higher subsidies for those who qualify (because the value of subsidies is tied to the cost of insurance premiums).

The additional cost of the subsidies might even outstrip the savings that would be generated by stopping the CSR payments, according to a new analysis from the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation, which estimates that stopping the CSR payments would save $10 billion in 2018 but lead to $12 billion in additional subsidy payments, assuming insurers did not abandon the Obamacare markets next year.

How did the CSR payments get dragged into the current budget debate?

To prevent an insurance market meltdown, insurers industry officials and many Democrats urged congressional leaders to include funding for the CSR payments in the spending bill that Congress must pass this week to keep the government open.

That would make the fate of the payments less dependent on the ongoing lawsuit and prevent Trump from using them as a bargaining chip down the road, risking the collapse of insurance markets. At one point, Trump and GOP leaders had floated the idea of using the payments as a way to pressure Democrats to support funding for a border wall with Mexico or to increase military spending.

The White House and GOP leaders ultimately decided against including the payments in the spending bill. But the administration said Wednesday that it would agree to keep funding the CSRs administratively, at least for now.

What could happen further down the road?

Assuming the CSR payments are not included in a future spending bill, the Trump administration could threaten to cut them off again in the future.

That means that insurance markets will likely remain unsettled for some time, even if a collapse is not imminent.

Pre-existing conditions drive moderates’ concern over repeal bill

http://www.politico.com/story/2017/04/27/healthcare-repeal-pre-existing-conditions-moderates-237713?utm_campaign=KHN%3A%20First%20Edition&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=51306136&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_Kd2qUCppTF1-MJzmxXc-yctQ3aukhBU3TjgUBmQorQj2jnFsKpRFmI9jaf7tldE1bHi7_7v6CLiebqofmJrqHhkUGzA&_hsmi=51306136

Image result for Pre-existing conditions

Moderate Republicans are largely withholding their support for the Obamacare repeal bill, arguing it would hurt people with pre-existing conditions

House Republican leaders hoped that the House Freedom Caucus’s endorsement of the latest Obamacare repeal bill would light a fire under enough moderates to get their whip count to the 216 votes needed to pass the measure. Instead, the holdouts are digging in, saying that the latest changes only moved the bill to the right and could put more Americans at risk of losing their health insurance.

“My concern has always been and what a lot of us talked about: people with pre-existing conditions, the elderly,” said Rep. Mario Díaz-Balart (R-Fla.). “How this makes the original bill better? Where is the part that is better for the folks I’m concerned about it? I’m not seeing it at this stage.”

Protections for people with pre-existing conditions have only been in effect for seven years, but proven to be one of the most popular and well-known features of the Affordable Care Act. Moderate Republicans are worried about stripping the safeguards without a reliable replacement. If the resistance from moderates holds, it would be enough to block Obamacare repeal in the House — or send the effort back to square one.

GOP leaders have been buttonholing moderates for two days, arguing that the latest changes — drafted by Rep. Tom MacArthur (R-N.J.) with consultation from the House Freedom Caucus — would ensure people with pre-existing conditions wouldn’t be priced out of a reconfigured market, pointing to high-risk pool requirements in state that choose to opt out of Obamacare provisions.

Backers of the repeal measure say the bill protects people with pre-existing conditions, arguing that people with coverage, for instance, can’t be priced out if they maintain it.

But buying into the plan would pose big political risks for centrists in swing districts. Voicing concerns about pre-existing conditions could prevent a tough vote on an issue that Democrats would surely spotlight in the 2018 election.

 

Several Republican sources say at least some moderates have climbed aboard, but they’re not inclined to say so publicly. House Appropriations Chairman Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-N.J.), who was widely panned by fellow Republicans for not supporting an earlier version of the repeal bill given his high-profile post, is expected to now support it, according to several sources.

Other than Frelinghuysen, there are no moderates who have publicly flipped to support the bill.

Republicans can absorb no more than 22 defections (depending on how many members are seated when the vote is held) from the 238-member Republican conference. The leaders still need fewer than 10 votes, according to several sources.

Rep. Ryan Costello (R-Pa.) said the latest changes to the bill didn’t bring him to a yes.

“Protections for those with pre-existing conditions without contingency and affordable access to coverage for every American remain my priorities for advancing healthcare reform, and this bill does not satisfy those benchmarks for me,” he said in a statement.

Rep. Barbara Comstock (R-Va.), one of the most vulnerable Republicans in 2018, said she is still a no. Rep. Carlos Curbelo of Florida is undecided— he’s still talking with leadership but claims no one is twisting his arm.

“They know better than to pressure me,” he said.

It’s not just traditional moderates who have qualms. Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.), who is very conservative on most social issues, is still a no.

Rep. Pete King (R-N.Y.) doesn’t want Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion repealed under the latest GOP plan, but told POLITICO he would vote to move the bill forward and assumes the Senate would restore Medicaid expansion. If the bill were to come back with Medicaid repealed, “it would be a problem,” he said.

The latest changes may have even eroded the support of moderates who backed the earlier repeal bill that was pulled in March. Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois said he’s undecided. Rep. Steve King of Iowa, one of the House’s most conservative members, told reporters he’s undecided now, too.

Rep. Jim Renacci (R-Ohio), who supported the original repeal bill, is undecided but inclined to move the process forward.

“My biggest concern is that we’re changing things based on amendments written in backrooms and not everyone knows what is said and what’s part of the deal,” he said.

Some Republicans just don’t want to talk about it.

Rep. Darrell Issa of California paused to hear a reporter’s question on his vote, then kept walking.

What individual insurance market trends mean for providers

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/finance/implications-individual-insurance-market-trends-for-providers?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mrkid=959610&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWTJFNU1EQm1aREUyWW1FMSIsInQiOiJlVnd2K1hXVFcwN1wvUTMzTGpkR1lxV3huNGNnXC9IN2c2eEpxNFZBTDBuWmtIR1wvV0RSQXpBOFJnbEs1cHB0UUJJcEFKQnhhYUQ4UDcxNUxTZldTekNBalJMeGpDcWVZa2lpdVJxTHJVZSs5TmRvMWVqSGl0N1V2OUV4azBcL2R3M2QifQ%3D%3D

Image result for What individual insurance market trends mean for providers

Amid uncertainty about the future of healthcare reform, hospitals and health systems must be aware of and prepare for the potential challenges posed by the individual health insurance marketplaces.

Costs in the individual marketplaces have been volatile, so one way providers can support patients who have those plans is to understand the total costs associated with treating them, writes Paul Keckley, Ph.D., health policy analyst and editor of the Keckley Report, in an article for Hospitals & Health Networks.

Until now, much of the discussion from the provider side on the future of healthcare reform has centered on proposed changes to Medicaid. States that expanded Medicaid saw uncompensated care costs drop significantly, and provider groups largely came out against Republican efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act as well as proposed sweeping cuts to Medicaid.

But, Keckley writes, providers need to monitor trends in the individual market as well, which may result in more problems for them. For example, higher copays and deductibles may put preventive care, including key tests and screenings, out of reach for this patient population. Furthermore, the individual market is likely to grow as more employers push responsibility for insurance costs on employees, which in turn could push more costs of care onto providers.

“Hospitals must prepare for two realities: The individual market will grow, and the risks associated with its management will be challenging,” according to Keckley.

One solution that some hospitals are considering is to offer sponsored health plans that target individual market enrollees. But this could backfire, Keckley writes, as premiums will likely increase significantly. Just because a big hospital name is on the plan, that doesn’t mean it will attract more enrollees if premiums are too high to draw interest. Instead, he suggests providers engage in greater advocacy on these issues with state and local leaders.

 

S&P report: ACA individual market is fragile, but not in a ‘death spiral’

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/aca/s-p-report-aca-individual-market-fragile-but-no-death-spiral

Wall Street

Based on 2016 results and enrollment so far in 2017, the Affordable Care Act’s individual market is not in a “death spiral” as some have claimed—but it also isn’t on very stable footing, according to a new report from Wall Street analysts.

The report, from the ratings agency Standard & Poor’s, noted that 2016 brought the first signs that the ACA’s marketplaces could be manageable for insurers after a rough 2014 and 2015.

For example, the weighted average of the medical loss ratios of Blue Cross Blue Shield plans included in the analysts’ study dipped below 100% for the first time last year. That’s a positive sign, but insurers with MLRs above 90% still generally face an underwriting loss after factoring in administrative costs, suggesting more room for improvement.

This year, the analysts believe that meaningful premium increases, product and network changes, as well as “regulatory fine-tuning” of ACA rules, will get insurers closer to breaking even. But it will take another year or two of improvements for most to get to their target profitability levels.

Notably, the premium hikes insurers put in place didn’t result in a major drop in enrollment—and potential death spiral—the analysts wrote. In fact, open-enrollment signups dropped only slightly from 2016 to 2017, in part because the ACA’s subsidies increase along with premiums.

Looking ahead, the analysts expect premiums to rise in 2018, but “at a far lower clip” than they did this year. If the ACA’s rules stay largely intact, they predict low-single-digit growth in individual market membership next year, with most counties continuing to have at least one insurer. Recent insurer exits, however, might leave certain counties with no options on the exchanges.

But the analysts note that their predictions for the rest of this year and 2018 won’t hold if there is a major legislative overhaul of the marketplaces, like an ACA repeal. In addition, much depends on whether insurers will get clarification about cost-sharing subsidies, and whether the Trump administration will continue to conduct enrollment outreach and enforce the individual mandate.

The market still needs time to mature, the report argues, and “every time something new (and potentially disruptive) is thrown into the works, it impedes the individual market’s path to stability.”

Can Obamacare Survive Another Round in the Congressional Boxing Ring?

http://www.realclearhealth.com/articles/2017/04/25/can_obamacare_survive_another_round_in_the_congressional_boxing_ring_110564.html?utm_source=RC+Health+Morning+Scan&utm_campaign=2fcc8f4477-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_04_25&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_b4baf6b587-2fcc8f4477-84752421

Can Obamacare Survive Another Round in the Congressional Boxing Ring?

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) has survived its biggest challenge to date with the failed attempt to repeal and replace by the GOP. But will it survive in the long run? Republican comments and President Trump’s many tweets would suggest the law is still doomed. It is hard to predict what will happen, but let’s examine some themes we are seeing so far to try to gain some insight:

One of the first things the GOP Congress wanted was to retract the cost sharing payments to insurers for low-income exchange plan members. Without these payments, insurers would lose even more money, driving many of them to not offer plans in the state exchanges. The jury is still out on whether the replacement bill’s failure will move the budget reconciliation process forward, but insurers have only two months to decide if they will provide a plan in the exchanges for 2018. If insurers do decide to stay in the exchanges, significant premium increases are very likely to help cover their costs. This will force many people who cannot afford the monthly cost to drop out of coverage. Either of these situations would push people back into the uninsured ranks where providers would lose that reimbursement revenue and drive up uncompensated care.

Loosening the individual mandate’s enforcement is another theme being discussed. New HHS Secretary Price has stated he plans to allow states to loosen the restrictions on waivers for the individual mandate. Combined with premium increases, this would allow people to opt out of coverage much more easily. The CBO report has stated 7 million people would have opted out of coverage if the American Health Care Act (AHCA) had been passed, since many people do not think they need it. Most of these people would be younger and healthier, creating higher costs for insurers, while driving up premiums and/or driving insurers to exit the exchange.

Secretary Price has also mentioned giving states the ability to set requirements to individuals to maintain Medicaid coverage, like applying for work. Studies have shown in the past this activity causes people to fall out of coverage. It is expected that this move would cause many to fall off the Medicaid roles and drive them to the uninsured ranks as well.

The federal deficit is upwards of $540 billion for 2017. And If the ACA does not change at all, then the federal government is expected to spend $1.2 trillion on Medicaid coverage alone through 2026. Previous CBO estimates indicate this would drive our yearly national deficit to over a trillion dollars in 10 years. The U.S. economy survives today because financial institutions buy treasury bonds to fund that deficit each year. But when deficits reach the heights predicted if the ACA remains entirely intact, and the national debt reaches a significant portion of our yearly GDP, bond sales could and likely will slow down. That means damage to the U.S. economy as it continues to stabilize post-recession.

A federal budget has been submitted that makes some spending cuts, but without the AHCA’s passage they pale when faced with the real problem of balancing our budget. This is not an indictment of policy to cover people with insurance, but simply a fact that our nation must find a way to balance our finances. There are many ways to cut cost, but the GOP seems fixated on cutting Medicaid spending as the key to accomplishing this.

We can only theorize what might become of the ACA, but looking at some of the themes and recent comments by the current administration, it would appear some things will change if not a complete revisit of the repeal and replace bill. Will those changes effectively kill the law since it will lack the ability to function as planned? Quite possibly, but only time will tell.

Change will happen. It will result in some sort of reimbursement cuts and very likely push more people back to the uninsured roles. Providers need to ready themselves, and start thinking about ways to improve productivity and reduce the cost to collect while increasing cash collections.

Shawn Yates serves as Director of Product Management for Ontario Systems, defining the company’s strategy for product and service offerings in the health care market. With over 20 years of experience managing self-pay receivables and collection operations for a top 20 health care system, Shawn’s background also includes working for a national outsourcing company helping clients manage their insurance and self-pay receivables, and Experian Health, the largest data and analytics company in the country.

GOP Conservatives’ Goal To Relax Mandatory Health Benefits Unlikely To Tame Premiums

GOP Conservatives’ Goal To Relax Mandatory Health Benefits Unlikely To Tame Premiums

Image result for health insurance industry lobby

As House Republicans try to find common cause on a bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, they may be ready to let states make the ultimate decision about whether to keep a key consumer provision in the federal health law that conservatives say is raising insurance costs.

Those conservatives, known as the House Freedom Caucus, and members of a more moderate group of House Republicans, the Tuesday Group, are hammering out changes to the GOP bill that was pulled unceremoniously by party leaders last month when they couldn’t get enough votes to pass it. At the heart of those changes is the law’s requirement for most insurance plans to offer 10 specific categories of “essential health benefits.” Those include hospital care, doctor and outpatient visits and prescription drug coverage, along with things like maternity care, mental health and preventive care services.

The Freedom Caucus had been pushing for those benefits to be removed, arguing that coverage guarantees were driving up premium prices.

“We ultimately will be judged by only one factor: if insurance premiums come down,” Freedom Caucus Chairman Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) told The Heritage Foundation’s Daily Signal.

But moderates, bolstered by complaints from patients groups and consumer activists, fought back. And a brief synopsis of results from the intraparty negotiations suggests that the compromise could be letting states decide whether to seek a federal waiver to change the essential health benefits.

“The insurance mandates are a primary driver of [premium] spikes,” wrote Meadows and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) in an op-ed in March.

But do those benefits drive increases in premiums? And would eliminating the requirement really bring premiums down? Health analysts and economists say probably not — at least not in the way conservatives are hoping.

“I don’t know what they’re thinking they’re going to pull out of this pie,” said Rebekah Bayram, a principal consulting actuary at the benefits consulting firm Milliman. She is the lead author of a recent study on the cost of various health benefits.

Opponents of the required benefits point to coverage for maternity care and mental health and substance abuse treatment as driving up premiums for people who will never use such services.

But Bayram said eliminating those wouldn’t have much of an impact. Hospital care, doctor visits and prescription drugs “are the three big ones,” she said. “Unless they were talking about ditching those, the other ones only have a marginal impact.”

John Bertko, an actuary who worked in the Obama administration and served on the board of Massachusetts’ health exchange, agreed: “You would either have very crappy benefits without drugs or physicians or hospitalization, or you would have roughly the same costs.”

Maternity care and mental health and substance abuse, he said, “are probably less than 5 percent” of premium costs.

Of course, requiring specific coverage does push up premiums to some extent. James Bailey, who teaches at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb., has studied the issue at the state level. He estimates that the average state health insurance mandate “raises premiums by about one-half of 1 percent.”

Those who want to get rid of the required benefits point to the fact that premiums in the individual market jumped dramatically from 2013 to 2014, the first year the benefits were required.

“The ACA requires more benefits that every consumer is required to purchase regardless of whether they want them, need them or can afford them,” Ohio Insurance Commissioner Mary Taylor said in 2013, when the state’s rates were announced.

But Bayram noted most of that jump was not due to the broader benefits, but to the fact that, for the first time, sicker patients were allowed to buy coverage. “The premiums would go down a lot if only very healthy people were covered and people who were higher risk were pulled out of the risk pool,” she said. (Some conservatives want to change that requirement, too, and let insurers charge sick people higher premiums.)

Meanwhile, most of the research that has been done on required benefits has looked at plans offered to workers by their employers, not policies available to individuals who buy their own coverage because they don’t get it through work or the government. That individual market is the focus of the current debate.

Analysts warn that individual-market dynamics differ greatly from those of the employer insurance market.

Bailey said he “saw this debate coming and wanted to write a paper” about the ACA’s essential health benefits. But “I very quickly realized there are all these complicated details that are going to make it very hard to figure out,” he said, particularly the way the required benefits work in tandem with other requirements in the law.

For example, said Bertko, prescription drugs can represent 20 percent of costs in the individual market. That’s far more than in the employer market.

Bayram said another big complication is that the required benefits do double duty. They not only ensure that consumers have a comprehensive package of benefits but enable other parts of the health law to work by ensuring that everyone’s benefits are comparable.

For example, the law adjusts payments to insurers to help compensate plans that enroll sicker-than-average patients. But in order to do that “risk adjustment,” she said, “all of the plans have to agree on some kind of package. So if you think of essential health benefits as an agreed-upon benchmark, I don’t know how they can get rid of that and still have risk adjustment.”

Revised ACA Repeal-and-Replace Bill Likely to Increase the Uninsured Rate and Health Insurance Costs for Many

http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/blog/2017/apr/amendment-aca-repeal-and-replace-bill

News outlets report that House Republicans are close to agreeing on an amended version of the American Health Care Act (AHCA), their proposed repeal and replacement of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The all-important legislative language for the revised bill is not yet available, nor are Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projections of its effects on coverage and the budget, so any analyses are necessarily tentative.

Nevertheless, the summaries leaked to the media offer insight on the amended bill. If accurate, those summaries suggest that the revised AHCA will significantly increase the numbers of uninsured Americans, raise the cost of insurance for many of the nation’s most vulnerable citizens, and, as originally proposed in the AHCA, cut and reconfigure the Medicaid program. The new amendment specifically allows states to weaken consumer protections by, for example, permitting insurers to charge people with preexisting conditions higher premiums.

What the Amendment Leaves in Place

The amended proposed bill does little to change many provisions of the original AHCA including:

The CBO estimated in March that the combined effects of these provisions would increase the number of people without health insurance by 24 million by 2026. Older Americans would be particularly hard hit by the bill, experiencing much higher premiums relative to the ACA and the greatest coverage losses.

What the Amendment Changes

The amendment offers states the option to apply for waivers to reduce ACA consumer protections that have enabled people with health problems to buy private health insurance. States could waive the ban on charging people with preexisting conditions higher premiums, as long as states set up high-risk pools for people with conditions like cancer or heart disease who could no longer afford coverage. States could also change the ACA’s required minimum package of health benefits for health plans sold in the individual and small-group markets.

Despite the fact the federal ban on preexisting condition exclusions would remain under the AHCA, as Tim Jost points out, insurers could reach the same end by not covering services like chemotherapy that sick people need, or by charging very high premiums for individuals with expensive, preexisting problems. In addition, waiving the ACA’s essential benefit requirement could weaken other consumer protections like bans on lifetime and annual benefit limits and caps on out-of-pocket costs.

While states that allowed higher premiums for people with health problems would be required to use a high-risk pool under the amendment, prior research has found that such pools operated by states before the ACA were expensive both for states and for people enrolled in them, and covered only a small fraction of the individuals who would have benefited. An amendment proposed earlier in the month would provide federal funds for a so-called “invisible risk-sharing” program, a hybrid between a high-risk pool and reinsurance for high claims costs, but the allocated funding would likely need to be much higher to have an impact on costs.

The number of states that would apply for these waivers is unknown, but it seems reasonable to expect that many states with governors and legislatures that have opposed the ACA would do so. For a substantial part of the country, therefore, the amendment could seriously undermine the ACA’s protections for people with preexisting health conditions.