States that resisted the ACA face the biggest hurdles in 2017

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payer/states-resisted-aca-face-biggest-hurdles-2017?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mrkid=959610&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWmpJMlpEZzFZbVV3WXpSaSIsInQiOiI0dCs1NW9kd0ord0VnTUpDWkgzcUp6VmpOV09JNUpldnBqcTh3eUJNTithQUs5QWc0N1JBbjJRYWZmRVJRN216MjNHQ2tFNGhrQWNON2NwR0dLSkdiVTZTSGxDVEZkNVwvejNoRitlVFpGblU9In0%3D

Document titled "Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act"Document titled "Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act"

States that are set to experience reduced competition in their health insurance exchanges also appear to be the ones that were unwilling to lay the groundwork to create a robust marketplace.

The issues that many states are now facing regarding consumer choice and premium pricingwere predicated by resistance from Republican politicians, who failed to expand Medicaid or conduct the necessary outreach to enroll healthy individuals into marketplace plans, according to the Los Angeles Times. In fact, eight of the nine states that have the fewest plan options next year refused to expand Medicaid and failed to engage in outreach.

“It’s the same basic lesson I tell my kids,” Joel Ario, a former insurance commissioner in Oregon and Pennsylvania, told the newspaper. “If you put the work into something, you will get results. If you just sit on the sidelines and complain, you shouldn’t be surprised if things don’t work out.”

Uncovered California: Why Millions Have Fallen Into Health Care Gaps

Uncovered California: Why Millions Have Fallen Into Health Care Gaps

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“Right now, I have a medicine sitting at Wal-Mart pharmacy that I can’t purchase till payday,” Jacqueline, a 55-year-old San Diegan told me during a telephone interview in mid-April. She asked that her last name not be used for this story. “I’ll go without, eight or nine days till payday. It’s for my high cholesterol.”

Five years after the Affordable Care Act became law, and more than three years after California began moving aggressively to implement its provisions, upwards of three million Californians remain without health care coverage; and millions more, like Jacqueline, have basic coverage but continue to be grievously under-insured.This is the story of how so many Californians continue to fall through the ACA’s cracks.

“Uncovered California” is a three-part series of stories and videos examining how the Golden State is trying to fill holes in its health care coverage. Sasha Abramsky’s articles look at working people who are falling through coverage cracks, and at what’s being done to help community college students gain access to mental health services. Debra Varnado reports on efforts to expand the role of nurse practitioners to increase medical services for low-income Californians.

Uncovered California: Community College Students’ Quest for Mental Health Services

Uncovered California: Community College Students’ Quest for Mental Health Services

Mental Health infographic

On April 19, 35-year-old Sacramento City College student Rachel Wilson testified before the state Assembly’s higher education committee. A survivor of sexual assault and multiple suicide attempts, she described the lack of mental health support services available to her at school. Wilson was followed by an American River College professor, whose own son had killed himself while studying at a community college. The professor talked about three students who had recently committed suicide at her school, and of the lack of mental health services to help troubled individuals. When faculty members saw someone in crisis, she said, they were instructed to call campus police and have them take the student away.

“Mental illness is not a crime,” she told legislators. Then she repeated it: “Mental illness is not a crime.”

 Both women wanted the legislators to support Kevin McCarty’s (D-Sacramento) Assembly Bill 2017, which would significantly expand mental health services across California’s vast community college system.

Roughly two million Californians attend classes in one or another of the 113 community campuses dotted around the state. Surveys suggest that somewhere in the region of one in four of these students will experience a diagnosable mental health problem at some point, but approximately 40 percent of them won’t seek timely help. And too often, the institutions at which they study won’t be proactive in linking them up with vital services. As a result, they go untreated.

“Uncovered California” is a three-part series of stories and videos examining how the Golden State is trying to fill holes in its health care coverage. Sasha Abramsky’s articles look at working people who are falling through coverage cracks, and at what’s being done to help community college students gain access to mental health services. Debra Varnado reports on efforts to expand the role of nurse practitioners to increase medical services for low-income Californians.

High-Risk Pools For Uninsurable Individuals

High-Risk Pools For Uninsurable Individuals

Figure 1: Concentration of Health Care Spending in U.S. Population, 2011

In the debate over the future of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), proposals have emerged that would repeal or weaken rules prohibiting health insurance discrimination based on health status, instead offering high-risk pools as a source of coverage for people who would be uninsurable due to pre-existing conditions.

In Congress, HR 2653 was introduced by members of the House Republican Study Committee to repeal the ACA and replace it with other changes, including state high-risk pools.  This bill would authorize $50 million for seed grants to help states establish high-risk pools, and $2.5 billion annually for 10 years to help states fund high-risk pools.  Recently, House Republicans released their proposal to replace the ACA, entitled A Better Way.  This plan would significantly modify ACA insurance market rules to provide a one-time open enrollment opportunity; thereafter, only individuals who maintain continuous coverage would be guaranteed access to insurance without regard to their health status.  This plan also would provide $25 billion over 10 years in state grants to help fund high-risk pools.  Pools would be required to cap premiums (at unspecified levels) and would be prohibited from imposing waiting lists.

For more than 35 years, many states operated high-risk pool programs to offer non-group health coverage to uninsurable residents.  The federal government also operated a temporary high-risk pool program established under the ACA to provide coverage to people with pre-existing conditions in advance of when broader insurance market changes took effect in 2014.  This issue brief reviews the history of these programs to provide context for some of the potential benefits and challenges of a high-risk pool.

The Next Big Debate in Health Care

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2016/06/30/the-next-big-debate-in-health-care/

Image result for The Next Big Debate in Health Care

Source: Kaiser Family Foundation analysis of Truven Health Analytics Market Scan Commercial Claims and Encounters Database, 2004-2014; Bureau of Labor Statistics, Seasonally Adjusted Data from the Current Employment Statistics Survey, 2004-2014 (April to April).

With 91% of the population now covered by some form of health insurance, and the coverage rate higher in some states, the next big debate in health policy could be about the adequacy of coverage. That particularly means rising payments for deductibles and their impact on family budgets and access to care. This is about not just Obamacare but also the many more people who get insurance through an employer.

As the chart above shows, payments toward deductibles by consumers who have insurance through large employers rose 256% from 2004 to 2014; over the same period, wages increased 32%. The chart shows what people actually paid toward their deductibles and other forms of cost-sharing, not just their exposure as deductibles climbed (which is more typically what studies and data report). Deductibles accounted for 47% of cost-sharing payments in 2014, up from 24% in 2004. During the same period some other forms of cost-sharing fell. Payments for co-pays declined by 26%. It’s no wonder that consumers say in polls that deductibles are their top health-cost concern.

Rising payments for deductibles cause people to use less health care and have played a role in the moderation we have seen in recent years in the growth of health spending. That rate of growth has begun to tick up but remains moderate by historical standards. Ever larger deductibles may dampen growth in spending but can also be a significant burden for many family budgets and a barrier to care for the chronically ill.

New Commonwealth Fund Report: Latinos and People with Low Incomes Are Most Likely to Be Uninsured, Despite Significant Gains Under Affordable Care Act

http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/press-releases/2016/aug/remaining-uninsured

Latinos Are a Growing Share of the Uninsured

Of the U.S. adult population currently without health insurance, 88 percent is Latino, makes less than $16, 243 a year, is under age 35, and/or works for a small business, according to new Commonwealth Fund survey findings. Half (51%) of the remaining uninsured live in one of the 20 states that had not yet expanded Medicaid at the time of the survey.

The report, Who Are the Remaining Uninsured and Why Haven’t They Signed Up for Coverage?, finds that an estimated 24 million working-age adults were uninsured between February and April 2016, six years after the initial implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) in 2010. According to the report, as the number of people without health insurance declined by 20 million since the law went into effect, the composition of the uninsured population has changed: white adults now represent a smaller share and Latinos a larger share.

“About 26 million Americans have gained coverage through the Affordable Care Act’s marketplaces and Medicaid expansion,” said Sara Collins, Vice President for Health Care Coverage and Access at The Commonwealth Fund and the report’s lead author. “However, millions of people still don’t have health insurance. That means they are likely to go without the health care they need and are at risk of medical debt or bankruptcy if they get sick.”

The study finds that state and federal policies, varying levels of awareness about the health insurance marketplaces, and concerns about affordability are the primary reasons people remained uninsured.

The High Cost of Charging Older People Much Higher Premiums

http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/blog/2016/aug/the-high-cost-of-charging-older-people-much-higher-premiums?omnicid=EALERT1090805&mid=henrykotula@yahoo.com

An estimated 11 million young adults ages 19 to 34 currently lack health insurance. Health insurers covet this age group as enrollees for their generally healthy status and lower cost risk. Bringing more of these uninsured young people into the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplaces would bring more balance to the marketplace risk pools, which some insurers complain are dominated by less healthy people.

One option for attracting young people being floated in policy circles is lowering premiums for this group by raising the limit on how much more insurers can charge older people relative to young people. The ACA bans insurers from charging people higher premiums on the basis of health or gender, but insurers are allowed to charge older adults up to three times what they charge young adults. This provision helps protect insurers from the greater potential health costs of older adults. Some have suggested that insurers be allowed to increase this so-called age band from 3:1 to 5:1 or higher, or allowing states to set their own age bands.

Christie boasts N.J. Medicaid expansion success under Obamacare

http://www.nj.com/politics/index.ssf/2016/08/christie_medicaid_expansion_report.html

Gov. Chris Christie on Monday boasted the success of expanding the Medicaid program in the state, arguing the “naysayers” have been “proven wrong” and that 566,000 additional New Jerseyans have insurance coverage.

It’s been three years since Christie announced he planned to buck his party and embrace President Obama’s Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act. He was one of only a handful of GOP governors to embrace the changes.

“There were many naysayers,” Christie said during a Statehouse news conference.

“We made a deal with the federal government. If they keep their deal, we’ll keep our part of the deal,” he said. “I am for Medicaid expansion … but I am not for Medicaid expansion at any price.”

JAMA Forum: Why Are Private Health Insurers Losing Money on Obamacare?

https://newsatjama.jama.com/2016/08/25/jama-forum-why-are-private-health-insurers-losing-money-on-obamacare/

Uwe Reinhardt, PhD (Image: Jon Roemer/Princeton University)

Uwe E. Reinhardt, PhD, is the James Madison professor of political economy and of economics at Princeton University, where he teaches health economics, comparative health systems, general microeconomics, and financial management. Dr Reinhardt is also the codirector of the Griswold Center for Economic Policy Studies at Princeton University. The bulk of his research has been focused on health economics and policy, both in the United States and abroad. He is a member of the Health and Medicine Division of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (formerly the Institute of Medicine) and served on its Governing Council in the 1980s. He is past president of AcademyHealth, the Foundation for Health Services Research, and the International Health Economics Association. He is also a member of JAMA‘s editorial board.

Health spending is highly concentrated among the highest spenders.

The contributions individuals make out of their paychecks toward employer-sponsored health insurance are community rated, which means that they are the same for all employees of the firm, regardless of their health status and even age. So healthy employees are forced to subsidize less healthy colleagues through the premiums they pay. With the ACA, the Obama administration sought to provide the same deal for US individuals purchasing health insurance in the individual market.

For health insurers, however, this approach can be called an unnatural act, because it forces them knowingly to issue policies to very ill people at premiums evidently far below these individuals’ likely claims on the insurer’s overall risk pool. Actuaries and health policy analysts understand that this approach can work only if all individuals, healthy and ill, are mandated to purchase coverage for a defined, basic package of benefits, at the community-rated premium—thereby forcing young and healthy individuals to subsidize with their premiums the health care of individuals with medical conditions in the insurer’s risk pool.

However, for purely political reasons, the ACA mandate for all person in the United States to be insured was rather weak, leading many younger or healthier individuals simply to forgo purchasing health insurance and paying the relatively low fines for doing so. Over time, this practice naturally will drive up the community-rated premiums, inducing even greater numbers of young and healthy individuals to forgo insurance coverage, leaving private insurers with ever-more expensive risk pools.

The result of this adverse risk selection (the scenario in which sicker-than-average people purchase insurance while young and healthy people do not) has been that some private health insurers underpriced their policies on the ACA exchanges, perhaps to gain market share early on or because they simply did not anticipate quite the adverse risk selection that occurred.

Uwe Reinhardt: Adverse risk selection crippling Obamacare

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/uwe-reinhardt-adverse-risk-selection-crippling-obamacare/425182/

  • The ACA has failed to attract enough younger, healthier people to the public insurance exchanges, causing Aetna and other private insurers to exit the market rather than shoulder the costs of sicker people, according to Princeton economist Uwe Reinhardt.
  • To deal with adverse risk selection — where sicker-than-average individuals buy insurance while younger, healthier ones don’t — some payers plan to raise premiums more than 25% in 2017.
  • That will lead even more young, healthy individuals to forego obtaining ACA coverage, creating even greater adverse risk selection, Reinhardt says.