By Julie Appleby July
18, 2017
One
of the fiercest complaints about the Affordable Care Act is that it imposed a
government mandate on consumers to purchase coverage with a broad and specific
set of benefits — including maternity care, mental health treatment and limits
on out-of-pocket costs — whether they wanted those benefits or not.
More
choice is always better, critics argued. But what if choice trumps protection?
The
latest Senate bill — drafted solely by Republicans — fell apart late
Monday as two more senators said they would not vote for it. The political
tumult was spurred in part by the potential changes for consumers.
“I
think choice is great when it comes to buying cell phones or pizza slices,” said
Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at Georgetown University’s Health Policy
Institute. “It’s a very different thing in insurance. None of us is immune from
someday becoming one of those sick people. Insurance is supposed to protect us
from unpredictable risk.”
One
bill provision, dubbed the “Cruz amendment,” for backer Texas Sen. Ted Cruz,
would have allowed insurers to offer plans stripped of most of the ACA’s
requirements so long as they also offer some policies that do meet those rules.
The
provision aimed to win support from conservatives who want lower premiums,
which would be achieved with the more limited benefit package. But it’s not so
simple. Consumers would have to weigh the tradeoffs between price and their
somewhat unpredictable future needs.
“This
is the fundamental divide,” said Christopher Condeluci, an attorney and former
counsel to the Senate Finance Committee.
“You
are taking a risk in purchasing a less comprehensive plan because you never
know what’s going to happen. But, if you feel this is the right type of plan,
then you should have ability to make that economic and risk decision.”
ACA
supporters, though, see high value in the strong consumer safeguards.
The
ACA, they say, rescued consumers left wanting by some of the choices on the
individual market. Before the ACA, some policies had very limited coverage, not
covering hospitalization, for example, or paying only small amounts toward
doctor visits, tests or drugs.
Sometimes
consumers were misled by insurers or agents about the breadth of coverage.
Sometimes they were just confused and didn’t realize the limits until after the
medical problem occurred — their most vulnerable point — leaving some on the
hook for hefty medical costs.
The
ACA’s comprehensive benefit rules, supporters say, may add to premium costs,
but protect consumers from making bad choices — deliberately or inadvertently —
that could result in tens of thousands in unpaid medical bills or no treatment
altogether.
The
next steps in the Senate’s consideration of the GOP health plan are now
uncertain as Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz), a key GOP vote, recovers from surgery and the intra-party
fissures emerge.
McCain issued a statement urging that the
chamber return to “regular order, hold hearings, receive input from members of
both parties” to produce the legislation. But Majority Leader Mitch McConnell
(R-Ky.) signaled his intent to hold a vote to repeal the health law with a two year
delay. As the discussion continues from this point, here are five
things you should know about how this marketplace provision could play out:
1.
Premiums would be lower, but maybe not for you.
Because
they would cover less, premiums on such policies would be lower for healthy
people. That’s how the market was before the ACA passed, when insurers could
reject people with preexisting medical conditions in most states.
The
ACA barred that practice, so insurers generally raised everyone’s rates to
cover those who were ill. Premium increases were softened for consumers who
received subsidies to purchase ACA coverage, but really hit people with incomes
of more than $48,000 and who are not eligible for subsidies.
Still,
the Cruz plan might not lower premiums for everyone.
Insurers
could use a person’s health — including their claims history and genetic
profile — to set rates, a move barred in ACA plans. They could also outright
reject people deemed too risky or sick. People with medical conditions — or
those that develop them while covered — could be charged far more than those
without. And the Senate bill doesn’t offer consumers help in buying the plans.
Federal subsidies cannot be used to purchase the Cruz amendment plans.
2.
Coverage would be less generous.
Because
the plans would not have to include the ACA’s ten “essential health benefits” —
hospital care and prescription drugs among them — consumers could end up paying
those expenses themselves.
Those
costs could be high, as insurers could also forego the ACA’s annual
out-of-pocket caps, which this year are $7,150 for individual coverage and
$14,300 for family plans.
The
policies cannot set annual or lifetime dollar limits on care, but under the
Cruz amendment, insurers could use deductibles or other out-of-pocket costs to
achieve a similar goal: shifting more costs to consumers. For example,
chemotherapy might have unlimited annual coverage, but only after a huge
deductible — say $10,000 or $20,000 — is met.
3.
It would create essentially two different markets.
Insurers
could offer Cruz amendment plans, so long as they also offered at least one
gold level, one silver level and one “benchmark” plan that meets the ACA rules.
But there’s nothing saying they would have to actively market those plans.
Most
policy experts fear the result would be market segmentation — a siphoning off
of the healthiest people into Cruz plans. “The attempt here is to turn what we
know as Obamacare today into a high-risk pool,” said Robert Laszewski, an
insurance industry consultant.
Then
what would happen? Premium costs could rise rapidly for people in the ACA plans
and, at the same time, subsidies for consumers purchasing those plans would
become less generous for many, particularly older people.
Even the insurers’ trade lobby has
sounded alarm about the Cruz approach, sending a letter last week to Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer
(D-N.Y.) that called it “simply unworkable in any form.”
4.
You might be temporarily barred from broader coverage.
Because
the plans won’t be considered “creditable coverage,” consumers who buy one and
then decide to switch to a plan that is consistent with ACA rules might face a
penalty of having to wait six months for that coverage to begin. That lockout
period aims to keep people from jumping in and out of comprehensive coverage.
Here’s
how that would work: Someone with a stripped down plan gets cancer and wants to
switch to coverage that is more generous. Under the current proposal, that
person might have to wait six months, which could complicate if not threaten their
cancer treatment.
Some
experts read the proposal as appearing to offer a small exception to that
six-month lockout — but only if consumers don’t have a single-day gap between
the day their Cruz amendment policy expires and the new ACA-compliant plan kicks
in.
“People
would have the freedom to choose, but the difference between the choices and
the consequences of those choices are extraordinary,” said Laszewski, a
longtime critic of the ACA who has blasted the proposed Senate replacement. “Do
they roll the dice with their health and hope they never get sick?”
5.
They are different from “catastrophic plans.”
The
bill would also expand eligibility for coverage known as catastrophic plans.
These are not the same as the Cruz amendment plans. Catastrophic plans include
the broader array of ACA benefits. They also allow three doctor visits annually
exempt from the deductible.
At
the same time, however, their deductibles are higher than any of the other
types of ACA plans sold, equal to those previously mentioned annual
out-of-pocket limits. So far, they haven’t been terribly popular. They are
currently limited to people age 30 and younger, with a few other exceptions.
The Senate bill would make them available to all ages — and allow subsidies to
be used to purchase them.
http://khn.org/news/5-ways-the-senate-gop-health-bill-could-change-your-health-plan-options/?utm_campaign=KHN%3A%20First%20Edition&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=54342873&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--DFxTlqYesQBjhN3lwxQpiaU4FfmoBV6m3WTLsNiYgtIk9q4BkN-I8qtOIVYlDGi0cTL_I8g1UPefEPaxuLjy1ZhXJMg&_hsmi=54342873
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