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Analysis: Most Short-Term Health Plans Don’t Cover Drug
Treatment or Prescription Drugs, and None Cover Maternity Care
A new Kaiser Family
Foundation analysis of short-term, limited duration health plans
for sale through two major national online brokers finds big gaps in the
benefits they offer.
Through an executive
order and proposed new regulations, the Trump Administration is seeking to
encourage broader use of short-term, limited duration health plans as a
cheaper alternative to individual market plans that comply with the
Affordable Care Act’s requirements. Repeal of the individual mandate penalty
– which currently applies to people buying short-term plans – is also
expected to boost enrollment starting next year.
The analysis examines 24 distinct short-term
insurance products currently marketed in 45 states and the District of
Columbia through eHealth or Agile Health Insurance. It finds:
In seven states – Alaska, California, Hawaii,
Maryland, Montana, New Mexico and Utah – none of the available short-term
plans cover any of these four benefit categories. When short-term plans
do cover mental health, substance abuse, and prescription drugs, the analysis
finds they almost always include meaningful limitations and exclusions that
would not be permitted in ACA-compliant plans.
Short-term plans
traditionally have been marketed to people who experience temporary gaps in
coverage. Unlike ACA-compliant plans, short-term policies can deny or
restrict coverage to people with pre-existing conditions and are not required
to cover essential health benefits. They also can include dollar caps on
coverage and higher deductibles that would not be allowed under ACA-compliant
individual market and group health plans.
The analysis confirms
that these short-term plans often have premiums much lower than ACA coverage
– often 20 percent or less than the lowest-cost bronze plan available through
the ACA marketplace in the same location.
To the extent that
healthy individuals opt for cheaper short-term policies instead of
ACA-compliant plans, adverse selection would raise the cost of coverage for
people with health conditions who remain in the ACA-compliant
market. Tax credits would offset those higher premiums for low- to
moderate-income people who qualify for them, though middle-income families
not eligible for subsidies would likely face premium increases.
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues, the Kaiser Family Foundation is a nonprofit
organization based in San Francisco, California.
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Monday, April 23, 2018
Most Short-Term Health Plans Don’t Cover Drug Treatment or Prescription Drugs, and None Cover Maternity Care
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