Washington Times (DC)
April 24, 2018
Health insurers, patient groups and Senate Democrats
implored the Trump administration Monday to curb or cancel its push to let
Americans get around Obamacare by using cheaper, short-term health plans for a
full year, saying the plan would destabilize the insurance markets and increase
the number of uninsured.
The Health and Human Services Department wants to lift the
three-month limit on the stopgap plans that President Obama imposed during his
last year in office. It is part of Mr. Trump's effort to extend more affordable
options to healthier people who've been priced out of the individual market
under the Affordable Care Act, after the GOP-led Congress failed to repeal and
replace the 2010 law.
More than 100 patient-advocacy groups protested the
proposal Monday, the final day to submit comments to HHS, noting the full-year
plans could duck Obamacare rules requiring robust coverage or preventing
insurers from denying sicker patients or charging them more than healthy ones.
They fear the rule will fragment the market, as healthier
customers leave the Obamacare exchanges and opt into skimpier plans, forcing
insurers to raise prices on costlier, sicker consumers who will remain in the
program because they need robust coverage.
Allowing short-term plans "to proliferate would force
individuals, including those with serious or chronic diseases and disabilities,
into a smaller, sicker market to obtain the coverage they need to manage their
health," wrote the groups, including the American Health Association and
March of Dimes. "Premiums for comprehensive plans that meet federal
standards would likely skyrocket, and plans would likely exit the market. This
will make insurance either unavailable or unaffordable for those who rely on
the marketplace to get coverage."
America's Health Insurance Plans, the main insurers'
lobby, aired similar worries.
"We are concerned that this proposed rule will lead
to more people being uninsured and under-insured, and to higher costs in the
long run," said Matt Eyles, AHIP's incoming president and CEO.
"Short-term plans can provide an important temporary bridge for Americans
who are transitioning between plans. But they are not a replacement for
comprehensive coverage."
HHS officials estimated in February that 100,000 to
200,000 people might defect from the Obamacare exchanges and into short-term
insurance in 2019, under the proposed framework.
It's unclear how many people who lack current coverage
will opt for short-term duration insurance instead of Obamacare-compliant
plans, though the administration said they drafted the proposal with them in
mind.
Mr. Eyles said the plan, if it proceeds, should not be
enacted until 2020, so insurers have time to plan for a reconfigured
marketplace. He also said the plans shouldn't last longer than six months.
AHIP also said consumers need to understand that
short-term plans might not cover prescription drugs, mental health care or
chronic conditions, might be unavailable to people with pre-existing conditions
and may impose annual or lifetime limits on coverage.
It is unclear when the administration will finalize the
proposal, though HHS spokeswoman Caitlin Oakley said the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services will work with the Labor and Treasury departments to
"thoroughly examine the public comments on the rule and publish a final
rule expeditiously."
Analysts say healthy people may consider the short-term
plans a viable option because the GOP-led Congress zeroed out penalties tied to
the "individual mandate" requiring Americans to hold robust coverage
or pay a tax.
Democrats want Republicans who control the levers of
political power in D.C. to bolster the wobbly markets with new funding or
taxpayer-funded options, instead of siphoning current customers away from Mr.
Obama's program.
"We are committed to making health insurance premiums
more affordable for all consumers and expanding the number of options, and we
stand ready to work with the Administration and our colleagues in Congress to
achieve these goals," dozens of Senate Democrats wrote to HHS on Monday.
"Unfortunately, creating a new class of health insurance plans that lack
basic patient protections and could lead to higher prices for seniors, those
with pre-existing conditions, and any American who wants to purchase a plan
with comprehensive benefits does not achieve this goal."
Democrats said they're particularly worried that HHS will
let consumers renew the short-term plans, "creating a permanent market for
junk plans."
https://insurancenewsnet.com/oarticle/trump-administration-implored-to-curtail-short-term-insurance-plan
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