By Michelle Andrews JUNE 26, 2018
If you
own a restaurant, plumbing company or other small business, you may be
intrigued by the expected expansion of association health plans under a new
rule that got a stamp of approval from the Trump administration last week.
Will
they meet your needs? Save you money?
Those
are important questions for small businesses and self-employed people who
struggle to buy affordable insurance for themselves and their workers.
Federal
officials said the new rule would
help level the playing field for these businesses, giving the kind of flexibility on benefits and
leverage to negotiate with providers that large companies may
have.
When announcing the policy on
June 19, President Donald Trump said it would “result in very low prices, much
more choice, much more freedom, including in many cases new opportunities to
purchase health insurance. You’ll be able to do this across state lines.”
But
detractors say the plans may not provide the full protection that workers need,
plus the changes likely will drive up costs in the regular individual and
small-group markets, where people who need comprehensive coverage would be
forced to seek insurance.
Critics
also point to “the long history of fraud and scams and insolvencies” for these
plans, said Timothy Jost, emeritus professor of law at Washington and Lee
University in Virginia.
“I
think consumers are going to be in for a pretty wild ride,” Jost said.
Here
are some details about what association health plans could mean for you.
Q: What
are association health plans and what did the administration change?
Association
health plans (sometimes called AHPs) allow small businesses to band together to
buy insurance. Some plans have been in place for years, and those plans can
continue to operate after the new rule takes effect. But the Trump
administration’s regulation loosens the rules for additional plans to enter the
market, allowing more small businesses, including individuals who work for
themselves, to join these plans.
In
contrast to earlier AHPs that generally required the association’s members to
share an economic or other common purpose beyond enrolling in health insurance,
new AHP members can be connected by geography alone or by business and
professional interests. And under the new rule, providing members with
insurance can be the main purpose of the association health plans.
Q: When
will the plans be available?
The new
rule will be phased in starting in September. It’s uncertain how soon after
that date plans will be offered.
Q: The
ACA added some popular protections, including requiring plans to cover
preventive care without charging consumers anything out-of-pocket and allowing
people to keep their kids on their plan until they reach age 26. How will these
provisions be handled under association health plans?
Those
provisions still apply to association health plans.
Q: How
are preexisting medical conditions handled in the new rule?
Association
health plans that are established under the new rule won’t be allowed to
discriminate against individuals if they’re sick. But that doesn’t necessarily
mean that people with preexisting medical conditions won’t encounter roadblocks
in finding affordable, comprehensive coverage.
In the
final rule, the administration lays out a variety of circumstances that could
affect affordability. For example, an association plan could charge companies
that employ construction workers higher premiums than firms that are in the
hospitality business. The rule also allows plans to charge different rates based
on gender, age and location.
Q: Will
the plans cover a broad range of benefits?
It’s
unclear. Association health plans are intended to make health insurance more affordable for
small businesses in part by giving them the same kind of flexibility that large
companies have in choosing which benefits they offer.
Flexibility
may have a downside, though. AHP insurers don’t have to include the 10
“essential health benefits” that are required under the health law for plans in
the individual and small-group market, typically companies with fewer than 50
employees. They might exclude coverage for prescription drugs or rehab
services, for example.
Even
though they’re not required to, large companies typically provide comprehensive
benefits to compete for top talent. Smaller companies with fewer resources may
find it tougher to afford generous employee perks.
Association
health plans that cover employers with at least 15 employees will have to offer maternity
coverage — one of the ACA’s essential health benefits — under
the new rule. But smaller employers could skip that requirement.
The plans
have to abide by the annual maximum out-of-pocket
spending limitfor the essential health benefits they decide to
cover, and they can’t impose annual or lifetime limits on coverage of
those benefits.
But
since plans don’t have to cover all the essential health benefits, those
protections aren’t as meaningful, some say.
“It
waters down the out-of-pocket cap protection if you don’t have essential health
benefit coverage requirements,” said Sarah Lueck, a senior policy analyst at
the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
Q: How
could premiums be affected?
The new
rule allows health insurers to use several factors that may provide clues that
people are likely to be expensive to insure, including gender, age, industry
and geography, when setting rates for employers. A company with older workers
who are more likely to have chronic conditions, for example, could face higher
rates — as might one that employs lots of women, who might rack up charges for
maternity care. In addition, individuals within a company could be charged
different premiums based on their occupation or other factors not related to
their health status if the employer chooses to do so, Jost said.
Q:
Who’s likely to benefit under the rule?
Companies
that have relatively young, healthy employees could fare well.
“For
young men in certain low-risk industries, who are currently healthy, they’re
likely to encounter a relatively low premium,” said Justin Giovannelli, an
associate research professor at Georgetown University’s Center on Health
Insurance Reforms.
The
Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, when filing comments on the proposed
rule, said association health plan premiums for women in their
early 30s might be more than 30 percent higher than rates under regular
individual and small-group rules. It also estimated that rates for young men of
a similar age could be more than 40 percent lower than ACA rates.
Similarly,
companies in some industries could see lower premiums than others, according to
BCBS. Rates for engineering companies could be about 9 percent lower than what
insurers would charge on the individual and small-group market, for example,
while those for the taxicab industry could be nearly 15 percent higher.
Q: What
if an employer offers a really skimpy plan? Are workers stuck with it?
That
depends. If an employer offers coverage that doesn’t meet minimum standards,
workers can shop for subsidized health insurance on the marketplace, and the
employer may face penalties. (Companies with fewer than 50 workers are exempt from
penalties, however.) In 2018, that means that single coverage can’t cost workers more than 9.56
percent of their entire household income and plans have to pay
at least 60 percent of the cost of covered benefits. The same rules apply if an
employer offers coverage through an association health plan.
Some
policy experts say they’re worried that people who work for small businesses
may get burned if their companies, which do not offer any plans now, start
offering coverage through an association health plan. The new plan may be
skimpier and more expensive than the comprehensive coverage they’ve been
getting on the ACA exchange.
“Even
though the AHP coverage might be skimpy, employees would no longer be eligible
for subsidized coverage on the exchange,” said Katie Keith, a health policy
consultant who writes frequently about health law.
Please
visit khn.org/columnists to
send comments or ideas for future topics for the Insuring Your Health column.
Michelle
Andrews: @mandrews110
https://khn.org/news/thinking-about-an-association-health-plan-read-the-fine-print/?utm_campaign=KHN%3A%20First%20Edition&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=64032358&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_pWAfNttYcXcZDu1S8F68E8SFJJQmjTM-iVjEnxBY_JiRa4PkPKq8GWKlImihat3vm9oR2Nq8u-mhwJDcxgzC3UGToug&_hsmi=64032358
No comments:
Post a Comment