By Wire Reports
July 5, 2018
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said state
health insurance marketplaces are increasingly failing to cover people
who do not qualify for federal subsidies even as the exchanges remain
relatively stable.
CMS released three reports that provide important
information on the current condition of the Federal and State-based Exchanges
and state individual health insurance markets. Steps taken by CMS in 2017, as
the reports show, improved the performance of the Exchanges and began
addressing market stability issues. However, serious problems persist.
Rising premiums have left unsubsidized people with poor health coverage options
and dramatically increased the federal cost of premium subsidies.
“As the Trump Administration took office, there were
warning signs that we were dealing with a crisis in the individual health
insurance market and Obamacare was failing its consumers. These reports show
that the high price plans on the individual market are unaffordable and forcing
unsubsidized middle class consumers to drop coverage,” said CMS Administrator
Seema Verma. Additionally, these reports represent the current state of the
market, as well as confirm our Agency’s efforts to stabilize the market. The
three reports released today include the Early 2018 Effectuated Enrollment Snapshot, Exchange Trends Report, and new for this
year, Trends in Subsidized and Unsubsidized Enrollment.
The reports include data on effectuated Exchange enrollment for 2017 and 2018,
overall trends on the operational and programmatic performance of the Exchange,
and trends in subsidized and unsubsidized individual market enrollment from
2014 to 2017. These data provide a number of insights on how well state
individual health insurance markets and Exchanges are serving the American
consumer.
Serious problems in the individual
health insurance market emerged in 2016.
·
The subsidized and unsubsidized
enrollment report shows enrollment began to decline in some states between 2015
and 2016, and in particular among the unsubsidized portion of the market. Over
that period, 23 states experienced a decline in unsubsidized enrollment, with
10 states experiencing double-digit declines.
·
For plan year 2017, for which
enrollment began in November 2016, the report shows an alarming 20 percent drop
in the number of people nationwide who enrolled in the individual health
insurance market without federal premium subsidies. By comparison, subsidized
enrollment dropped by just 3 percent, or 223,000 people.
·
This enrollment drop occurred at the
same time average monthly premiums spiked by 21 percent.
·
The unsubsidized portion of some
state individual markets have clearly entered a death spiral, with unsubsidized
enrollment dropping by more than a third in 14 states, including an astonishing
73 percent decline in Arizona.
·
These dramatic drops in enrollment
occurred under the insurance rules and rates established under the previous
Administration.
Immediate actions taken by CMS
improved the performance of the Federal platform Exchanges and began addressing
market stability issues.
·
CMS took immediate steps in 2017 to
address market stability issues and to improve the performance of the Exchanges
using the Federal platform in order to mitigate the deterioration of the
individual health insurance market for consumers. The Exchange trends report
shows a number of these initiatives are already improving the Federal platform
Exchanges.
·
The Exchange Call Center reported an
all-time high customer satisfaction rate of 90 percent.
·
CMS increased efforts to leverage the
capabilities of the private sector by expanding the role of health insurance
agents and brokers who supported 3,660,668 health plan enrollments, 42 percent
of plan year 2018 open enrollments on Federal platform Exchanges. In contrast,
Navigators enrolled less than 1 percent of total enrollees.
·
CMS also added new changes to Special
Enrollment Periods (SEPs) to improve the risk pool by requiring people to
verify their eligibility for an SEP. As a result, the volume of
exceptional circumstance SEPs granted by CMS declined by 56 percent for plan
year 2017.
·
Consumer requests for SEPs continued
to be served at a high level. Average response times for SEP verifications were
one to three days and 90 percent of SEP applicants were able to satisfy SEP
verification and begin coverage.
With enhancements to the Federal
platform, enrollment through the Federal and State-based Exchanges remained
steady into 2018.
·
Effectuated enrollment is when a
person has selected or is automatically reenrolled in a plan and paid the first
month’s premium, if applicable. The effectuated enrollment report shows that
enrollment through the Exchanges remained steady for subsidized people moving
into plan year 2018. In February 2018, 10.6 million individuals had effectuated
their coverage through the Exchanges. This is approximately 3 percent higher
than the 10.3 million people who had effectuated their coverage at the same
time last year.
·
Those who enroll through the
Exchanges increasingly rely on federal subsidies. The report shows 87 percent
of enrollees rely on Advance Premium Tax Credits up from 84 percent for plan
year 2017.
·
People who made a plan selection
during open enrollment were more likely to have effectuated coverage in 2018.
Nine percent of people failed to follow through with effectuating their
coverage in 2018, compared to 15 percent in 2017.
Rising premiums dramatically increase
the federal cost of subsidies and leave unsubsidized people with few if any
coverage options.
·
The effectuated enrollment report
also shows that average monthly premiums for coverage purchased through
Exchanges rose another 27 percent in 2018 on top of the 21 percent increase
consumers experienced in 2017.
·
This premium increase resulted in an
even sharper increase in the average federal premium subsidy, which jumped by
39 percent in 2018, rising from $373 in 2017 to $520 in 2018.
·
This increase in average premiums
subsidy, as well as higher enrollment, will likely increase federal spending on
premium subsidies by more than $17 billion in 2018.
·
Coverage options for the unsubsidized
portion of the market were already bad in 2017 when 20 percent dropped
coverage. Another 27 percent increase in premiums leaves unsubsidized people
with few if any coverage options and likely resulted in another substantial
decline in unsubsidized coverage for 2018.
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