Targeted News Service (Press Releases) October 4,
2018
DALLAS, Texas, Oct.
3 -- The Institute for Policy Innovation issued the following news release:
The U.S. health
insurance system has failed and left Americans without access to affordable
coverage. Unless Congress repeals Obamacare or at least gives insurers enough
flexibility to operate outside of its current restrictions, health insurance,
and especially the individual market, will become even more dysfunctional and
less affordable.
In a new Institute
for Policy Innovation (IPI) publication, "How Health Insurance Has Failed
America," IPI's Dr. Merrill Matthews examines how politicians forced
health insurers to abandon standard actuarial principles and have tried to turn
health insurance into a social justice tool to achieve their vision of
"fairness."
"Health
insurance (like any insurance) is supposed to protect us from catastrophic
losses," said Matthews. "Most insurance markets--life, property,
auto, etc.--still rely on standard actuarial principles. Not health
insurance."
"Today, health
insurance and the health care system are driven by perverse economic
incentives, exacerbated by President Obama's misnamed 'Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act,'" said Matthews. "The more federal and state
politicians and bureaucrats tried to improve access to quality, affordable
health insurance, the less access people had," Matthews said.
"Politicians
have turned health insurance on its head," he said.
"Under
Obamacare's regulatory onslaught, insurance increasingly protects patients from
costs they can easily pay, while exposing them to costs they cannot afford--on
top of the sky-high premiums," said Matthews, who also called out
hospitals as another problem, with many charging outrageously inflated prices,
especially to the uninsured. "Congress could have easily provided a
solution for the relatively small number of uninsured individuals with a
preexisting condition. Instead, Democrats chose to reinvent the health
insurance system, and in the process made most Americans worse off."
But there's hope,
said Matthews. If Republicans cannot repeal and replace Obamacare, a
well-functioning health insurance system might still emerge if Congress or the
administration implement policies that:
* Encourage
insurers to develop more flexible, short-term insurance policies for consumers;
* Expand HSAs so
anyone with high-deductible coverage would be qualified to have one;
* Embrace
"direct-pay," bypassing third parties;
* Promote
alternative coverage options, e.g., life insurance policies with an
accelerated-benefit option, as an additional safety net for patients facing
high out-of-pocket costs; and
* Block grant
federal Medicaid and Obamacare subsidy funds to the states, which could offer
more flexibility than a top-down distribution from Washington.
"It is time
for health insurers to devise new options," said Matthews. "We know
the current system has failed, and the primary reason is government
intervention in the health care system. Now those who passed the failed
Obamacare system want to impose even more government."
"A better
solution is to let consumers buy the kind of insurance coverage they want, not
what politicians think they should have, and give insurers the freedom to offer
those policies," said Matthews.
https://insurancenewsnet.com/oarticle/new-publication-how-health-insurance-failed-america?utm_source=Newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=subscriber_id:&utm_campaign=As%20Enrollment%20Season%20Arrives,%20Health%20Care%20Questions%20Remain#.W7Yh4CX4-JA
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