By Steven Findlay DECEMBER
14, 2018
Like
millions of Americans in this final week of open enrollment for the Affordable
Care Act marketplaces, Diane McCabe is shopping for health insurance.
“At my
age, I can’t go without it even though I’m healthy now,” said McCabe, 62, a
self-employed real estate agent in Luzerne County, Pa. “But the process is
frustrating, and the expense significant.”
That’s
because McCabe is one of the 5 million people who buy their own coverage and
pay the full cost. Her income is too high to qualify for a government subsidy
to help defray the premium.
McCabe
this week settled on a $773-a-month policy that has a $4,000 deductible — the
amount she’ll have to pay out-of-pocket before insurance kicks in. She
estimates that will account for at least 15 percent of her income in 2019.
Under
the ACA, people who earn up to 400 percent of the poverty level (about $48,500 for an
individual and $100,400 for a family of four in 2019) are eligible for premium
subsidies. Eighty-seven percent of
the 10.6 million people with ACA plans this year received a subsidy.
The
financial challenge for people like McCabe has come into much sharper focus
during the past year, as insurance premiums have spiked.
These
increasing costs plus rising deductibles and copayments have driven millions who
don’t get a subsidy to drop their coverage or turn to cheaper, less
comprehensive — and sometimes inadequate — insurance.
The
Trump administration has highlighted the plight of the unsubsidized and said
that its regulatory revamp of the health law will give consumers new, more
affordable options. One of the key administration efforts is extending the use
of short-term insurance plans that have lower premiums but don’t provide the
full benefits that the ACA requires, such as continuous coverage of preexisting
conditions or maternity care.
Those
plans are not eligible for subsidies now, but, under regulations the administration proposed in
October, subsidies could be available starting in 2020.
Critics
counter that the administration’s approach runs a high risk of undermining core
features of the ACA. And a legal battle over the administration’s proposed new
rules is likely.
“The
subsidy structure is unquestionably a problem,” said Chris Sloan, a director at
Avalere Health, a policy and research think tank in Washington, D.C. “It’s a
cruel reality for those above the income cutoffs. But it’s not clear that the
administration’s actions are the best solution.”
Opponents
of the Trump administration’s proposals contend they could lead young, healthy
people to abandon ACA coverage and choose less comprehensive and expensive
coverage — leaving more older and sicker people in the exchanges. That would
result in steadily increasing costs for those plans, and could eventually destabilize the ACA marketplaces,
policy analysts say.
Overall,
about 4.4 million fewer people who
buy coverage on their own were insured in 2018 compared to 2015, a decline from
18.8 to 14.4 million. Most of the decline occurred among people who don’t get
subsidies.
On And
Off Insurance
Cameron
and Lori Llewellyn, of Dover, Del., have found insurance just too expensive.
In June
2017, Lori left a job that provided the family with good health coverage. She
wanted to start her own business — a clothing boutique. Cameron is a
self-employed construction contractor.
The
Llewellyns tried to enroll in a plan through the ACA exchange in the summer of
2017. But Cameron’s income was too high to qualify for a subsidy. On the open
market, they were quoted rates as high as $2,000 a month, with deductibles of
$4,000 or more, for themselves and their 8-year-old daughter, Bryce.
They
opted instead to go without coverage until the end of 2017. Then again, for
this year, they ended up not qualifying for subsidies and decided to go without
insurance.
“We just couldn’t justify the expense,
especially with that high of a deductible,” Lori said. “But it wasn’t a
comfortable situation. We wanted coverage for all the reasons people know they
need it.”
For
2019, the Llewellyns are trying again. They have enrolled through the state ACA
exchange in a policy with a premium of $1,286 and a $7,900 deductible, but with
a subsidy that will cover the entire premium.
Spencer
Ricks, 36, a self-employed attorney in Salt Lake City, is choosing a different
path. He, his wife and their 3-year-old daughter bought ACA-compliant coverage
in 2016. Their premium rose from around $600 in 2016 to $970 in 2017 with a
$10,000 deductible.
Ricks
was told his premium for 2018 for the same plan would be $1,200 with a $13,500
deductible. He pulled the plug on the family coverage and instead enrolled his
wife — who was pregnant — in a plan costing $570 a month with a $5,000
deductible.
Ricks
and his daughter then joined a Christian Healthcare Ministry plan costing $157
a month, with a $10,000 deductible. For 2019, Ricks is enrolling the whole
family is another religious-affiliated plan, costing $529 a month with a $2,250
deductible.
But the
most prevalent alternative to an ACA plan for people who don’t get subsidies in
2019 is likely to be a short-term plan.
Previously
available for only 90 days — primarily to bridge gaps in coverage — the Trump
administration expanded that time frame to 364 days.
The
plans can be bought at any time, but sales are up now because more people are
shopping during the ACA’s open enrollment, said Sean Malia, a senior director
at eHealth, an online brokerage.
Melanie
and Pete Howell, of Austin, Texas, are among eHealth’s newest customers. They
had an ACA plan this year costing $1,100 a month with a $7,000 deductible. It
covered the couple and their two children, ages 22 and 17.
The
Howells’ income is too high to qualify for a subsidy. When their insurer
notified them that the premium was going to $1,400 a month in 2019, they opted
for a short-term plan that will cost $380 a month with a deductible of $12,500.
The
plan does not cover prescription drugs, and the Howells will pay 30 percent of
the costs for doctor, emergency room visits and any surgical procedures.
“This
buys us some time at a much more affordable price to figure out what to do for
the longer term,” said Melanie Howell.
No Easy
Solutions
Although
both ACA critics and advocates say that addressing the high cost of coverage
for non-subsidized families should be a priority, there are no easy bipartisan
fixes in sight.
Many
ACA supporters urge legislation that raises the threshold for subsides above
400 percent of poverty — to, say, 600 percent. But that stokes concerns of
added federal spending.
A more
realistic approach, for now, could be to permit states to experiment with ways
to help those over the 400 percent threshold, said Sabrina Corlette, a research
professor at the Georgetown University’s Health Policy Institute.
For
example, with federal government permission, eight states have already
launched, or will in 2019, “reinsurance” programs that
redeploy federal dollars to help insurers cover the costs of families with high
medical expenses. The programs have kept premium costs down for both people who
get subsidies and those who don’t.
Another
proposal would permit states more leeway to restructure the ACA subsidies to
provide less help to people with high-cost health care needs and more help to
those not currently eligible for subsidies.
“Letting
states try things out has bipartisan support and there are mechanisms for that
already in place,” Corlette said. “It would seem to have the best chance of
yielding something useful to help this population [the unsubsidized] for now.”
https://khn.org/news/health-insurance-costs-crushing-many-people-who-dont-get-federal-subsidies/?utm_campaign=KFF-2018-The-Latest&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=68345904&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8AFwYRJmgm-e28pPCn8o5DHRhELUL_QkqRbrH-OO-sm38fMNLgDPg9SUxvNBE4PYtZGBFSKtUXjEIGzo1tcEzTG-H4NQ&_hsmi=68345904
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