By JoNel AlecciaMAY 17, 2019
Sheri
Lewis, 59, of Seattle, needed a hip transplant. Bradley Fuller, 63, of nearby
Kirkland, needed chemotherapy and radiation when the pain in his jaw turned out
to be throat cancer. And Kim Bruzas, 55, of Waitsburg, hundreds of miles away,
needed emergency care to stop sudden —and severe — rectal bleeding.
Each of
these Washington state residents required medical treatment during the past few
years, and each thought they had purchased health insurance through an online
site.
But
when it was time to pay the bills, they learned that the products they bought
through Aliera Healthcare Inc. weren’t insurance at all — and that the cost of
their care wasn’t covered.
Lewis
and the others had enrolled in what Aliera officials claimed was a health care
sharing ministry (HCSM) — faith-based co-ops in which members agree to pay one
another’s medical bills.
But
Washington insurance officials this week said the firm doesn’t meet the
definition of a sharing ministry and described Aliera’s products as a “sham”
aimed at misleading consumers. Other states, including Texas and New Hampshire,
are poised to take similar action.
Insurance
Commissioner Mike Kreidler on Monday ordered Aliera, which
operates Trinity Healthshare Inc., both of Delaware, to halt operations in
Washington, alleging the firm was selling health insurance illegally and
engaging in deceptive business practices.
Aliera
falsely represented itself as a sharing ministry, which would be exempt from
insurance regulations, an investigation found.
Though he wouldn’t name them, Kreidler said he’s investigating two additional
firms over similar concerns.
“They
don’t have the direct affiliation with a particular religious group, a church,
a pastor,” Kreidler said. “These appear to be ones that come in with an
opportunity here to make money.”
In
a statement, Aliera officials disputed
Kreidler’s conclusions. The company has 90 days to request a hearing.
“Aliera
has never misled consumer and sales agents about its health plans,” the
statement said. “For example, our website, marketing materials and other
communications clearly state that Trinity’s health sharing products are not
insurance. Most importantly, they have never been represented as insurance.”
The
Washington order followed complaints from nearly two dozen people, including
Lewis, a dance teacher who was told her planned hip surgery wouldn’t be
covered.
Across
the U.S., several state insurance regulators report similar concerns.
Texas
insurance officials have scheduled a hearing to
consider a similar order against Aliera, which has 100,000 members nationwide
and reported revenue of $180 million in 2018, documents showed.
New
Hampshire insurance officials on Tuesday warned consumers about
Aliera, saying they were concerned about “potential fraudulent or criminal
activity.” Officials in at least five other states told Kaiser Health News they
are reviewing firms operating as “illegitimate” health care sharing ministries.
Aliera
is operated by Shelley Steele of Marietta, Ga., and her husband, Timothy Moses,
who was convicted in 2006 of federal securities fraud and perjury. He was
sentenced to 6½ years in prison and ordered to repay more than $1 million to
victims.
Nationwide,
nearly 1 million people are enrolled in more than 100 sharing ministries in at
least 29 states, according to the Alliance of Health Care Sharing Ministries.
But that’s just an estimate, said James Lansberry, executive vice president of
Samaritan Ministries International of Peoria, Ill. No comprehensive data is
available.
“We try
to track what’s going on out there,” Lansberry said. “Anyone claiming to be a
health care sharing ministry could spill over onto our reputation.”
Samaritan is among what have been the three top
players in the sharing ministries field. The oldest, founded in 1993, is the Medi-Share program
of Melbourne, Fla., operated by Christian Care Ministry. The third is Christian
Healthcare Ministries of Barberton, Ohio. All are explicitly
religious and emphasize faith as the basis for members to share medical
burdens.
Those
groups originally were certified by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services and required to meet specific criteria. Consumers who enrolled
were shielded from the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate that required
they show proof of insurance or pay a fine.
But CMS
no longer certifies HCSMs and, since Congress zeroed out the mandate’s
penalty in 2017, a new crop of companies, including Aliera, has
sprung up. That worries some of the traditional ministries.
“HCSMs
must operate with integrity, transparency, full compliance
with the law, and enforcement of the law,” officials with Medi-Share, which has
415,000 members nationwide, said in a statement. “Anything outside of that
violates the true spirit of the HCSM community.”
Washington
investigators found that Aliera’s marketing materials rarely mention religious
or ethical motivations, and they don’t meet government requirements.
Many of
these entities mimic the marketing, structure and language of ACA-compliant
health insurance plans — but offer none of the protections, said JoAnn Volk and
Justin Giovannelli, researchers at the Georgetown University Center on Health
Insurance Reforms, who wrote about the issue last
summer.
“The
way they advertise and the services they are providing, it sounds a heck of a
lot like health insurance,” Giovannelli said. “They’re letting folks believe
they have a product that has a promise to pay.”
That’s
exactly what Lewis thought.
“It
looked like Aliera was health insurance to me,” she said.
When
Aliera denied her surgery, she had to resort to a GoFundMe site organized by friends to
raise nearly $13,000 and then travel to Tijuana, Mexico, to get a hip
transplant she could afford.
Fuller,
who was diagnosed with throat cancer, said he was stuck with $81,000 in bills
for his first month of treatment.
“They
started checking my insurance and it didn’t cover nothing,” said the retired
commercial electrician.
Fuller,
his voice still raspy after radiation, said he had insurance through his union
for years, but when the premiums spiked, he went online to find something else.
The
person he talked to from Aliera said he could get insurance, no problem, Fuller
said. The premium would be $350 a month, rather than the $1,300 fee for a gold
plan on the state insurance exchange. “And that was with dental, too,” he
added.
Low
premiums also attracted Bruzas, who left her well-paid government job in
Tacoma, and the insurance it provided, after her husband died in 2015. She
moved to a small town in southeastern Washington to care for her parents and
went online to find health insurance.
“I just
sat down and Googled ‘Obamacare,’” she said. “I got a call back from a lady who
said she could help me find coverage.” Bruzas was charged $219 for the first
month.
Four
days later, she was in the local emergency room with massive rectal bleeding.
As she was discharged, hospital officials said they had “never heard of Aliera
Healthcare,” she said.
The
$10,000 bill was not covered. Bruzas, who works part time at a hardware store,
filed for charity care and the debt was reduced to $6,500. She is paying it off
slowly, $50 each month.
The
Washington patients recalled mentions of “sharing” and vague references to
spirituality. But none realized they were signing up for a religious
cost-sharing ministry, they said.
“I
would have hung up the phone if she would have said, ‘We’re a group, and we’ll
review your records and pray for you,’” Bruzas said.
Aliera
officials said they make the nature of their products clear.
“Aliera
disagrees that Trinity’s inclusive and specific statement of beliefs misleads
consumers or violates the applicable regulations governing healthcare sharing
ministries,” the statement said.
It’s
not clear how states can curb the new sharing ministries. If Aliera ignores his
order, Kreidler said, he’ll seek a court injunction to force the groups to
cease operations. But several states contacted by KHN said that because the
ministries are not health insurance, state insurance officials don’t review or
regulate them.
Some
users of sharing ministries say the lower-priced products should be available
for consumers who understand and accept the risks involved.
But
consumers need to pay close attention to details when they sign up for any
health plans, said Colorado Insurance Commissioner Michael Conway, who is
investigating sharing ministries operating in his state.
“Ask if
it’s actually insurance,” he advised. “Ask if there’s a guarantee of coverage.
Get into the policy documents. Read the contract they’re agreeing to.”
JoNel
Aleccia: jaleccia@kff.org,
@JoNel_Aleccia
https://khn.org/news/sham-sharing-ministries-test-faith-of-patients-and-insurance-regulators/
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