Posts Tagged ‘health care reform’

The Current Future of Health Insurance Reform

Monday, April 13th, 2009

I thought I’d share my experiences about what is going on in Washington DC and healthcare reform. At the end of March through the beginning of April, I was in DC for a Capitol conference surrounding healthcare/health insurance reform. We had many of the top legislators come and give their view of what is happening with reform in health care and health insurance (they both need reforming and are different, health care is the care that is provided by doctors and includes costs associated with providing this care and associated treatments and drug therapies. Health insurance is the financing vehicle we use to pay for this care).

 

HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM IS INEVITABLE

Every legislator stated that there would be reform this year. They all differed on what form it would take. Based upon these presentations and personal meetings with my local legislators and their aides, I believe the following scenarios are most likely w/regards to health insurance reform.

 

THERE IS A HIGH PROBABILITY OF AN INDIVIDUAL MANDATE

There will be an individual mandate. Every person not currently covered by health insurance would be required to purchase a plan. Lower income individuals and families would be eligible for refundable tax credits and subsidies.

 

Individual health insurance would become guaranteed issue (you cannot be turned down). The major health insurers have already written a position paper on this. If you read between the lines, this means the insurance companies figure it’s not worth fighting so are trying to shape the legislation instead.

 

THERE MAY BE A PUBLIC OPTION

Many legislators want a public option included. The problem with this is that Medicare and Medicaid already don’t reimburse health care providers for their costs. Medicare pays about 90% and Medicaid 70% (providers loose money on each patient). The public option would probably be less expensive (due to their lower reimbursements) which could cause everyone to migrate to those plans. Hospitals in poorer neighborhoods would close (which has already been happening). Private insurance companies would close (lack of members, but also the cost shifting that doctors and hospitals already do to make up for lack of reimbursement of public insurance plans and the resulting increase in premiums – right now $1500/year of a family’s health insurance premium is due to this cost shifting). See the January 5, 2009 article from American Medical News at http://tr.im/costshift. Also see this article by the Lewin Group (note: they are owned by UnitedHealthCare), http://tr.im/costpublichealth.

 

 

THERE IS A LARGE NEGATIVE IMPACT OF THIS OPTION

Secretary HHS-elect Kathleen Sebelius established a similar plan in Kansas according to a fellow agent. The cost of a plan for a family of 4 earning under $54,000/year is $75/month. The cost of a similar plan in the open market is $700/month. So, who’s funding the rest? Here’s an article from the Wall Street Journal from yesterday (4/12/2009) about the end of Private Health Insurance http://twurl.nl/drw7my.

 

EMPLOYER SPONSORED HEALTH INSURANCE WILL STAY, FOR NOW

Employer sponsored health insurance would still survive, that is until employers decide to get out of the health insurance business. Legislators have been talking about taxing health insurance as a way to pay for these reforms, so it will be interesting to see how it all works out.

 

WE ARE IN FOR QUITE A RIDE

As always, the devil is in the details. There is no perfect solution, but at least we will be trying something different in the United States.

 

BTW, if you don’t want universal healthcare, please contact your legislators and tell them the public option won’t work.

 

I’ll be updating my blog as things in DC change or feel free to email me if you have questions.

 

Robert Slayton

Robert Slayton Associates Insurance

http://www.robertslayton.com

http://www.twitter.com/rcslayton

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