Will current Individual health insurance rates stay the same when Health Care Reform takes effect on Jan. 1st?

(The following information pertains to Individual and Family Health Insurance for those 64 years old or younger in California.)

Will current Individual health insurance rates stay the same when Health Care Reform takes effect on Jan. 1st?

We do not yet know what the rates will be. But rates are expected to be announced by the carriers in Sept. Those rates will take effect on Jan. 1st when the bulk of the ACA (Obamacare) rules take effect.
What we do know is that individual rates, which have traditionally been low in California, will rise to the level of the higher group rates. Young people will probably see their rates skyrocket. Those in older age groups will probably see more moderate increases.
The increases will likely be due to these factors:
1) The half dozen premium taxes, fees and other charges that will be levied to pay the expenses of the Federal program and the State-sponsored Exchanges.
2) The age band ratio changes from 1:9 to 1:3. Previously, the ratio could be as much as 1 to 9 of a younger person’s rate to that of the oldest age group. Under ACA, that ratio will be compressed to 1 to 3. This will drive up rates for young people while moderating those for the older groups.
3) Guarantee-Issue will result in higher rates. Previously the individual plan “pools” consisted of people who were generally healthy when they enrolled. With guarantee-issue, carriers will have to take all comers including those with significant pre-existing health conditions who previously could not qualify for these plans. This will drive up claims, and therefore premiums.
The carriers and the Exchanges will open for enrollment on Oct. 1st for plans to start on Jan. 1st. Plans will be offered both inside the State Exchanges and outside. The selection of plans within the Exchange will be more limited, but will allow you to apply for low income subsidies. Plans outside of the Exchange will have a much wider selection but will not be able to offer subsidies.
Premiums for similar plans will be the same, inside or outside of the Exchanges.

Phil Lee
www.HealthPlanTalk.com
www.Health-Insurance.com

Health Care Reform Employer Mandate or “Play or Pay” Delayed until 2015

The White House announced yesterday that enforcement of the Health Care Reform mandate, aka Play or Pay, will be delayed until 2015. This mandate requires large employers with 50 or more full-time equivalent employees to offer minimum essential coverage to full-time employees (and dependents) or incur a penalty tax of between $2,000 and $3,000 per employee should any full-time employee obtain coverage through a “marketplace” with the assistance of a federal subsidy. The delay of this (large employer) Pay or Play mandate does not affect employees’ access to premium tax credits, nor does it affect any other provision such as the Individual mandate. This delay is intended to allow the Treasury Department (IRS) time to consider ways of simplifying the new reporting requirements consistent with the mandate and also time to adapt health coverage and reporting systems while employers are taking steps toward making health coverage affordable and accessible for their employees. Formal guidance describing this transition is expected within the next week. Following is a link to one of many articles reporting on this story: http://www.bizjournals.com/bizjournals/washingtonbureau/2013/07/02/health-care-reforms-employer-mandate.html

Medicare Introduces New Competitive Bidding Program

Medicare (CMS) just announced great success at saving hundreds of millions of dollars in a limited pilot bidding program for Durable Medical Equipment by reducing prices and curbing inappropriate uses.  Kathleen Sebelius, Secretary of the U.S.  Dept. of HHS, who is in charge of CMS credits this success to the Affordable Care Act, ACA, or Health Care Reform.

This raises the following questions:

·         Why did CMS not already have a competitive bidding process in place?  Don’t all Government programs (including the not so frugal Pentagon) routinely use competitive bidding to curb fraud, waste and abuse?

·         Why did CMS wait so long for ACA before implementing such an obvious cost-saving procedure?

·         What other Medicare benefits, other than oxygen tanks, are also experiencing rampant fraud, waste and abuse?

·        Would a private insurer, if they were operating such a program, have allowed such rampant abuse to occur unchecked for so long?

Medicare was originally designed to be an insurance program.  This is more evidence why this program is inflating the nation’s deficit.  It’s become an unfunded Government program with out-of-control spending at Pentagon prices.

More details and links to full story below:

NAHU Newswire April 19, 2012:

Medicare To Expand Bidding Program After Pilot Saved $202 Million In First Year.

USA Today (4/19, Kennedy) reports, “A new competitive bidding pilot program that replaces Medicare fee schedules for durable medical equipment – such as wheelchairs, oxygen tanks or diabetic test strips – has saved Medicare $202 million in its first year,” according to a report by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). “Beneficiaries also saw 42% in savings in their co-insurance payments for medical equipment.” The CMS report also projects that “the program, if expanded nationwide, could save seniors and people with disabilities $17.1 billion over the next 10 years.”

The New York Times (4/19, B1, Pear, Subscription Publication) reports that Secretary Sebelius “said the pilot program had reduced Medicare costs by 42 percent, or $202 million, by securing lower prices and curbing ‘inappropriate utilization’ of personal medical equipment.” She added that “the savings showed the value of the” Affordable Care Act. The story says, “the bulk of the savings came from oxygen equipment, power wheelchairs and mail-order test strips for people with diabetes.” CMS deputy administrator Jonathan D. Blum “said the switch to competitive bidding had not compromised beneficiaries’ access to the items they needed,” and that “Medicare had received few complaints from beneficiaries in the last year.”

The AP (4/19, Alonso-Zaldivar) reports, “The nine-city crackdown targeting waste and fraud has drawn a strong protest from the medical supply industry, which is warning of shortages for people receiving Medicare benefits and economic hardship for small suppliers. But the shift to competitive bidding has led to few complaints from those in Medicare.” It will be expanded “to a total of 100 cities next year, along with a national mail order program for diabetes supplies.” The story quotes Blum saying, “Costs are lower and there is no impact on the health status of our beneficiaries.”

CQ (4/19, Reichard, Subscription Publication) cites Blum saying that “contrary to the claims of critics, the program hasn’t led to disruptions in access to products … Nor has it led to adverse health effects requiring more hospital, doctor, or skilled nursing care.” In response, “Michael Reinemer, spokesman for the American Association for Homecare (AAH), said ‘we don’t find that credible,'” adding, “We documented four or five hundred complaints from patients or clinicians.”

The Hill (4/19, Pecquet) in its “Healthwatch” blog cites the CMS report and the AAH dissent.

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What if the Supreme Court Overturns Obama’s Health Care Reform?

There is growing consensus that if the most controversial element of President’s Obama’s Health Care Reform Act (PPACA or ACA), the individual “mandate”, is overturned by the Supreme Court, most of the rest of the bill would also have to be ditched, resulting in a “mess”.
If ACA (Affordable Care Act) is overturned, insurers may have to reverse not just all the changes that they have already implemented over the past 2 years, but also all the preparations and advance planning that had gone into the implementation of the 2014 changes.

Although some of the changes that have already taken place have been the least controversial, the most damaging, costly and controversial elements of ACA have yet to be implemented.

For more information,please contact Phil Lee at [email protected] or go to www.health-insurance.com.

Read related article “Health Case Ripples Outward” at:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304177104577310050863533554.htmlat

For more information,please contact Phil Lee at [email protected] or go to www.health-insurance.com.

Full article below:

By JANET ADAMY, JESS BRAVIN and ANNA WILDE MATHEWS

Wall Street Journal

After three days of historic Supreme Court debate, the political world and health-care companies confronted the prospect of President Barack Obama’s health law being wiped away, a decision that would upend years of planning by businesses and roil the November elections.

Justices in the Supreme Court’s conservative majority said Wednesday that it would be difficult to figure out which parts of the Obama health-care law should survive if one part of it is judged unconstitutional. Jess Bravin has details on The News Hub. Photo: Reuters.

Among those set to implement the law, insurers would have to ditch changes to their businesses designed to bring in millions of new customers. Provisions that have already gone into effect, including letting children stay on their parents’ insurance plans until they turn 26, would no longer be required.

Companies facing the law’s requirements would be reprieved, including health firms set to pay new taxes and businesses that would have been required to insure their employees or pay a fee.

As the affordable health care law arguments wrap at the Supreme Court, WSJ’s Peter Landers checks in on Mean Street to outline the next steps in the legal process. Photo: Getty Images.

It is impossible to predict how the court will rule, but skepticism from key justices heightened the possibility the 2010 health overhaul could be overturned in June, when the court is set to announce its opinion.

During the marathon arguments, the government’s attorney was grilled by the conservative majority over the constitutionality of the law’s central plank, the mandate to buy insurance. On Wednesday, the final day, the court’s conservatives appeared inclined to wipe away the entire law if it found the mandate in error.

The same justices even questioned the basis for the law’s expansion of the Medicaid insurance program for the poor, giving credence to an argument that even some of the challengers had declared a long shot.

The Supreme Court’s liberal justices went head to head with their conservative counterparts Wednesday in an effort to protect the Obama administration’s health-care law. Janet Adamy has details on Lunch Break.

Few disputed that untangling the law would be tricky if it is overturned. It would leave “a mess,” said Jon Kingsdale, a managing director with Wakely Consulting Group and a former official of Massachusetts’ near-universal insurance system. “It just ripples throughout Medicare and Medicaid and the private markets.”

Neil Trautwein, a vice president at the National Retail Federation, a Washington trade group that represents stores, said: “If the clock went back and health-care reform was gone, we could live with that.” He said it would be “a little trickier” if the court decided to only strike down parts of the law.

Ashby Jones on Lunch Break examines the three days of arguments over the Obama health-care law before the Supreme Court, including key takeaways and what the justices’ questions suggest about the court’s decision.

Under any outcome, the decision will wedge itself into the 2012 presidential election.

White House officials said they remained confident the law would be upheld, and that it was impossible to predict the outcome. Ultimately, one official argued, the election is likely to turn on the economy, not health care, no matter what the ruling. Mr. Obama, who returned late Tuesday from South Korea, was briefed by staff on the court deliberations.

Still, if all or part of the law is struck down, it would be a blow to Mr. Obama and Democrats, and create a liability months before the election. Republicans would hold up the victory as evidence the Obama administration overreached in trying to expand the scope of federal power. “To strike it down would send a chilling message to the administration’s agenda,” said Rep. Tim Scott (R., S.C.).

Congressional leadership aides from both parties say a health law left with holes would have no chance of getting patched until at least after the election. What happens next would be largely driven by the election result. Republicans want to repeal the law, and Democrats have little incentive to restart work on a legislative fix, given how the law has thus far been a political loser.

Lawyers for the Obama administration pressed the court on Wednesday for its preferred outcome, which would be to scrap certain popular insurance rules tied to the mandate, if the court was inclined to rule out the mandate.

Enlarge Image

European Pressphoto Agency

Supporters of health-care reform hold signs outside the Supreme Court.

Justice Antonin Scalia called it “totally unrealistic” to expect a court to “go through this enormous bill item by item and decide each one.” Justice Anthony Kennedy, a key swing vote, suggested the justices may “lack the competence” to pick and choose what parts should stay.

Chief Justice John Roberts, whose vote is also somewhat unclear, asked several questions that appeared to further the case of the challenger’s attorney, Paul Clement, who argued the whole law be struck down.

The court could decide to strike down parts of the law. If it nixed only the insurance mandate, insurers say premiums would skyrocket because there would be nothing to stop people from waiting to buy coverage until they got sick.

Health-industry officials on Wednesday began grappling with a range of problematic outcomes and said there was little they could do to prepare for them.

Molina Healthcare, which manages care for 1.7 million low-income Medicaid members in 10 states, saw in the health law a growth opportunity. Steven T. O’Dell, the senior vice president overseeing Molina’s growth strategy, said it was preparing for an influx that could as much as double its membership as states boost Medicaid rolls to comply with the law.

If the law fails in the court, Mr. O’Dell said, the company would turn instead to a state-by-state strategy, seeking to expand in states that overhaul their own health systems or expand Medicaid. That is a decision each state will make based on “politics and budget,” he said.

If the entire law fell, many parts of the law already in place would cease to exist, including checks for seniors to fill a gap in their Medicare prescription-drug program and insurance pools covering nearly 50,000 Americans who otherwise can’t get health insurance.

Planning for the main pieces of the law that are set to begin in 2014—including new marketplaces where consumers can shop for policies and subsidies designed to expand coverage to millions of lower earners—would halt. Experts said it could be years before the U.S. again tackled the issue of covering the tens of millions of Americans who lack insurance.

More

If only the mandate falls, insurers have scratched out backup plans that could potentially be done with support from state officials. These include offering narrow annual windows in which people could buy policies, or allowing plans with narrower benefits and lower premiums, which might entice younger and healthier people to sign up. They plan to press Congress to get rid of the requirements most closely linked to the mandate, should the court not strike those down, too. But with little political will among Republicans to fix a law they dislike, there is little chance a federal replacement to the mandate could get passed.

In states such as New Jersey, which in the 1990s guaranteed policies to all applicants but didn’t require all residents to carry coverage, premiums rose about 30% over the first few years of the policy, said Robert Laszewski, president of Health Policy and Strategy Associates, a consulting firm, and a former insurance-industry executive.

Mr. Laszewski said insurers could decide to voluntarily keep in place the requirement that children can stay on parents’ plans, which the Obama administration says has covered 2.5 million young adults. That change is already priced into coming policies and isn’t expensive, he said.

—Louise Radnofsky, Laura Meckler and Christopher Weaver contributed to this article.

A version of this article appeared Mar. 29, 2012, on page A1 in some U.S. editions of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Health Case Ripples Outward.

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