The following is an excerpt from the study Understanding the Uninsured and What to Do About Them, by the Council for Affordable Health Insurance, March 2007--the second of a two-part series.
The
"uninsured" are not a homogenous population, so a one-size-fits-all
solution likely won't address everyone's needs. Some well-intended
state reforms actually make the problem worse.
States
play an important, often negative, role in determining whether
residents have access to a wide range of health policies at affordable
prices.
For example, a few states
have passed guaranteed issue and community rating laws, which require
insurers to accept any applicant regardless of health status, and to
charge everyone the same price, respectively. Together, these
government mandates dramatically drive up health insurance premiums within just a few years of implementation.
If
states with guaranteed issue and community rating did nothing more than
repeal those laws, allowing health insurers to underwrite again,
premiums would begin to fall and competition would return.
Many
states have passed or are considering ways to address the problem of
the uninsured, but refuse to first undo the bad reforms of the past.
- Massachusetts has passed comprehensive reform, mandating the purchase of insurance and creating a new health insurance market called the "Connector."
- Maine
passed a government-run insurance plan meant to provide lower-cost
insurance. Of course, the state taxed those with private insurance to
pay for it, further exacerbating the problem.
- Cynical California legislators passed a single-payer health plan without any funding, daring the campaigning governor to veto it.
States
have several reforms at their disposal that can increase access to
affordable coverage without fundamentally restructuring the health care
system, imposing significant new costs, or creating new distortions in
the health insurance market.
- High-risk pools.
High-risk pools provide coverage to those who are medically
uninsurable, often the chronically ill. About 1 million uninsured
Americans fall into this category. While 34 states currently have
high-risk pools, many are underfunded. This is an area where additional
federal subsidies could go a long way toward ensuring those with
chronic conditions have access to affordable coverage.
- Individual tax credits.
Republicans and some Democrats support tax credits for employees
without access to employer-provided coverage. These tax credits would
help lower-income workers afford coverage.
- Health Savings Accounts (HSAs).
While not a panacea, HSAs have been enormously successful in attracting
the uninsured. More than 30 percent of businesses and individuals
choosing HSAs were previously uninsured, according to industry sources.
However, a few states still do not provide a tax deduction for
contributions to accounts, and a few states still have barriers that
make it difficult for HSA plans to be sold.
- Allow the private market to participate in the State Children's Health Insurance Plan (SCHIP) and Medicaid.
Many workers eligible for employer-provided insurance may not be able
to pay for their portion of the premium. If Medicaid and SCHIP
subsidized the employee and dependent premiums, these employees might
be able to afford private coverage.
- List billing.
List billing allows an employer who is not contributing to premiums to
help employees purchase individual health insurance. Individuals sign
up for their own policies and agree to have premiums deducted from
their wages. The employer receives a monthly bill for all employees
(hence, a "list bill") and remits premiums to the insurer.
- Limited-benefit plans.
Many of the invincibles--the uninsured who are young and healthy--would
get coverage if they had access to affordable policies. Limited-benefit
plans limit an insured person's reimbursement for medical care either
in aggregate (e.g., a $50,000 annual limit) or with a schedule of
benefits (e.g., $3,000 per day of hospital confinement).
- Medical waivers.
An exclusionary waiver, or rider, provides an applicant with a minor
chronic medical condition an additional coverage option. In exchange
for waiving coverage for the condition, the applicant receives coverage
at standard prices for all other medical conditions.
- Mandate-lite policies. By eliminating some (or all) mandated benefits, health insurers are able to offer more affordable health insurance products.
- Out-of-state insurance.
The fact that states regulate individual and small group health
insurance means access to affordable coverage can vary significantly
from state to state. For example, community rating and guaranteed issue
have made policies unaffordable for all but the wealthiest residents of
Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York. If residents trapped in
states with unaffordable health insurance could purchase policies sold
in other states, they too would have access to affordable health
insurance products.
- Short-term medical insurance.
Short-term medical insurance is an affordable option for those seeking
coverage for a limited time, as when they are between jobs.
- Employer and individual subsidies.
Several states have started programs that subsidize coverage for small
employers who do not offer health insurance. These programs have proven
to be very popular. Other states are providing subsidies directly or
indirectly to uninsured individuals.
- Leveling the playing field for individual purchasers.
Those workers who pay for health insurance out of their own pockets
(not including the self-employed, who already get a 100 percent
deduction) should be granted the same pretax treatment of premium
payments afforded to employers and their employees.
- Wellness.
We have come to understand that a healthier population will have lower
overall health care costs and, as a result, lower health insurance
premiums. The market is increasingly experimenting with wellness
programs to see whether, and to what extent, they improve health and
lower costs.
Our approach focuses on reducing
government interference in the private market. Instead of forcing
individuals and employers to provide coverage, we support policies that
encourage them to buy it.
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