It's barely been two weeks since Idaho regulators said they would
allow the sale of health insurance that doesn't meet all of the
Affordable Care Act's requirements — a controversial step some experts
said would likely draw legal scrutiny and, potentially, federal fines
for any insurer that jumped in.
And on Wednesday, Blue Cross of Idaho unveiled a menu of new health plans that break with federal health law rules in several ways, including setting premiums based on applicants' health.
"We're
trying to offer a choice that allows the middle class to get back into
insurance coverage," said Dave Jeppesen, the insurer's executive vice
president for consumer health care.
The insurer filed five plans to the state for approval and hopes to start selling them as soon as next month.
The
Blue Cross decision ups the ante for Alex Azar, the Trump
administration's new Health and Human Services secretary. Will he use
his authority under federal law to compel Idaho to follow the ACA and
reject the Blues plans? Or will he allow state regulators to move
forward, perhaps prompting other states to take more sweeping actions?
At
a congressional hearing Wednesday, even as Blue Cross rolled out its
plans, Azar faced such questions. "There are rules," Azar said. "There
is a rule of law that we need to enforce."
However, he didn't specifically indicate whether the federal government would step in.
Robert
Laszewski, a consultant and former insurance industry executive, says
it should. "If Idaho is able to do this, it will mean other ... states
will do the same thing," he said. "If a state can ignore federal law on
this, it can ignore federal law on everything."
Idaho's move stirs up more issues about the stability of individual insurance markets.
Policy
analysts say that allowing lower-cost plans that don't meet the ACA's
standards to become more widespread will pull younger and healthier
people out of Obamacare, raising prices for those who remain. Supporters
say that is already happening, so the lower-cost plans provide more
choices for people who earn too much to qualify for subsidies to help
them purchase ACA coverage.
Idaho's move to allow such plans, announced in January, drew harsh and swift criticism.
"Crazypants
illegal," tweeted Nicholas Bagley, a law professor at the University of
Michigan and former attorney with the civil division of the U.S.
Department of Justice, who said that states can't pick and choose which
parts of federal law to follow. Sabrina Corlette, a research professor
at Georgetown University's Center on Health Insurance Reforms, pointed
out that health insurers could be liable for sharp fines if they are
found to be in violation of the ACA.
But both Idaho regulators and Blue Cross officials say they aren't worried.
Jeppesen
said the ACA gives states regulatory authority "to make sure the market
works and is stable," and the insurer is simply "following what the
state has given us guidance" to do.
Other insurers in Idaho are taking a much more cautious approach, telling The Wall Street Journal they aren't stepping up immediately to offer their own plans.
Laszewski
said they are likely waiting to see what legal challenges develop. "If I
were running an insurance company, there's no way I would stick my neck
out until the high court has ruled in favor of this — and they're not
going to," he said.
Jeppesen said his company has consulted with
legal experts and is moving ahead with confidence.
The aim is to bring
people back into the market, particularly the young, the healthy and
those who don't get a tax credit subsidy and can't afford an ACA plan.
For
some people — especially younger or healthier applicants — the new
plans, which the insurer has named Freedom Blue, cost less per month
than policies that meet all ACA rules.
They accomplish that by
limiting coverage. If they are allowed to be sold, consumers will need
to weigh the lower premiums against some of the coverage restrictions
and variable premiums and deductibles, policy experts say.
The
plans, for example, will include a "waiting period" of up to 12 months
for any pre-existing conditions if the applicant has been without
coverage for more than 63 days, Jeppesen said.
Additionally, they
cap total medical care coverage at $1 million annually. And premiums
are based, in part, on a person's health: The healthiest consumers get
rates 50 percent below standard levels, while those deemed unhealthy
would be charged 50 percent more.
All those conditions violate
ACA rules, which forbid insurers from rejecting coverage of preexisting
conditions or setting dollar caps on benefits or higher premiums for
people with health problems.
But the rates may prove attractive to some.
Premiums
for a healthy 45-year-old, for example, could be as low as $195 a
month, according to a comparison issued by the insurer, while a
45-year-old with health problems could be charged $526. In that case,
the 45-year old would find a lower price tag — $343 a month — for an
ACA-compliant bronze plan.
While Freedom Blues plans cover many
of the "essential health benefits" required under the ACA, such as
hospitalization, emergency care and mental health treatment, they do not
include pediatric dental or vision coverage. One of the five plans
doesn't include maternity coverage.
When compared with one of the
Blues' ACA-compliant plans — called the Bronze 5500 — the new standard
Freedom Blue plan's annual deductibles are a mixed bag.
That's
because it has two separate deductibles — one for medical care and one
for drugs. If a consumer took only generic drugs, the new plan would be
less expensive, according to details provided by the plan. But with a
$4,000 deductible for brand-name drugs, the Freedom Blue plan requires
more upfront money before full coverage kicks in than the ACA-compliant
plan it was compared with.
Jeppesen said the insurer hopes to attract many of the "110,000 uninsured state residents who cannot afford [ACA] coverage."
That's the total number of uninsured people who earn more than 100 percent of the federal poverty level in the state, he said.
Sarah
Lueck, senior policy analyst for the Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities, cautioned that some of those residents might actually be
eligible for subsidies under the ACA, which are available to people
earning up to four times as much.
"Many ... could be getting
subsidies for more comprehensive coverage through the [ACA-compliant
state exchange] and would be better off," Lueck said.
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