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texan
01-13-2014, 11:21 AM
By Ariana Eunjung Cha (http://www.washingtonpost.com/ariana-eunjung-cha/2011/02/25/ABH5cCJ_page.html), Published: January 11 Washington Post Health & Science
When millions of health-insurance plans were canceled last fall, the Obama administration tried to be reassuring, saying the terminations affected only the small minority of Americans who bought individual policies.

But according to industry analysts, insurers and state regulators, the disruption will be far greater, potentially affecting millions of people who receive insurance through small employers by the end of 2014.


While some cancellation notices already have gone out, insurers say the bulk of the letters will be sent in October, shortly before the next open-enrollment period begins. The timing — right before the midterm elections — could be difficult for Democrats who are already fending off Republican attacks about the Affordable Care Act and its troubled rollout.

Some of the small-business cancellations are occurring because the policies don’t meet the law’s basic coverage requirements. But many are related only indirectly to the law; insurers are trying to move customers to new plans designed to offset the financial and administrative risks associated with the health-care overhaul. As part of that, they are consolidating their plan offerings to maximize profits and streamline how they manage them.

“If they do it one way, the word canceled gets attached to it. If they do it another way, they say they are amending the policy. It sounds more gentle but it’s the same thing,” said Gary Claxton, an expert in private insurance at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “The basic point is, for many people in the small-group market at some point soon their coverage is going to change.”

The transformation of the small-group market is just one of the many ripple effects of the Affordable Care Act that will reshape the insurance industry in coming years. With millions of previously uninsured people getting coverage, the insurance industry’s business model is being upended, and that’s leading to changes involving all sorts of products, not just those sold through the online marketplaces to individuals.

The impact of cancellations in the small-group market is expected to be less dramatic than in the individual market, partly because a higher percentage of small-business policies provide more generous benefits. Still, the changes being made by the insurance industry are leaving some small-business owners confused and disillusioned about the law — whether it is directly to blame for the changes or not.

Stephen Lohman, owner of Allegheny Plant Services, a trucking company in Pittsburgh, said the Aetna PPO plan he offers his 38 employees will be discontinued at the end of this year. He said he has been offered a new Aetna policy with premiums that are 40 percent higher, and that other insurers’ rates are similar.

“We were very surprised,” he said, adding that it is “important to me personally” to offer insurance to his employees, but he is not sure he can afford the premium increase.

Now that insurers aren’t able to charge more to people with preexisting conditions, companies with sicker workers may see lower premiums, while those with a healthier workforce may see higher premiums. Many small businesses are also discovering that the new plans have more restrictions on access to specific doctors, hospitals and prescription drugs.

The reason, said Robert Zirkelbach, a spokesman for America’s Health Insurance Plans, the industry’s main trade group, is that the law requires small businesses to purchase coverage that is more comprehensive than what some buy today, and that drives up costs.
Some small businesses are eligible for new tax credits to partially offset the cost of insurance. Also, firms no longer have to worry about the possibility of large premium increases if too many of their workers fall ill.

‘Ending discrimination’
An estimated 18 million to 24 million people in the United States have insurance through employers with fewer than 50 workers, and about 40 million have coverage through firms with fewer than 100 workers. The Department of Health and Human Services estimated in 2010 that up to 80 percent of small-group plans, defined as having fewer than 100 workers, could be discontinued by the end of 2013. But many small employers bought themselves extra time by renewing policies early through the end of 2014.

Jonathan Gruber, a key architect of the health law and a professor of economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said the number of people covered by small-group policies that will be discontinued is “not trivial."

“We’re ending discrimination [against people who are sick, and as a result] the people who were previously benefiting may now suffer,” Gruber said. “That’s sad for them, but it does not mean we should continue discrimination.”

He said the change for most small businesses will simply be a “labeling issue,” with companies able to switch to similar plans at similar prices with the same carriers, although the plans themselves may have different names. A smaller group will have to pay more for a more generous plan. Gruber said the number of genuine “losers” under the health-care law — those who will have to pay more for the same or inferior coverage — is “very, very small.”

In November, President Obama, responding to criticism about widespread cancellation of individual policies, said insurers could extend policies that do not meet the law’s requirements for an additional year, if state regulators agreed. His announcement applied to small-group plans as well.

There is substantial turnover in individual and small-group policies every year, even without the health law. But insurers say the change that’s starting to occur is significantly larger than before.


In New Jersey, the state’s association of health plans says 650,000 people with small-group coverage have had their plans disrupted. In Colorado, regulators said small-group plans covering 143,000 people are being discontinued in 2014.

In New Hampshire, the state’s largest insurer, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, is moving all of those in its small-group plan — 60,000 to 70, 000 people — to plans that are similar to those sold on the marketplace created by the health-care law. These plans have drawn fire from consumers because they include only 16 of the state’s 26 acute-care hospitals.

In Pennsylvania, Delaware and West Virginia, Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield is discontinuing all its small-group plans for those who did not renew early, and offering new policies with different coverage and premiums. The company says 99.5 percent of the 5.3 million people it covers through its individual and small-group plans will be affected, but it declined to break out the number under small-group plans for competitive reasons.

Business for marketplaces
In Vermont and the District, regulators are making other changes in the small-group market. They are requiring small businesses and associations with fewer than 50 employees to purchase new policies through the government-run online marketplaces. The rules go into effect in 2014 in Vermont and 2015 in the District. About 39,300 people in Vermont are being affected, according to state regulators. The District requirement will be extended to employers with up to 100 employees in 2016; it could affect as many as 125,000 people.

Regulators took the step to try to ensure that the exchanges — the smallest in the country, by population served — would have enough young, healthy enrollees to offset the cost of older, sicker participants. Judith Kennedy, president of the National Association of Affordable Housing Lenders, based in the District, recently received a notice informing her that the group’s small-group plan was being discontinued. She said she worries about the consequences as both an employer and as a parent.

“The notion that the plans on the exchanges may or may not limit providers scares a mom who has lived through chronic illness with her child,” she said.

Also facing disruption are people who purchase insurance through professional or trade associations and don’t have any employees. This includes some doctors, lawyers and accountants in solo practice. Under the health law, that type of association plan is not allowed; sole proprietors must purchase coverage on the individual market.

Cynthia Rutzick, 49, who has her own law practice in Oak Hill, Va., said that the policy she had been buying for years through the state bar association was already offering the benefits mandated by the health law. But the policy, which cost $1,500 a month for herself, her husband and their two children and included 94 percent of the physicians in her area, was canceled. The new one, which costs $1,600 a month for her and her two children (her husband is going on Medicare next year) includes 82 percent of area physicians. Her broker said plans like her old one don’t exist anymore.

“So I had a blue car, but could not go out and buy another blue car,” she said. “I have to buy a red car, and it’s not as good and way more expensive.”

texan
01-13-2014, 11:24 AM
This is exactly why this law halted hiring. Small business' were sitting pat until they could see what would happen.

"Stephen Lohman, owner of Allegheny Plant Services, a trucking company in Pittsburgh, said the Aetna PPO plan he offers his 38 employees will be discontinued at the end of this year. He said he has been offered a new Aetna policy with premiums that are 40 percent higher, and that other insurers’ rates are similar."

But no coolaid drinking dem will admit the truth even as it smacks them in the ass.

Ivan88
01-13-2014, 11:58 AM
We chose to dis-obey "nature's God" and so we gotta pay like Moses said, "Those who hate you, rule over you." (Leviticus 26:17)
5359

lynn
01-13-2014, 05:29 PM
Medicaid
Prior to the ACA becoming approved in 2010, we had 61 million people on Medicaid. Since then all states together managed to reduce this number to 55 million people. This also includes the states that agreed to the expansion.
As of today, 4.6 million have signed up.
The government won’t tell us how many are brand new enrollees or how many just renewed coverage.

Employment
Prior to the ACA becoming law in 2010, Part time jobs averaged approximately 24 million people employed. Today it has become 47 million who are employed part time.
How many do you think were full time and had health benefits before their hours were reduced? How many of them had coverage for their spouse and children?

Insurance coverage through their parents for young adults up to 26 years of age
There are 3.1 million young adults now covered under their parent’s insurance coverage. According to the government statistics it doesn’t show that there has been a reduction in the number of 8.2 million adults between the ages of 19 and 25 years of age who still have no insurance. This number has not been reduced at all due to the law.

Exchange totals for private insurance coverage
As of today, there are 2.2 million people that signed up through the exchanges and 30,000 that signed up directly with their chosen carrier. Don’t forget that 4.5 million lost coverage because their policies did not include all of the mandated benefits under the new law.

In summary, if you do the math we have more people uninsured now than we did prior to the ACA. The government had to have known this was going to happen so what is the real objective behind this new mandate?

lynn
01-14-2014, 11:54 AM
You also have to remember is that over 60 million people that have coverage through their employer are "self Insured" which means this population is not part of any insurance pool of customers. The insurance carrier only job is to administer it as the employer pays for all healthcare expenses for their employees via the carrier.

You can thank again our government for screwing small employers by allowing larger corporations to self insure under ERISA. Prior to the ACA the total pool of fully insured through their employers was 11 million people which is where the insurance company assumes 100% of the risk. Since they were denying people with pre-existing conditions, the insurance company has the healthiest of the bunch for this risk group.

The law now has changed the game and that is why small businesses are being priced right out of the market.

Cigar
01-14-2014, 12:08 PM
http://upload.democraticunderground.com/imgs/2014/140114-the-obamacare-tidal-wave.jpg

Huge Surge in Obamacare Enrollment Reported

About 1.8 million people enrolled in new individual health plans in December
By Kate Pickert


As federal officials predicted, the flood of Americans trying to sign up for health insurance by the end of 2013 ended in a tidal wave. About 1.8 million people enrolled in new individual health plans through the law in December, bringing new enrollments through Dec. 28 to about 2.2 million.

The number of signups through HealthCare.gov, the federal exchange web site that has been hobbled by technical difficulties, peaked toward the end of the year, according to a report released Monday by the Department of Health and Human Services. The number of Americans who selected plans through the federal exchange in December was seven times higher than those who signed up in October and November combined, according to HHS.

On a call with reporters Monday, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said HealthCare.gov is now “working smoothly” and that the federal government was encouraged by the late surge. “Among young adults, the momentum was particularly strong,” she said. According to HHS, 30 percent of those who signed up for individual market health plans under Obamacare in 2013 were 34 or younger.

more....

http://swampland.time.com/2014/01/13/huge-surge-in-obamacare-enrollment-reported/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+timeblogs%2Fswampland+%28TIME %3A+Swampland%29

zelmo1234
01-14-2014, 12:13 PM
http://upload.democraticunderground.com/imgs/2014/140114-the-obamacare-tidal-wave.jpg

Huge Surge in Obamacare Enrollment Reported

About 1.8 million people enrolled in new individual health plans in December
By Kate Pickert


As federal officials predicted, the flood of Americans trying to sign up for health insurance by the end of 2013 ended in a tidal wave. About 1.8 million people enrolled in new individual health plans through the law in December, bringing new enrollments through Dec. 28 to about 2.2 million.

The number of signups through HealthCare.gov, the federal exchange web site that has been hobbled by technical difficulties, peaked toward the end of the year, according to a report released Monday by the Department of Health and Human Services. The number of Americans who selected plans through the federal exchange in December was seven times higher than those who signed up in October and November combined, according to HHS.

On a call with reporters Monday, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said HealthCare.gov is now “working smoothly” and that the federal government was encouraged by the late surge. “Among young adults, the momentum was particularly strong,” she said. According to HHS, 30 percent of those who signed up for individual market health plans under Obamacare in 2013 were 34 or younger.

more....

http://swampland.time.com/2014/01/13/huge-surge-in-obamacare-enrollment-reported/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+timeblogs%2Fswampland+(TIME%3 A+Swampland)

I think that this is great now we only have 2 million more un insured than when we started!

But when the small business waiver expires and 60 million more hit the streets???? then what?

Cigar
01-14-2014, 01:16 PM
I think that this is great now we only have 2 million more un insured than when we started!

But when the small business waiver expires and 60 million more hit the streets???? then what?

... and another 3 Months :laugh:

Better start getting some more talking points :grin:

Mainecoons
01-14-2014, 02:18 PM
Cigar's idea of a great accomplishment:

http://images.bwbx.io/cms/2014-01-13/Obamacare_Subsidies.png

http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2014-01-13/whos-buying-obamacare-in-three-charts

monty1
01-14-2014, 02:27 PM
Will we ever see the day when the right tries to take the ACA away from Americans who have benefitted so much from it?
I sure fucking hope so. This sideshow is just too good to end!

Mainecoons
01-14-2014, 03:51 PM
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
lol!