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The NOW! Blog

Archive for July, 2011

HCAN on Deficit Reduction: Don’t Default on the American Dream

Posted on July 7th, 2011 by Melinda Gibson in Press Releases

Washington, DC Health Care for America Now (HCAN), the nation’s leading grassroots health care advocacy organization, released the following statement from HCAN Executive Director Ethan Rome on discussions about deficit reduction and the debt ceiling:

“While the Republicans are pushing our country to the brink of an economic disaster, the president and the Democrats understand it’s imperative that we act responsibly and avoid defaulting on our debt. Just as important to our economic security are the retirement and health programs that are part of the fabric of American society. We must make progress on our debt without defaulting on the American dream.

“Working and middle-class families didn’t create our national debt. It's unfair and irresponsible to force seniors and middle-class families to fix a problem they didn't cause. Millionaires, billionaires and huge corporations should be asked to pitch in, and Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid benefits should be protected. The super rich have been getting a free ride for years while the middle class has been getting the shaft.”

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Health Care for America Now is the nation’s leading grassroots health care advocacy organization. HCAN led the fight over the past two years to win passage of health reform and to keep Congress from being steamrolled by corporate special interests.

Lower Premiums for Thousands of Consumers

Posted on July 5th, 2011 by Melinda Gibson in From Insurance Company Rules, Profits Before People, Solutions that Work

Check out today's article from Kaiser Health News - "Federal Officials Try Again to Bolster Plans For People With Medical Conditions".  Thousands of consumers with pre-existing conditions are seeing dramatically lower health care costs thanks to the Affordable Care Act.

Federal Officials Try Again to Bolster Plans For People With Medical Conditions

Jul 05, 2011

How low can they go? Experts agreed that pricey premiums for the new “pre-existing condition insurance plans” created under the health care overhaul were partly to blame for anemic enrollment in the plans, which reached just 21,454 after several months, compared with potentially hundreds of thousands that had been projected.

Starting July 1, the Obama administration reduced premiums by up to 40 percent in 17 states and the District of Columbia where it runs the new high-risk programs and encouraged other states to follow suit. The reductions were possible because federal officials now have state-specific data that allowed them to more accurately peg the premiums to the rates for individual plans in the state, as the law requires, says Steven Larsen, director of the Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight at the Department of Health and Human Services.

Another provision of the health reform law could help make the plans—which are aimed at people with medical conditions who can’t get coverage on the private individual market—even more affordable.

Under the law, starting in 2012 insurers must spend at least 80 percent of the premiums they collect on medical claims, as opposed to administration or profit, or pay rebates to consumers for the excess amount collected.

Some insurers are already reducing premiums to meet the new “medical loss ratio” requirements. (Medical claims paid are considered losses in insurance jargon.) If tough economic times continue and people cut back on medical care, experts say other insurers may follow suit. “Plans are getting nervous about how big the rebates they’re going to have to pay are,” says Timothy Jost, a law professor at Washington and Lee University who’s a consumer representative to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.

If insurers lower premiums in the individual market to meet the law’s new MLR requirements, that could be good news for the PCIP programs, whose rates are supposed to be no higher than standard rates in a state’s individual market.

Talk about further reductions can wait for another day. “It’s possible,” that the medical loss ratio requirements might further depress premiums in the PCIPs, says Larsen. However, “I wouldn’t care to speculate about that.”

Read more about high-risk insurance plans.

HCAN Statement on NAIC Vote: Regulators Steal $1.3 Billion From Consumers

Posted on July 5th, 2011 by Melinda Gibson in Press Releases

Washington, DC Health Care for America Now (HCAN), the nation’s leading grassroots health care advocacy organization, released the following statement from HCAN Executive Director Ethan Rome on today’s NAIC vote to recommend removing health insurance agent and broker commissions from the medical-loss ratio calculations under the Affordable Care Act:

Today a committee of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners acted like a wholly owned subsidiary of the health insurance industry. They did exactly what the industry wanted by voting to gut one of most significant provisions of the Affordable Care Act that holds the insurance companies accountable.

“The Affordable Care Act is about protecting small businesses and consumers who have been beaten up and overcharged for decades, but today the NAIC got it backwards. It’s repugnant that they would steal $1.3 billion from consumers and small businesses and hand it over to the insurance companies.

On June 28, HCAN and 42 other organizations sent a letter to the NAIC on this issue. Read it here.

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Health Care for America Now is the nation’s leading grassroots health care advocacy organization. HCAN led the fight over the past two years to win passage of health reform and to keep Congress from being steamrolled by corporate special interests.