Archive for the ‘Exchanges’ Category

Q and A on health care exchanges in the US health insurance marketplace

Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

PPO, HMO, Arizona health insurance, Gilbert, Mesa, Tempe, ArizonaGood Neighbor Insurance (www.gnazhealth.com and www.gninsurance.com) is continuing to update our clients on the new health insurance laws that were signed into law in the spring of 2010.   There are six major coverage options for those in the US and even though some of the rules and regulations are similar for all many differences are there and it all depends on how old you are and for whom you work.  Many critical details of this new insurance law will be clarified in the months and years to come. 

These six major coverage options are:

(1) Individual or family coverage (private health care plans)

(2) Employee/employer group option for small businesses (typically under 50 employees)

(3) Employee/employer group option for large businesses (typically larger than 50 employees)

(4) Exchange options through the state you are residing in (fully integrated 1-1-2014 and are quasi-government and private insurance coverage combined)

(5) Medicare (which include Parts A, B, C, and D) for those 65 years onwards

Health Exchanges are, by US federal law, going to be created by each state.  States are working on these plans now to have them start rolling out in the next couple of years with a dead line of 1-1-2014.  The purposes of health insurance exchanges will be to provide more health insurance options for each citizen of that state.  Health exchanges are going to have to follow the same set of rules set up by the US government, signed into law by President Obama on March 2010, and thus the premiums will not be much different than with other methods of getting health insurance.  With the state governments getting involved there will be additional rules and laws set up which will, inadvertently, cause the premiums to increase.  

Myth #A: If we build it, they will come.

Truth: While health insurance exchanges hold many great benefits, the law as it’s currently written contains very weak penalties for those employers that choose not to participate. As a result, some employers, at first glance, will likely opt to accept the penalties rather than provide coverage for their employees. However, as history has shown us governments raise penalties very quickly since it is an “easy” form of income for the tax coffers.  So the penalties for the first couple years will be low but as the years progress those penalties will be a big bite to the bottom line of company’s annual financial statements.  

Myth #B: New state exchanges are going to be strictly for the uninsured.

Truth: To be sustainable, state exchanges will need to be as welcoming to those currently insured as they are to the uninsured. They will also need to appeal every bit as much to individuals and small groups that do not qualify for subsidies or tax credits as they do to those who qualify for these incentives. Recognizing this, some states have made it part of their goal to tap into currently insured individuals and groups. To do this, they would be well advised to not only harness private sector distribution channels (such as brokers) but to offer products and services that align with commercial purchaser interests and needs. Only by being inclusive to all individuals can an exchange attract the type of balanced enrollment that will allow it to be a meaningful force in the market. diving, scuba diving, Bali, Indonesia, traveling, overseas, travel insurance

Myth #C: It will be complicated for employers to cover employees through a health insurance exchange.

Truth: Not true. The beauty of an exchange is that employees get access to a number of great health plans and benefit choices while employers get ease of administration and a single point of contact. The big change for employers will be to convert the funding of their employee health benefits program from defined-benefit to a defined-contribution model. Here employers provide employees with a voucher-like premium contribution; employees then use that premium contribution toward the health plan option they like best within the exchange. Employees who wish to “buy up” to coverage not covered by their employer’s contribution can do so by increasing their premium contribution, generally through payroll deduction.

Myth #D: Health insurance exchanges are expressly designed to save individuals and employers money.

Truth: Some policymakers falsely believe that by attracting a larger volume of purchasers, an exchange will turn around the rising cost curve. It doesn’t work that way. Health plans will still need to price to the risk and underwriting losses that can’t be made up strictly by volume. That’s because medical trend increases are driven by utilization, provider costs, hospital costs, and an aging and often unhealthy population. So while there should be a small administrative savings, health insurance exchanges are really more about value-based purchasing. Exchanges create an online shopping mall where consumers, employers, and brokers can view health insurance plans side by side and compare benefits, costs, and other features. Each of the plans offered in an exchange includes an essential set of benefits at different levels of cost sharing. By giving individuals the freedom to choose what’s right for their needs and budget, purchasers will be able to determine what is most valuable to them and, as a result, get the greatest value for their dollar.

Myth #E: The creation of health insurance exchanges will eliminate the need for agents and brokers.

Truth: While exchanges will be selling direct to consumers and using a still undefined network of “navigators,” the health reform legislation says that state exchanges can use brokers. But brokers who wish to stay competitive will need to ask themselves “Why would a client use me to purchase exchange coverage when they could go straight to the exchange themselves?” The answer is the same as to why employers use brokers today when they can go directly to a carrier. It’s because brokers, more than anyone else, can provide the information and unbiased recommendations purchasers need to make well-informed decisions, as well as service for both routine issues and more serious policy interpretation concerns.  Equally as important is the fact that, despite some other myths, exchanges will not turn health insurance purchasing into an annual transaction. During the course of a year, an individual can encounter many lifestyle changes – including a change in marital status, the birth of a child, a change in income, etc. This means that the need for the broker as “ombudsman” will not diminish, nor will the need for competent and responsive service.

Doug Gulleson loves to scuba dive overseas and makes sure he has his US health care and overseas health care, www.overseashealthinsurance.com/trip-protection.asp, information with him at all times when he travels   Keep our blog close by you, www.gntravelinsurance.com, for continual updates on the changes with the US health care system.

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Understanding how Exchanges work which start on January 1, 2014

Wednesday, December 8th, 2010

Good Neighbor Insurance (www.gnazhealth.com and www.gninsurance.com) is continuing to update our clients on the new health insurance laws.   There are six major coverage options for those in the US and even though some of the rules and regulations are similar for all many differences are there and it all depends on how old you are and for whom you work.  Many critical details of this new insurance law will be clarified in the months and years to come. 

These six major coverage options are:

(1) Individual or family coverage (private health care plans)

(2) Employee/employer group option for small businesses (typically under 50 employees)

(3) Employee/employer group option for large businesses (typically larger than 50 employees)

(4) Exchange options through the state you are residing in (fully integrated 1-1-2014 and are quasi-government and private insurance coverage combined)

(5) Medicare (which include Parts A, B, C, and D) for those 65 years onwards

(6) Full government health plans like Medicaid, CHIP, TRICARE, VA and other coverage plans as may be designated by the Department of Health and Human Services based mostly on financial criteria and/or military service.

The PPACA includes an individual mandate (including penalties for not obtaining health insurance) and requires the creation of state Insurance Exchanges by January 1, 2014. I know these are years away, but can you shed some light on the initial rules that surround these measures?

Individual Mandates
Beginning in 2014, all individuals are required to maintain “minimum essential coverage.” Failure to do so for an entire year will result in a penalty or tax. The penalty is on a sliding scale for three years and is described as 1/12th of the greater of:

  • For 2014: $95 per uninsured adult in the household or 1% of the household income over the filing threshold
  • For 2015: $325 per uninsured adult in the household or 2% of the household income over the filing threshold
  • For 2016: $695 per uninsured adult in the household or 2.5% of the household income over the filing threshold
  • The penalty will be 1/2 of the amounts listed above for individuals under the age of 18
  • The total household penalty may not exceed 300% of the adult penalty or the national average annual premium for bronze level health coverage offered through the Exchange (the Exchange is another mandate scheduled for 2014)

More on This Mandate:
The “Minimum essential coverage” mandate can be satisfied through:

  • Eligible employer-sponsored coverage
  • Individual health plans
  • Grandfathered health plans
  • Medicare part A
  • Medicaid
  • CHIP
  • TRICARE
  • VA
  • Other coverage as may be designated by the Department of Health and Human Services

Individuals who do not satisfy the individual mandate through participation in one of these programs will be able to purchase coverage through the state Insurance Exchanges discussed below.

Exceptions to the individual mandate include:

  • Religious exemptions
  • Individuals not lawfully present in the United States
  • Incarcerated individuals
  • Those who cannot afford coverage (required contributions toward coverage exceed 8% of household income)
  • Taxpayers with income under 100% of the poverty level
  • Those who have received a hardship waiver
  • Those who were not covered for a period of less than three months during the year

State Insurance Exchanges
In 2014, states are required to have an operational Insurance Exchange (this may be in the form of an Internet portal). Many critical details are yet to be clarified through regulations. Below are some early requirements noted in the new law:

  • Open to individuals and small employers (up to 100 full-time employees over 30 hours/week)
  • Estimated to provide coverage to 24 million people
  • Each Exchange is required to offer individuals five benefit levels:
    • Bronze
    • Silver
    • Gold
    • Premium
    • Catastrophic
  • Individual responsibility requirements will apply and employer requirements and penalties for not offering coverage will apply

With the new state Insurance Exchanges, what is the difference between the premium assistance tax credit and the free choice voucher?
The free choice voucher must be provided by the employer, beginning in 2014, to “qualified employees” to purchase qualified health plan coverage through the Exchange. Qualified employees for this purpose are those:

  • whose required contribution for minimum essential coverage through the employer’s plan is between 8% and 9.8%* of the employee’s taxable income for the year;
  • whose household income is less than 400% of the Federal Poverty Level; and
  • who do not participate in a health plan offered through their employer.

The amount of the voucher will equal the most generous amount the employer would have contributed for applicable coverage (self-only or family) on a monthly basis under the employer’s plan.

The Premium Assistance Tax Credit is a federal tax credit available to employees whose household income is between 100% and 400% of the Federal Poverty Level and who are either:

  • not offered minimum essential coverage by their employer; or
  • offered minimum essential coverage by their employer, but the plan’s “actuarial value” (or plan’s share of the total allowed costs of benefits provided under the plan) is less than 60%, or the premium exceeds 9.5%* of the employee’s household income.

The Premium Assistance Tax Credit is also available to individuals whose household income is between 100% and 400% of the Federal Poverty Level to purchase individual coverage through the State Insurance Exchange.

Note: There may have been a technical drafting error in the legislation that did not conform the 9.5% and 9.8% of income thresholds between these two provisions. The law uses different numbers in those places and absent a technical corrections bill, it will stay as such. Implications are unclear right now for those who get caught in between.

Doug Gulleson loves to scuba dive overseas and makes sure he has his US health care and overseas health care, www.gninsurance.com , information with him at all times when he travels   Keep our blog close by you, www.gntravelinsurance.com, for continual updates on the changes with the US health care system.

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Low enrollment in the US federal government high-risk pool

Friday, November 5th, 2010

Good Neighbor Insurance (www.gninsurance.com and www.gnazhealth.com) is continuing to update our clients on the new health insurance laws.   There are six major coverage options for those in the US and even though some of the rules and regulations are similar for all many differences are there and it all depends on how old you are and for whom you work.  Many critical details of this new insurance law will be clarified in the months and years to come. 

These six major coverage options are:

(1) Individual or family coverage

(2) Employee/employer group option for small businesses (typically under 50 employees)

(3) Employee/employer group option for large businesses (typically larger than 50 employees)

(4) Exchange options through the state you are residing in (fully integrated 1-1-2014 and are quasi-government and private insurance coverage combined)

(5) Medicare (which include Parts A, B, C, and D) for those 65 years onwards

(6) Full government health plans like Medicaid, CHIP, TRICARE, VA and other coverage plans as may be designated by the Department of Health and Human Services based mostly on financial criteria and/or military service.

Note: The US federal government high risk pool will morph into the Exchange plans through each state starting on 1-1-2014.

NAHU was invited by the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) to participate in a meeting yesterday about how to increase public awareness and participation in the federal high-risk pool program, the Preexisting Condition Insurance Plan (PCIP). Despite initial actuarial projections that hundreds of thousands of people would enroll right away and that an initial $5 billion appropriation would be insufficient program financing, DHHS is now reporting that after being open for business for two to three months in most states, the plans have enrolled only 8,011 people. In many states, the federal pools are operating at less than 10 percent capacity.

Some of the biggest barriers to PCIP participation include the requirement that an individual be uninsured for six months prior to enrolling, and the need for rejection notices from health insurance carriers that contain specific content. But another huge factor identified by DHHS and pool directors across the U.S. is agent involvement, and time was spent at the meeting discussing how to increase agent awareness of the new program. 

Suggestions included more education through associations like NAHU and compensation for agents who help enroll individuals in the states where the federal government administers the program. All but two states operating their own federal PCIP programs provide compensation to participating agents and brokers already, as do all state-run high-risk pool programs. 

Another suggestion that came out of the meeting was to use the PCIP as a means of filling a coverage void for child-only plans in some states. Since carriers have had to pull out of this market in many states due to lack of an open enrollment period and federal rules requiring guarantee issue of coverage, one state is already trying to make the PCIP plan work for these children. In New Mexico, the pool director is working with DHHS to get an exception to the rejection letter requirement, since children without coverage can’t get a rejection letter if there is no carrier serving their marketplace. Other states may follow suit.

Doug Gulleson loves to scuba dive overseas and makes sure he has his US health care and overseas health care information with him at all times when he travels (check out his diving travels at www.douggulleson.com).  Keep our blog close by you, www.gntravelinsurance.com , for continual updates on the changes with the US health care system.

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2014 state insurance exchanges; what are they?

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Good Neighbor Insurance (www.gninsurance.com and www.gnazhealth.com) is continuing to update our clients on the new health insurance laws.   There are six major coverage options for those in the US and even though some of the rules and regulations are similar for all many differences are there and it all depends on how old you are and for whom you work.  Many critical details of this new insurance law will be clarified in the months and years to come. 

Note:  Updated 7-29-2010

These six major coverage options are:

(1) Individual or family coverage

(2) Employee/employer group option for small businesses (typically under 50 employees)

(3) Employee/employer group option for large businesses (typically larger than 50 employees)

(4) Exchange options through the state you are residing in (fully integrated 1-1-2014 and are quasi-government and private insurance coverage combined)

(5) Medicare (which include Parts A, B, C, and D) for those 65 years onwards

(6) Full government health plans like Medicaid, CHIP, TRICARE, VA and other coverage plans as may be designated by the Department of Health and Human Services based mostly on financial criteria and/or military service.

 Introduction:

 In 2014 states are required to have an operational insurance Exchange. Although many critical details are yet to be developed through regulations – below are some early requirements noted in the new law:

 *           Open to individuals and small employers (up to 100 full-time employees over 30 hours/week)

 *           Estimated to provide coverage to 24 million people

 *           Each Exchange is required to offer individuals five benefit levels:

– Bronze

– Silver

– Gold

– Premium

– Catastrophic

 *           Individual responsibility requirements will apply and employer requirements and penalties for not offering coverage will apply

 *           Premium assistance is offered from the federal government for individuals who qualify

 More on this mandate:

 Minimum essential coverage includes:

 *           Eligible employer-sponsored coverage

*           Individual health plans

*           Grandfathered health plans

*           Medicare part A

*           Medicaid

*           CHIP

*           TRICARE

*           VA

*           Other coverage as may be designated by the Department of Health and Human Services

Individuals who do not satisfy the individual mandate through participation in one of these programs will be able to purchase coverage through the State Insurance Exchanges.

Exceptions to the individual mandate include:

*           Religious exemptions

*           Individuals not lawfully present in the United States

*           Incarcerated individuals

*           Those who cannot afford coverage (required contributions toward coverage exceed 8% of household income)

*           Taxpayers with income under 100% of the poverty level

*           Those who have received a hardship waiver

*           Those that were not covered for a period of less than three months during the year

Q and A:

With the new State Insurance Exchanges, what is the difference between the premium assistance tax credit and the free choice voucher?

The free choice voucher is required to be provided by the employer, beginning in 2014, to “qualified employees” to purchase qualified health plan coverage through the Exchange.  Qualified employees for this purpose are those:

  • whose required contribution for minimum essential coverage through the employer’s plan is between 8% and 9.8%* of the employee’s taxable income for the year;
  • whose household income is less than 400% of the Federal Poverty Level; and
  • who do not participate in a health plan offered through their employer.

The amount of the voucher will equal the most generous amount the employer would have contributed for applicable coverage (self-only or family) on a monthly basis under the employer’s plan.

The Premium Assistance Tax Credit is a federal tax credit available to employees whose household income is between 100% and 400% of the Federal Poverty Level and who are either:

  • not offered minimum essential coverage by their employer; or
  • offered minimum essential coverage by their employer, but the plan’s “actuarial value” (or plan’s share of the total allowed costs of benefits provided under the plan) is less than 60%, or the premium exceeds 9.5%* of the employee’s household income.

The Premium Assistance Tax Credit is also available to individuals whose household income is between 100% and 400% of the Federal Poverty Level to purchase individual coverage through the State Insurance Exchange.

* Note: There may have been a technical drafting error in the legislation that did not conform the 9.5% and 9.8% of income thresholds between these two provisions. The law uses different numbers in those places and absent a technical corrections bill, it will stay as such. Implications are unclear right now for those who get caught in between.

Doug Gulleson totally adores scuba diving and travels overseas throughout the year with his underwater camera in one hand and a cup of coffee in the other.   Visit Good Neighbor Insurance at www.gnazhealth.com  and www.gninsurance.com/tripcancellation for Arizona and international travel insurance coverage.

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