Overview of State Options

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Overview of State Options

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Title: Overview of State Options


1
Overview of State Options
  • Tim Henderson MPH
  • Policy Consultant
  • Center for Health Policy, Research Ethics
  • George Mason University
  • 5.4.05

2
State Options Expanding Private Coverage for
the Working Uninsured
  • Publicly Funded Reinsurance Programs
  • Tax Incentives
  • Sale of No-Mandate/Mandate-Lite Benefit Policies
  • Consumer Driven Health Plans / Health Savings
    Accounts (successors to MSAs)
  • Group Purchasing Arrangements
  • Small Group Rating Reforms
  • Individual Insurance Market Reforms
  • Enact/Broaden State Continuation-of-Coverage Laws
  • Allow Other Groups to Join State Employee Health
    Benefit Plans
  • Compelling Employers to Provide Coverage
  • Comprehensive Reforms

3
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredPublicly Funded Reinsurance Programs
  • Reduce steep premium increases for small
    employers with high claims experience
  • State Examples
  • CT, ID, NM, MA Support small-group coverage
    and/or improve individual coverage
  • AZ, NY Operate programs that subsidize
    insurance for small groups or low-income workers
  • Lessons Learned
  • Many state pools are inactive or have low
    enrollment
  • Substantial subsidies and marketing efforts
    needed depending on program configuration
  • Keys to success
  • Low (subsidized) premiums, high benefits,
    significant insurer participation
  • VA Regulatory Implications
  • Legislature would need to create an authority to
    adopt such programs
  • To determine financial risk, an actuarial
    analysis of the covered population required

4
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredTax Incentives
  • Tax relief (deductions or credits) to
    employer/individual who purchases health
    insurance
  • State Examples
  • Oklahoma 100 credit for employers whose
    eligible employees participate in state-certified
    basic benefit plan
  • VA 2005 bill recc.by Lt Gov. Comm. (SB1255 died
    in committee) would provide income tax credit for
    small employers (lt50 employees) for cost of
    insurance premiums or if contribution is 50 of
    total cost of premium/HSA
  • Several states allow self-employed individuals to
    deduct full amount of insurance premium payments
  • Subsidies appear to have minimal impact on
    increasing coverage To be effective, subsidies
    must be substantial (60).
  • VA Regulatory Implications
  • Legislature would need to examine impact on state
    revenues

5
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredSale of No/Low Mandate Benefit Policies
  • By dropping requirement to cover mandated
    benefits, price of coverage will decline and more
    will buy coverage.
  • Handful of states have exempted certain insurers
    from covering certain state health benefit
    mandates. In VIRGINIA
  • Special advisory committee (established 1990) to
    examine efficacy of mandated health benefits
  • Limited benefits plan existed for three years
    (1991-94) with very low use
  • 2004 bill (HB1362 killed) would place moratorium
    on new insurance mandates until 2009
  • Lessons Learned
  • Not clear that waiving benefit mandates increases
    coverage
  • Benefit mandates may have strong negative impact
    on small employers
  • VA Regulatory Implications
  • New legislation required to resurrect a limited
    benefit plan

6
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredTax-Free Medical Savings Accounts
  • For covered individuals that assist to finance
    part of cost of deductibles, co-payments, other
    medical expenses not covered by insurance plan
  • Most states have income tax deductibility for
    MSAs as allowed under federal law.
  • VA 2002 implementation plan showed low
    participation insurers offering MSA
    coverage has declined. MSA demonstration
    programs expired in 2003.
  • Lessons Learned
  • Unclear if MSAs have had measurable impact on
    coverage rates
  • Tax deductibility appears to mainly benefit upper
    and middle income employees (who are less likely
    to be uninsured)

7
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredConsumer-Driven Health Plans
  • Defined generally as including
  • An employer-funded personal benefit account (also
    called healthcare reimbursement account - HRA)
  • A deductible amount employees responsible for
    paying
  • Coverage for major expenditures
  • Physician choice and flexibility
  • Accessible consumer health care information
    services, often via the Internet
  • Lessons Learned
  • Plans are too new to have an established track
    record
  • Some companies combining HSAs and HRAs as an
    employee option and as another way to assist
    employees in directing their own health care

8
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredConsumer-Driven Health Plans
  • Health Savings Accounts (HSAs)
  • Created by 2003 Medicare Modernization Act must
    be coupled with a high-deductible health plan
    (1000/individual 2000/family) maximum
    out-of-pocket is 5000 and 10,000 respectively.
    Full deposits allowed starting in 2004.
  • Makes everyone eligible for income tax credits
    (up to 2600/individual 5150/family). Most
    employers with HSA plans will see their health
    care costs drop 5-10. Some predict small
    business (2-50 employees) can cut premiums up to
    50.
  • May attract disproportionately healthy employees
    employers worry about sicker employees staying in
    traditional plans which will drive up costs and
    fracture the insurance market.
  • HSAs cannot provide first-dollar coverage except
    for preventive care may delay one obtaining
    needed care. Will not eliminate elevated medical
    expenditures (most spending above deductible of
    HSAs).
  • HSA-related legislation in over 20 states (at
    least 4 states have enacted laws) through 2004.
    Some states have first-dollar mandates for
    benefits that may not fit definition of
    preventive services.
  • VA 2005 law (HB1492) requires creation of
    system of tax deductions for 1) employers
    contributing to HSAs, 2) providers delivering
    reduced/free care to HSA holders, and 3) the
    working poor.
  • Most employers taking a watch and see approach.
    Plans are very complex and hard to understand
    confusion over difference between HSAs and MSAs.
  • VA Regulatory Implications
  • HSAs are politically popular and have legislative
    support (I.e., passage of HB1492)

9
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredConsumer-Driven Health Plans
  • Health Reimbursement Accounts (HRAs)
  • May go with any insurance plan, for any amount of
    money (negotiable). May be funded or unfunded.
    Must be employer money.
  • Employers do not have to pre-fund the account
    amount of money to be used via the account is
    pre-established with the employee. Can be used
    to pay for services not covered by other plans.
  • Employees must spend their HRA amounts before
    tapping flexible spending account balances. If
    employer goes out of business, the employee loses
    his funding for the HRA. If employee leaves
    business, HRA can be used to subsidize COBRA.
  • Healthy employees can accumulate a significant
    nest egg over time-- a feature that critics fear
    will undermine traditional health plans.
  • Lessons Learned
  • Offering is still too new.
  • AETNA has begun offering such plans with rates
    based on age. Survey of over 300 mostly-large
    employers 19 already offer HRA or HSA another
    14 plan to in 2005 or 2006.
  • VA Regulatory Implications ?

10
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredGroup Purchasing Arrangements
  • Most such arrangements permit small employers to
    band together to purchase insurance and negotiate
    provider discounts
  • Over 20 states have authorized formation of
    purchasing cooperatives. In VIRGINIA
  • Previous studies (Joint Commission, Mercer) found
    cooperatives not effective in achieving
    significant savings (only 3 savings)
  • Association health plans suffer from adverse
    selection due to liberal underwriting policies
  • 2005 legislation requests state to study and
    design voluntary public/private purchasing pool
    (HJ696/SJ400 died in committee)
  • Lessons Learned Little evidence that group
    purchasing increases coverage rate or ability of
    small employers to offer such insurance.
  • VA Regulatory Implications Involvement of
    multiple employers would require compliance with
    MEWA regulations

11
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredSmall Group Rating Reforms
  • Designed in part to increase of small employers
    that offer insurance by controlling variability
    in premium rates.
  • State Examples
  • NY Requires insurers to charge all small
    employers the same per-employee rate for the same
    coverage
  • VA
  • Current standard and essential plans (created in
    early 90s by medical practitioners) intended to
    offer a rich array of coverage options for small
    business, but viewed as difficult to administer.
  • Small employers provided with guaranteed issue
    and renewal.
  • Lessons Learned
  • Small group reforms have not appeared to raise
    chances of small employers offering coverage or
    employees taking up coverage. Substantial
    subsidies may be needed. High-risk nature makes
    implementation difficult in strict regulatory
    climate (ERISA, HIPAA).
  • VA Regulatory Implications Significant new
    legislation may be needed to create a plan other
    than standard or essential to increase market
    penetration.

12
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredIndividual Insurance Market Reforms
  • Increase persons covered by individually
    purchased health plans and improve consumer
    protections under these plans
  • Restrictions on factors used to set initial or
    renewal rates for policies
  • Limits on efforts to exclude coverage for
    preexisting conditions or requirements to issue
    coverage to those no longer eligible for group
    coverage
  • Over 20 states
  • Have guarantee issue requirement (sell coverage
    to anyone who applies)
  • Limit extent to which insurers can charge higher
    premiums based on experience of insured
  • VA Unsuccessful attempts to establish pilot
    projects (Indigent Health Care Trust Fund)
  • No evidence that individual reforms improve
    coverage rates of working uninsured 2002 Joint
    Commission study found previous attempts to
    implement such reforms unsuccessful.
  • Lessons Learned
  • Reforms dont require state funding regulation
    may actually decrease insurer willingness to sell
    individual coverage
  • VA Regulatory Implications ??

13
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
Uninsured
  • State Continuation-of-Coverage Laws
  • Allow employees to continue health coverage under
    employer-sponsored plan after employee leaves
  • Nearly all states require insurers to offer
    continuation coverage
  • For as little as 3 months (e.g., VA, GA) up to 36
    months (e.g., NV)
  • Generally apply to employers with fewer than 20
    employees (who are not subject to federal COBRA
    rules requiring up to 18 months coverage)
  • VA Employer can choose between offering 90-day
    continuation coverage or conversion to individual
    policy. COBRA can be extended up to 36 months on
    age-dependent basis.
  • Lessons Learned No state studies exist studies
    of COBRA shown to have positive influence.
  • VA Regulatory Implications 2004 law repealed
    statutory requirements limiting age or education
    status
  • Allow Others to Join State Employee Health
    Benefit Plans
  • State-employee health benefit plans have been
    expanded to cover
  • public colleges/universities (at least 30
    states) public schools (at least 20 states)
    cities and counties (at least 22 states)
  • VA 2004 law allows part-time state employees to
    participate at full cost 1990 measure allows
    local government employees to participate.
  • Lessons Learned Not known no studies exist.
  • VA Regulatory Implications Any changes would
    require legislation

14
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredCompelling Employers to Provide Coverage
  • Employer Mandates
  • Requires employers to offer health insurance to
    some or all of their employees May require
    employer to reimburse state for employees on
    Medicaid/SCHIP
  • Hawaii only state with current law at least 10
    states considering legislation
  • Conditioning State Benefits and Contracts on
    Health Care Coverage
  • Requires employers doing state business to
    provide employee coverage
  • At least 11 states considering legislation
  • Reporting Employees on Public Assistance
  • Intent is to shame employers into providing
    employee coverage requires public assistance
    applicants/beneficiaries to provide name of
    employer. HIPAA rules may present barrier.
  • Massachusetts has law at least 20 states have
    considered legislation (including VA)

15
Expanding Private Coverage for the Working
UninsuredComprehensive Reforms
  • Universal coverage intended to ensure access
    while managing issues of cost and quality of care
  • One State Example Maines Dirigo Choice
  • A public-private health plan for small businesses
    (2-50 employees) provides sliding-scale premium
    discounts based on ability to pay.
  • Employers offering this product to employees, and
    pay at least 60 of the costs, to benefit from
    lower rates as a result of greater risk pooling.
  • After the first year, Maine plans to charge
    insurers an annual assessment only if cost
    savings are achieved in the system.
  • To date Plan slow to be implemented, as a lower
    than expected number of participating insurers
    and enrollees has been realized.
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