Search Results for: stop-loss

Oregon Advances Basic Health Program: Considerations for States

…in bronze or gold plans. While modeling suggests that resulting coverage losses would be small, this concern has prompted Oregon to consider ways to mitigate the higher premiums for affected enrollees. State Fiscal Impacts The cost of a BHP to the state depends in part on the generosity of the coverage provided. But the cost also depends on how the…

Administration Takes Action To Limit Junk Health Insurance

…plans that small employers purchase come with low attachment points for stop-loss coverage. Since the employer pays a monthly amount to the stop-loss issuer that resembles a premium, they may not realize they have become the sponsor of (and taken on the fiduciary duties for) a self-funded plan. The NAIC has documented several consumer protection concerns associated with level funding arrangements, including…

May Research Roundup: What We’re Reading

…millions of Americans will lose Medicaid and experience higher Marketplace premiums, and the currently record-low uninsured rate is expected to increase. Despite efforts to reduce coverage loss during the unwinding of continuous Medicaid, CBO projections suggest those may be insufficient to stem coverage losses. Further, the estimates are a wake-up call for policymakers to start planning for the end of…

Proposed Expansion of Self-funding for Small Employers Would Roll Back Affordable Care Act Protections, Pre-empt State Insurance Oversight

…legislation: High health care costs are driving many small employers out of the fully insured group market and into “level-funded” health insurance arrangements. These products combine a self-funded health plan with a stop-loss insurance policy. An estimated 35% of covered workers in small firms are now in a level-funded health plan. In general, self-funded employer plans purchase stop-loss insurance to…

More Than a Website: Should the Federal Government Establish Additional Minimum Standards for the ACA’s Health Insurance Marketplaces?

By Sabrina Corlette, Rachel Swindle, and Rachel Schwab The Affordable Care Act (ACA) established health insurance Marketplaces (or “Exchanges”) to facilitate enrollment in comprehensive and affordable health insurance plans. The ACA envisioned that the Marketplaces would be primarily state-run, with the federal government stepping in as a backstop. In practice, due in part to deep anti-ACA sentiment among some state…

April Research Roundup: What We’re Reading

…lose Medicaid during the “unwinding,” outreach to inform consumers of other affordable health insurance options will help mitigate widespread coverage loss. John Holahan, Erik Wengle, and Claire O’Brien, Changes in Marketplace Premiums and Insurer Participation, 2022-2023, Urban Institute, April 2023. Researchers used data from over 503 rating regions in 33 states to calculate average benchmark premiums and premium growth rates…

Searching for a New Normal: How Expiration of the Federal Public Health Emergency Impacts Access to Health Care Services

…treatments to some extent once the government stops footing the bill, consumers could face high out-of-pocket costs (as is already common for many prescription drugs). Telehealth Telehealth utilization grew exponentially during the pandemic, particularly among Medicare beneficiaries, whose share of telehealth visits increased 63-fold from 2019 to 2020. The federal government helped increase access to telehealth by allowing providers to…

Reducing Health Care Costs For Working Families

…level-funded products in significant numbers, it will leave employers with older, sicker workers behind. This causes adverse selection, where premium rates rise for employers whose groups cannot pass the stop-loss issuers’ underwriting. Just as with AHPs, this legislation does nothing to address the underlying reason why there is an affordability crisis for ESI: the prices that commercial insurers pay for…

A World Without The ACA’s Preventive Services Protections: The Impact Of The Braidwood Decision

…(DOJ) can and should ask the court to “stay” the decision—in lay terms, to stop it from going into effect—while they pursue an appeal. But such a stay is by no means a sure result, meaning that millions could, in very short order, lose access to no-cost early cancer screenings, mental health assessments, statins for heart disease, PreP to prevent…

Biden’s Budget Sets Up a Spending Showdown, With ACA Subsidies in the Crosshairs

…subsidies entirely—corresponding to an annual average loss of $3,277 in subsidies per person. Residents of populous states with high Marketplace enrollment numbers—including California, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Texas—would likely face the largest coverage losses and affordability reductions if the enhanced subsidies expire. Governors from these and other states have urged the federal government to make the enhanced subsidies…

The opinions expressed here are solely those of the individual blog post authors and do not represent the views of Georgetown University, the Center on Health Insurance Reforms, any organization that the author is affiliated with, or the opinions of any other author who publishes on this blog.