Consumer Reports calls it gjunk health insurance.h A California regulator
described them as gskeleton policies.h To an expert from the American Cancer
Society, they gare a perfect example of why health care reform is so
crucial.h
They are bare-bones health plans, and critics say they could leave consumers
who become seriously ill on the hook for tens of thousands of dollars in medical costs.
The Affordable Care Act was supposed to do away with them.
gThe good news is that these plans will be a thing of the past in 2014,h
Steve Larsen, then a high-ranking Department of Health and Human Services
official, told reporters two years ago.
The law did outlaw so-called "mini-med" plans, which cap annual benefits at,
say, $2,000 even though the average hospital stay costs $14,000. But now a new
type of bare-bones policy may take their place.
Consumer advocates, employers and insurers say that unless regulators move to
block them at the last minute, plans with limited benefits may continue to be
offered by some large businesses, especially those with low-paid workers such as
restaurant chains and retailers.
Proposed and final rules issued this spring surprised many by failing to bar
large employers from offering insurance policies that could exclude benefits
such as hospitalization.
Offering bare-bones policies may result in some fines, but that expense could
be less than the cost of offering traditional medical coverage.
For large employers, "the feds imposed no minimum standard on how skimpy that
coverage can be other than to say, in essence, it's got to be more robust than a
dental plan or a vision plan," said Ed Fensholt, a senior vice president at
insurance broker Lockton Companies. "We had customers looking at offering some
relatively inexpensive and skimpy plan designs to satisfy the individual mandate
at modest cost.h
Employers Showing Interest
gThere is a lot of interesth from retailers and others that have offered
limited-benefit plans in the past, said Joan Smyth, a partner with benefits
consultant Mercer. Shefs gotten so many inquiries since the Wall Street Journal
reported on the issue in late May that limited benefit plans are gmy favorite
topic,h she joked.
Such plans were typically offered because some insurance was seen as better
than none — and the premium costs for both employers and workers were far lower
than for traditional coverage.
This summer, the Obama administration gave businesses with 50 or more
employees another year, until 2015, to comply with the requirement that they
offer insurance or pay a fine.
gSome of the pressure was taken off because of the announcementh to delay the
employer mandate, said Neil Trautwein, employee benefits policy counsel at the
National Retail Federation, a trade group. gBut I think you will continue to see
employers in many industries c carefully calculate their strategy for
compliance,h in part by considering skinny plans. gAs always, the interest is to
limit cost increases.h
Officials for McDonald's, Ruby Tuesday, Darden Restaurants and other large
employers that have offered mini-med coverage in the past declined to comment or
did not respond to questions about their plans.
Small Businesses Barred
The bare-bones plans cannot be offered to small businesses with fewer than 50
workers, or to individuals buying coverage through new online marketplaces that
open for enrollment Oct. 1. But benefit experts expect some larger firms that
buy outside the marketplaces or that self-insure to consider them.
The Obama administration says that workers offered such coverage may qualify
to shop in the marketplaces and to buy subsidized plans.
gIndividuals who are not already offered quality, affordable health care can
enter into the marketplaces and choose a health insurance option that works for
them,h said Sabrina Siddiqui, spokeswoman for the Treasury Department.
About 2 million Americans are covered by limited benefit mini-med insurance
policies, many of which were issued by Aetna and Cigna.
Asked whether Cigna will offer new versions next year, a company spokesman
said, "We are currently evaluating the types of plan designs that will meet the
needs of employers and employees." Aetna spokesman Matt Wiggin said the insurer
is "still assessing" customer needs.
Skimpy insurance under the Affordable Care Act wonft be quite the same as it
is now. Under the new rules, capping the dollar value of annual benefits isn't
allowed, but excluding entire categories from coverage - such as hospital stays
- is permitted, say benefit consultants. That's another way of keeping costs
down.
'Mini-Meds Have Morphedf
The law says only that large-employer policies must cover preventive care
such as blood pressure tests or vaccines with no co-pays for consumers. So the
plan could cover dental, vision and preventive cancer screenings, but possibly
not the treatment or hospital care a patient could need if diagnosed with an
illness.
True, the health act requires policies to include coverage for 10 broad
categories of gessential health benefits,h such as hospitalization and mental
health services, but that provision applies only to plans sold to small
businesses and individuals. Larger firms and self-insured employers are
exempt.
Benefit advisers say some retailers and restaurant chains are considering
limited-benefit plans for 2014 even though the deadline was pushed back for
offering coverage or facing fines.
gIt seems like mini-meds have morphed,h said Lydia Mitts, a health policy
analyst for Families USA, a consumer advocacy group. The new limited benefit
policies gare not the same animal but are still substandard coverage.h Employers
offering these sorts of plans do face some risks, experts said. If a large
employer doesnft offer gminimum essential coverage,h itfs potentially liable for
fines of $2,000 per full-time worker after the first 30 workers. Under the
abstruse wording of the health law, however, skinny plans appear to qualify as
minimum essential coverage.
But if employers donft offer gcomprehensiveh policies — defined as covering
at least 60 percent of health expenses — they must pay $3,000 for each worker
who receives subsidies to buy coverage. Opinions differ on whether skinny plans
will be able to pass the comprehensive test; some regulations are still pending.
But employers see that potential expense as far lower than the cost of offering
all their workers more robust coverage, experts said.
Some businesses are also betting that few workers will go to the
government-run marketplaces to seek subsidized coverage, opting instead for the
skinny plan gwhich costs less than the penalty,h said Dania Palanker, senior
counsel for the National Women's Law Center in Washington, D.C.
Signing up for a company skinny plan would fulfill a consumerfs obligation to
be covered under the health act and protect her from the lawfs fines.
Advocates are still pressing employers to offer more comprehensive
policies.
gPeople need to be covered for hospitalizations,h said Mitts of Families USA.
gItfs important for employers to do the right thing and they should not just
look at the minimum requirements of the law.h
© 2013 Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights
reserved.