BREAKING: White House finalizes ACA rule to strengthen individual market
By Virgil Dickson
April 13, 2017
The White House has finalized a rule that aims to appease insurers looking
for some stability in the individual marketplace before they must submit rates
for 2018.
The rule limits when consumers can gain coverage outside of open enrollment
periods, shifts authority to states to determine whether health plans have
adequate provider networks, lets insurers potentially pay a lower percentage of
consumers' medical costs, and allows insurers to refuse to cover persons who
haven't paid their premiums.
The administration rushed to publish the final rule even though it had to run
through more than 4,000 comments.
The rule, however, does not address the insurance industry's major concern
regarding continued enforcement of the individual mandate. It also does not
appear to continue subsidies for people who buy coverage on the Affordable Care
Act's individual coverage exchanges.
Both requests were made in a letter sent Wednesday to President Donald Trump
that was co-signed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which previously supported a
rollback of the ACA.
Other signers included America's Health Insurance Plans, the American Academy
of Family Physicians and the American Hospital Association.
The final rule shortens the 2018 enrollment period from three months to a
six-week window of Nov. 1 to Dec. 15.
Kaiser Permanente was opposed to this move, saying in a comment posted on
March 6 that the shortened window would reduce plan sales, which would impact
the overall risk pool and could result in higher premiums.
The final rule subjects anyone who signs up during special enrollment to
strict documentation.
The agency is doubling the number of new applicants who must submit documents
before their coverage begins. That move should result in 650,000 more people
having their enrollment delayed every year until eligibility verification is
completed.
Insurers say both issues are key to discouraging people from signing up when
they realize they need costly medical services and then dropping coverage after
they receive care.
But insurers are not likely to be satisifed by the rule.
In a March 7 letter, Anthem, which sells plans in 14 markets on the exchange,
proposed that in 2018 people signing up during special enrollment periods prove
they had 12 months of continuous coverage with no more than a 63-day gap in
coverage to qualify. Anyone not able to verify that would have to wait until the
next open enrollment to sign up.
Anthem wanted the CMS's more rigorous verification standards to also apply to
state-run exchanges during special enrollment.
The final rule allows insurers to refuse coverage to people who haven't paid
their premiums.
The rule also relieves the CMS of the responsibility for ensuring network
adequacy. Insurers currently must meet both federal and state standards.
It's not clear whether these measures adhere to the ACA's statutory
provisions.