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The House legislation, the Senate health committee bill and the evolving Senate Finance Committee package differ on some important specifics, but follow the same general approach. All would set up an insurance marketplace. This exchange would be open to individuals and small businesses, and maybe big companies later on. Government subsidies would be available for low-to-middle income households. People buying health insurance through the exchange would be part of a large pool that spreads risks, giving participants leverage similar to what government employees
-- including lawmakers -- now have. Health plans offered through the exchange would have to meet basic standards, so it would be easier for consumers to understand what their insurance covers. To protect against catastrophic illness, there would be annual limits on out-of-pocket costs for co-payments and deductibles. Year-to-year increases in premiums would be more predictable for small companies. Insurers could not charge more to people in poor health or to women, as they do now. But they still could charge higher premiums due to family size, geographic location and age. The House and the Senate health committee bills would limit age-related premiums so that a 64-year-old pays no more than twice as much an 18-year-old. But Senate Finance Committee negotiators are considering allowing as much as a 5-to-1 difference, a big savings for the young but a significantly higher cost for older people who are more likely to have health problems. The federal consumer protections would set a basic standard for the whole country, changing a situation in which state-level safeguards vary widely. ___ On the Net: Employee Benefit Research Institute: http://www.ebri.org/ AARP: http://www.aarp.org/ Kaiser Family Foundation: http://www.kff.org/ Senate Finance Committee: http://finance.senate.gov/ Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee: http://help.senate.gov/ House Energy and Commerce Committee: http://energycommerce.house.gov/ House Ways and Means Committee: http://waysandmeans.house.gov/ House Education and Labor Committee: http://edlabor.house.gov/
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