Aetna pulls back on
Obamacare health insurance plans in 2017
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[August 16, 2016]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Aetna Inc, the
No. 3 U.S. health insurer, on Monday said that due to persistent
financial losses on Obamacare plans, it will sell individual insurance
on the government-run online marketplaces in only four states next year,
down from the current 15 states.
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Aetna's decision follows similar moves from UnitedHealth Group Inc.
and Humana Inc., which have cited similar concerns about financial
losses on these exchanges created under President Barack Obama's
national healthcare reform law.
Aetna is also trying to buy Humana and is currently fighting a U.S.
government lawsuit aimed at blocking the $34 billion deal.
Aetna, which earlier this year said it was too soon to give up on
the exchanges despite its challenges, this month signaled it was
reconsidering. On Aug. 2, the company said it would not expand in
2017 and would review all its individual business.
Many insurers last year had said they expected to profit on the
exchanges, but now say more exchange rules must be changed for it to
be sustainable. Only about 11 million people have signed up through
the exchanges, about half as many as expected.
Larry Levitt, healthcare economist at the Kaiser Family Foundation,
said that if enrollment stagnates, small technical fixes likely will
not be enough to bring big insurers back. "More healthy people need
to be encouraged to sign up," Levitt said by email.
Aetna said that the current risk adjustment system, in which the
government balances out the costs of sicker than typical populations
through payments to insurers, is not adequate.
Aetna said that it had a second-quarter pretax loss of $200 million
on the individual business and has lost $430 million since the plans
first went on sale in 2014.
Kevin Counihan, Chief Executive of the U.S. government-run
individual marketplace, said that the risks of the customer pool is
improving.
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"It’s no surprise that companies are adapting at different rates to
a market where they compete for business on cost and quality rather
than by denying coverage to people with preexisting conditions,"
Counihan said in a statement.
Aetna on Monday said it would continue to sell plans on the
exchanges in Delaware, Iowa, Nebraska and Virginia in 2017. The
plans, which are eligible for income-based government subsidies,
will be sold in 242 counties, down from 778 counties this year.
States it is exiting include Florida and Ohio.
It will continue to sell individual plans that meet the law's
requirements - such as not denying coverage to people with
pre-existing conditions - outside of the exchanges where it does
now, the company said.
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(Reporting by Caroline Humer; Editing by Diane Craft)
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