Anthem and Blue Crosses loom large in
Obamacare talks
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[February 27, 2017]
By Caroline Humer
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Anthem Inc. <ANTM.N>
and other U.S. health insurers complained to the White House for more
than a year that they were losing money on people who waited to sign up
for Obamacare coverage until they were sick.
They pleaded with the Obama administration to stem their losses by
tightening up on the enrolment rules. When their pleas went unmet,
UnitedHealth Group Inc <UNH.N>, Humana Inc <HUM.N>, and Aetna Inc
<AET.N> pulled out of most of the government subsidized health insurance
market.
But now that the new Trump administration and Republican lawmakers
control the future of healthcare, the industry is getting a new hearing.
And Anthem - the last national insurer playing big in the Obamacare
market - is the loudest industry voice in meetings with policymakers who
all have pledged to overthrow former President Barack Obama’s signature
law.
President Donald Trump, who has said Obamacare coverage is too costly
for customers and taxpayers, is set to meet with insurance industry
executives today.
Since the election, lobbyists for Anthem and affiliated Blue Cross
insurers have met “24/7’’ with Republicans leading the change effort,
including House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell, according to one healthcare industry lobbyist.
They are there “every time Senators and staffers are on the Hill,” the
lobbyist said.
Another industry source who attended some of the meetings said lawmakers
and aides were keen on hearing what the insurers needed to stay in the
market.
That clout may explain Anthem Chief Executive Joseph Swedish's optimism
in comments to investors earlier this month that policymakers would
introduce new enrollment rules limiting when people can opt into
coverage.
"We do have some positive indicators that stabilization could very
likely occur,” Swedish said. “I am again hopeful that our
recommendations will be looked at very carefully and adopted.”
A day later, the Trump administration took its first concrete stab at
Obama's Affordable Care Act, proposing regulations that would shorten
the enrollment period, establish a new eligibility verification process
and force members to pay delinquent premiums if they want to return to
the same insurer.
The so-called stabilization proposal addressed many of the industry’s
top demands for shoring up the individual market and came after Anthem
said it was considering whether it would remain in 2018.
Anthem is the largest insurer among the Blues, a collection of companies
that share a governing board, a brand and networks. As a group, they
cover the vast majority of people covered by Obamacare.
That means they have the most at stake and a lot of influence in shaping
the future of an insurance market that covers more than 10 million
people, according to people close to the negotiations.
"Blue Cross Blue Shield does have a larger role in discussing changes,"
said an aide to a key Republican Senator.
TRUMP’S 3 ‘R’s: REPEAL, REPLACE, REPAIR
Trump has said he wants to jettison the 2010 law that created Obamacare
and replace it with legislation that would change access to individual
insurance and the Medicaid program for the poor.
A copy of the administration's Feb. 10 working draft leaked out Friday.
But it was not clear whether there was enough support for all of the
measures or how it would evolve. Any major changes aren’t likely to
affect consumers before 2019.
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The office building of health insurer Anthem is seen in Los Angeles,
California February 5, 2015. REUTERS/Gus Ruelas
In the meantime, Republican lawmakers are hammering out tweaks to
Obamacare they view necessary to preventing any more insurers from
exiting. They are looking at ways to limit monthly premium
increases. For 2017, the average premium went up 25 percent in these
Obamacare plans, which incensed many consumers.
Anthem and other Blue Cross plans dominated the individual market
before Obamacare coverage took effect in 2014. Obamacare remade that
market and sought to stimulate competition by financing the start up
of about two dozen smaller insurance co-ops. The Obama
administration also courted big players, such as Aetna and
UnitedHealth, by forecasting rapid enrolment growth to more than 20
million people, which failed to materialize.
Anthem operates the BCBS license in 14 states and insures more than
800,000 people in the Obamacare exchanges - the single biggest
portion. It said it was making a slight profit on that business. Its
rivals exited after losing hundreds of millions of dollars last
year.
Wall Street analysts said Anthem was better at pricing and benefited
from a well-known brand. Its huge pool of members also helps Anthem
drive good deals with doctors and hospitals. Still, Anthem’s
business is mostly in the employer-based market; Obamacare customers
comprised only about 4 percent of its members at the end of 2016.
Ethan Lovell, co-portfolio manager at the Janus Global Life Sciences
fund that owns Anthem shares, said without changes to the exchange
rules, the company would likely have to raise the average premium 20
percent in 2018, as it did for this year, to keep from losing money.
In addition to the enrolment rules, Anthem is seeking changes in the
way payments for the sickest patients are calculated. It also wants
an extension to the planned discontinuation at year’s end of plans
that were issued before Obamacare and that don’t meet the law’s
coverage requirements.
Ed Haislmaier, senior health policy research fellow at The Heritage
Foundation, helped draft the proposed stabilization rule Trump
announced Feb. 2. He said he expected the Trump administration to
also address Anthem’s older plans.
Swedish also wants the elimination of one of Obamacare’s most
controversial revenue sources - an industry-wide premium tax that
insurers say has driven up premiums in all private U.S. health
insurance and that lawmakers agreed last year to set aside for a
year.
On January 4, Representatives Kristi Noem, a Republican from South
Dakota, and Kyrsten Sinema, a Democrat from Arizona, introduced the
Jobs and Premium Protection Act that would repeal the premium tax;
it has 145 co-sponsors.
(Reporting by Caroline Humer in New York and Yasmeen Abutaleb and
Susan Cornwell in Washington D.C.; Editing by Michele Gershberg and
Lisa Girion)
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