Health insurers focused on 2018 unknowns
for Obamacare market
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[May 05, 2017]
By Caroline Humer
NEW YORK (Reuters) - While attention is
focused on Republicans' fight to pass a bill to repeal Obamacare
starting in 2019, health insurers are busy struggling with decisions
they need to make now about how to price premiums and what markets they
can afford to be in next year.
Hospitals are on the other side of that coin, concerned that a spike in
the cost of Obamacare premiums next year will cause many people to
simply drop insurance coverage, reducing their revenues in the near
future.
Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives voted to undo Obamacare
on Thursday, but even if the bill - known as the American Health Care
Act (AHCA) - is passed by the Senate it would not solve a critical
outstanding issue for insurers looking at 2018: Will the government
continue to fund the cost-sharing subsidies that help individuals pay
for care?
Health insurers in the last two weeks have written letters to Congress,
sent out press statements and spoken up on conference calls, saying they
need more certainty about the payments.
Thursday's vote did not change that.
The chief executive of Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, Scott Serota,
on Thursday said that the House vote in itself does not stabilize the
exchange market. "It also is critical to fund cost-sharing reductions
during this time," he said.
Molina Healthcare Inc <MOH.N>, an insurer with over 1 million exchange
members, said, "While the debate on AHCA now moves to the Senate,
Congress and the Administration must ensure that the state Marketplace
exchanges are stabilized through at least 2018," including finding
subsidies and enforcing the mandate that people have health insurance.
Cost-sharing subsidy payments from the government are estimated at $7
billion this year and $10 billion next year. Without them, insurers say
they would need to raise rates at least 20 percent next year.
On Thursday, Maryland released the proposed premium rates filed by
insurers for the 2018 individual market in the state, which showed
increases ranging from 18 percent to 58 percent.
Double-digit premium increases have raised the notion that Republicans
are working on parallel paths to undo the law, creating a market where
plans are so expensive that they only make economic sense for patients
with very high medical costs.
Republicans say Obamacare has already reached that level, and needs to
be replaced with a system they say will make it possible for the young
and healthy to buy cheaper plans by eliminating required benefits and
allowing insurers to charge older patients - who typically have more
medical problems - much more.
HOSPITALS BRACE FOR COSTS
In states that did not expand Medicaid, a provision of Obamacare that
broadened the eligibility of the federal health insurance program for
the poor but was subject to approval by state legislatures, hospitals
are particularly worried about rising premium costs.
Hospitals in Southern Republican states that did not expand Medicaid
said they expect the number of patients covered through the exchanges to
drop if prices spike in 2018, increasing bad debt.
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An emergency sign directs patients and staff to the emergency room
at the newly constructed Kaiser Permanente San Diego Medical Center
in San Diego, California, U.S. , April 17, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake
"We estimated about a third people on exchange will drop it," said
Will Ferniany, CEO of the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB)
Health System.
John Haupert, chief executive officer of Grady Health System in
Atlanta, Georgia's largest safety-net hospital, also said after the
House vote that he worries that customers who have coverage through
the exchanges will not be able to afford Obamacare plans next year.
The hospitals also have longer-term concerns about changes to
Medicaid funding under the Republican proposal, but those concerns
focus on changes that may or may not take hold in 2019 or 2020.
On Thursday, shares of Tenet Healthcare Corp <THC.N> and HCA
Holdings Inc <HCA.N> were higher, which analysts said came as the
final version of the bill included more money that would flow to
hospitals.
The vote comes as state regulatory deadlines to submit 2018
insurance plans have already forced some insurers to make decisions.
Aetna Inc <AET.N>, for instance, pulled out of Virginia this week.
"I think the decision-making that we have to make right now has to
be based on the reality as it is today," Aetna's chief financial
officer, Shawn Guertin, said in an interview on Tuesday after
reporting that Aetna would lose $200 million on the business this
year.
The window may be closing on a decision, but Ana Gupte, an analyst
at Leerink, said insurers like Anthem Inc <ANTM.N>, Centene Corp
<CNC.N> and Molina were more likely to participate in the exchanges
because of the positive vote. It may make it more likely that the
government will in fact fund those cost-sharing subsidies, which
have been caught up in a tussle, she said.
Anthem shares ended down 0.3 percent, Centene fell 0.2 percent, and
Molina was up 1.2 percent.
(Additional reporting by Jilian Mincer and Michael Erman in New York
and Yasmeen Abutaleb in Washington, D.C.; Editing by Nick Zieminski
and Leslie Adler)
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