Friday, September 2, 2016

Precision Cannon Fire

As we noted a week ago, some Grand Canyon State citizens are going to have a problem this November:

"People in Pinal County are at risk of a health insurance problem that hasn't happened anywhere else in the country: no companies offering marketplace health insurance"

Turns out, Aetna was the sole remaining carrier on that state's Exchange, and they've bailed. That means that, if you live in Pinal County (home of the Boyce Thompson Arboretum) and you want to buy health insurance, you'll have to buy if off the Exchange.

Which also means you get to pay full-freight: no subsidies for off-Exchange plans.

And that most likely means you'll be faced with plans that are unaffordable. No problem: the ObamaTax makes provision for such circumstances, and offers an exemption for folks who can't afford premiums.

Except there's a pretty significant, but under-the-radar, catch: this exemption won't be available to the folks in Pinal County.

Why not?

Well, as FoIB Michael Cannon explains, "[t]he unaffordability exemption applies only if “the annual premium for the lowest cost bronze plan available in the individual market through the Exchange” is unaffordable." But there are **no** plans on the Exchange.

See the problem?

Read the whole thing, you'll be glad (and/or furious) that you did.

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Medical Necessity: Here we go again

If you want to understand why your rates keep going up, you can lay a big chunk of the blame on items like this (in email from Medical Mutual this morning):

"To be compliant with the non-discrimination rule outlined in the Affordable Care Act (section 1557), we will remove broad exclusions for gender transition treatment"

Let's dial back a bit, and talk about why this is so stupid. In the earliest days of this blog, we participated in a discussion with other bloggers about medical necessity and In Vitro Fertilization (IVF). We averred that:

"[A]ccording to the standard industry definition, “medical necessity refers to treatment which is required to treat or care for symptoms of an illness or injury or to diagnose an illness or condition that is harmful to life or health.” Thus, we see that IVF fails to meet the threshold of “medical necessity,” ergo it should not be covered by insurance."

That is, no one has ever died because they couldn't/didn't get pregnant. Likewise, there is no evidence that anyone has ever died because they didn't get their personal bits chopped and/or replaced (excluding obviously medical issues like cervical or breast cancer and the like). There is, however, ample evidence that these folks are at much higher risk for attempting suicide (which would then require medical treatment in the most expensive part of the hospital).

So when insurers are forced to pay for non-medically necessary procedures, that cost is going to be passed along in the form of higher insurance premiums. Now, am I blaming Medical Mutual for this change? Of course not, they're simply following directives sent down from Our Betters in DC©.

What choice do they (or any other carrier) have?

It's not rocket surgery, after all.

More 3000% rate decreases

This never gets old:



So two more individual medical renewals hit my desk this morning. Both are with the same carrier, both are HSA-compliant with $3000 per person deductibles then 100%, both are grandmothered (meaning they're only partially ObamaCare-compliant, but still "kosher") [ed: for now]:

Sally and her family of four currently pay about $930 a month; their rates are going up 15%, to $1,065 per month. This means that the family will spend just shy of $13,000 before the plan pays bupkes.

Still, that's a bargain: a comparable fully compliant plan will set them back about $1200 a month, and that's with a $6500 per person deductible. So they'd have the privilege of more than doubling their medical expense out-of-pocket while paying only 20% more in premiums.

Such a deal!

Terry's increase is 17%, from $295 a month to about $350. That's also still a bargain: a comparable new plan goes for $480 a month and also comes with a $6500 deductible. This means that Terry would be out almost $11,000 before the plan paid a dime. Well, except for pap smears, mammograms and birth control convenience items. Oh, did I mention that Terry's a 53 year old guy?

And they're the lucky ones.

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Insurance working properly, Wellmark-style

They say that "the exception proves the rule," and I think that FoIB Allison Bell has found the exemplar:

"Wellmark Blue Cross Blue Shield of Iowa says it spent $18 million on medical bills for just one patient in 2015."

And that's just from July forward. The patient suffers from a ""severe genetic disorder," and is racking up about $1 million a month in claims. In fact, this one insured accounts for some 10% of the almost 43% rate hike Wellmark's seeking for 2017. As this is a fully compliant ObamaPlan, there's no end in sight, since there's no cap (aka "lifetime maximum").

So why do I call this "insurance working properly?"

Well, because insurance should be about spreading the risk (and the pain). And this certainly qualifies: no average person could afford this kind of health care spending on his own. And since it's a genetic disorder, I don't feel any moral qualms as I would for someone with a lifestyle-related condition. This is simply the hand that this person was dealt.

And yes, it's a lot of money, and money means resources, being spent on one person. My faith requires me to "choose life," and that's the over-arching sentiment here. It's not for birth control convenience items or routine expenses, it's for a catastrophic claim, what health insurance should be about.

May this poor soul find a path to healing.

Mid-Week Linkage Roundup

From the "Everything Old is New Again" Department: My late mother had Post-Polio Syndrome, a result of childhood exposure, but (thankfully) she never had the full-blown version of the dread disease. A common treatment for those that did was the so-called "iron-lung." Fortunately, we've long since eradicated polio, but FoIB Allison Bell warns that we may have to dig those old machines out of mothballs:

"Zika May Be Polio All Over Again ... the CDC concluded, “after careful review of existing evidence,” that “Zika virus is a cause of microcephaly and other severe fetal brain defects” in newborn infants."

Heads' up.

Co-Blogger Mike thinks that Belgium might be catching up to Sweden in the Bizzaro World medical tourism race:

"Euthanasia tourists are flocking to Brussels to get a lethal dose. Doctors at hospitals and clinics at Belgium’s capital are seeing an increase in number of euthanasia tourists who are travelling from across the world"

Supply and demand.

FoIB Jeff M first alerted us to troubles brewing for North Carolina's Blue Cross franchise back in May. Today he shares this update in the continuing saga:

"The N.C. Department of Insurance announced Monday it will broaden its investigation into Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, citing “disagreements” with the insurer."

At issue are continuing IT and claims processing issues.

Gotta love the tech.

And finally, via FoIB Holly R, this sad (and highly unusual) case from Great Britain (and for once, it's not about the MVNHS©):

"[A] 61-year-old British bagpipe player who developed a dry cough and breathlessness that worsened over a period of seven years ... He died several weeks after entering the hospital"

Turns out, several different - and deadly - fungi had taken up residence in his bagpipe, which he had neglected to clean. Truly sad, but perhaps a helpful warning to fellow pipers.

Death by Amazing Grace?

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Tick-Tock: Welcome to the Walmart Marketplace

As we noted earlier this month, agents have the opportunity to sell ObamaPlans at Walmart stores around the country. But the window for signing up to do so is closing.

From email:

"Tomorrow (August 31) is the last opportunity for agents and brokers to sign up to enroll consumers in Marketplace plans in Walmart stores.

In order to participate in this Walmart event, you must hold a valid state license and be trained and registered to participate in the Marketplace for 2017."

Interested? Then click here to get started. And any readers that do choose to participate are encouraged to let us know what you think of the experience.

MVNHS© circling the drain?

Earlier this month, we noted the financial difficulties facing the Much Vaunted National Health Service©, and observed that if you're a government-run health care system and you're going broke, that's a problem. But it's not the only problem - lack of self-awareness is also strong:

"Yet oddly, rationing is not entirely dead. It is alive and well and making a comeback in our “precious” National Health Service." [emphasis added]

Just now noticing that, Jeremy? Had you been a regular IB reader, you'd have seen examples for years. Better late than never, one supposes. And he does, in fact, make an extraordinarily brilliant point:

"In a tax-funded health care system, the normal, self-limiting rules of supply and demand don’t apply."

Which is exactly right, and we're already seeing signs of it here, with only a partially government run health care scheme:

"A majority of new enrollees are considered high risk, meaning insurers will have to spend more money on people in poor health and requiring expensive  care."

Mr Warner goes on to point out three "new elements" that have entered the picture: mass communication, an aging society, and ever-growing, ever-changing tech. Notice the elephant in the room that he doesn't mention?

[Hat Tip: FoIB Peter K]