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Universal Health Insurance Coverage, new proposal
02-22-2010, 09:37 AM
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#1
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 193
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Universal Health Insurance Coverage, new proposal
Here is link to new proposals, any chance of passing this year? I didn't see any thing to control costs, I may have missed it. But without substantial cost control how will this get paid. This can be the first step, once costs go out of control then cost control will come. Anyway first let's see if it get enacted.
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02-22-2010, 10:55 AM
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#2
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Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Portland
Posts: 4,946
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Thanks for the link. I suspect this thread probably belongs over here, though.
It's a nice proposal compared to the recent 'product', but due to the usual external circumstances it is effectively dead on arrival.
I'm continuing to budget the usual high amount for medical insurance, with the usual 7.5%/year medical inflation rate, and would advise others to do the same rather than hope for Federal relief.
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02-22-2010, 02:38 PM
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#3
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 14,328
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Quote:
Originally Posted by M Paquette
Thanks for the link. I suspect this thread probably belongs over here, though............
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Yup.
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02-22-2010, 07:55 PM
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#4
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 5,381
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Quote:
Originally Posted by M Paquette
but due to the usual external circumstances it is effectively dead on arrival.
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Not necessarily.
It looks like this proposal is a compromise between the already passed Senate and House bills. The plan seems to be for the House to pass the Senate bill and then have new legislation that "reconciles" the Senate bill to the compromise bill. Conceivably that could be done through the reconciliation process in the Senate thereby avoiding the need for 60 votes.
Health reform is very much alive if the Democrats want it bad enough. They only need to muster a simple majority in both houses to make it happen.
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03-04-2010, 09:45 AM
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#5
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: VA
Posts: 923
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What good is health reform if you don't have a job to pay for it? Most of my clients (I am a health agent) struggle to pay premiums of $300-400/month. If those premiums were suddenly $1000/month, they wouldn't be clients much longer. If you can't write the check, then you can't write the check, period!
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03-04-2010, 11:02 AM
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#6
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 193
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dgoldenz
What good is health reform if you don't have a job to pay for it? Most of my clients (I am a health agent) struggle to pay premiums of $300-400/month. If those premiums were suddenly $1000/month, they wouldn't be clients much longer. If you can't write the check, then you can't write the check, period!
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Why will premiums be $1000/month, source? And there is subsidy for low income group.
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03-04-2010, 11:06 AM
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#7
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: VA
Posts: 923
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Quote:
Originally Posted by landover
Why will premiums be $1000/month, source? And there is subsidy for low income group.
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Source? Try the Massachusetts Health Connector and run some family rates for yourself: https://www.mahealthconnector.org
Let me know where you can find the family rates for $300-400/month.
Just because you aren't "low income" by the government's standards doesn't mean you can afford $1000/month for health insurance. The income levels proposed also are not based on geographic regions - someone making $100k in Manhattan has just a slightly higher cost of living than someone making $100k in Middle of Nowhere, Idaho.
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03-04-2010, 11:30 AM
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#8
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 5,381
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$575 / month for me and my wife according to the connector.
Similar plan in TX runs $511. But if I'm sick in TX, I can't get that plan, or maybe any plan whereas in MA I can.
And the subsidy is designed to keep health premiums below 10% of income.
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03-04-2010, 11:38 AM
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#9
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Texas: No Country for Old Men
Posts: 50,022
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Quote:
Originally Posted by . . . Yrs to Go
But if I'm sick in TX, I can't get that plan, or maybe any plan ...
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You should be able to get in the high risk pool even with an illness. Rates are double the cost for a healthy individual.
__________________
Numbers is hard
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03-04-2010, 11:39 AM
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#10
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 17,244
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Quote:
Originally Posted by landover
Why will premiums be $1000/month, source? And there is subsidy for low income group.
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Heck, our company insurancs is already over $1,000 per month for a family...
But maybe he was quoting for an individual...
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03-04-2010, 11:43 AM
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#11
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: VA
Posts: 923
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Quote:
Originally Posted by . . . Yrs to Go
$575 / month for me and my wife according to the connector.
Similar plan in TX runs $511. But if I'm sick in TX, I can't get that plan, or maybe any plan whereas in MA I can.
And the subsidy is designed to keep health premiums below 10% of income.
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How old are you and your wife? If it's $575/month in Mass, it's probably $200/month in Virginia. That's also for you and your wife, add two more people and your cost is $1000/month like I said. Good thing you and your wife aren't 60 years old, because the premiums for 2 60-year-olds in Mass. is about $940/month for the absolute cheapest, crappiest plan available.
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03-04-2010, 11:52 AM
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#12
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 5,381
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dgoldenz
How old are you and your wife? If it's $575/month in Mass, it's probably $200/month in Virginia. That's also for you and your wife, add two more people and your cost is $1000/month like I said. Good thing you and your wife aren't 60 years old, because the premiums for 2 60-year-olds in Mass. is about $940/month for the absolute cheapest, crappiest plan available.
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And how many 60yr olds get through the underwriting process with no exclusions?
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03-04-2010, 12:51 PM
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#13
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: VA
Posts: 923
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Quote:
Originally Posted by . . . Yrs to Go
And how many 60yr olds get through the underwriting process with no exclusions?
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Some companies don't do exclusions, like Anthem and Aetna, so for those companies, all of them that aren't declined. You didn't answer my question though.
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03-04-2010, 01:19 PM
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#14
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dgoldenz
Some companies don't do exclusions, like Anthem and Aetna, so for those companies, all of them that aren't declined. You didn't answer my question though.
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But then how many 60 year olds get through the underwriting process without getting declined. (And I am actually curious about your answer. I assume it would be a lot, but you do this for a living so you'd know for sure. But on second thought, they can just charge a really high price.)
I don't know what question I was supposed to answer. Our age? We're 38.
I think we're discussing two sides of the same coin. Sick people can't get affordable insurance without regulatory fiat. Regulatory fiat will cause rates to go up for people with insurance (in part because insuring sick people is expensive). If those rate increases make insurance unaffordable, it doesn't really matter why you can't get insurance (the insurance company excludes you or you can't afford it). Not having insurance is not having insurance.
But that is why the proposed legislation cost so much. The subsidies look to be pretty large.
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03-04-2010, 01:25 PM
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#15
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: VA
Posts: 923
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Quote:
Originally Posted by . . . Yrs to Go
But then how many 60 year olds get through the underwriting process without getting declined. (And I am actually curious about your answer. I assume it would be a lot, but you do this for a living so you'd know for sure.)
I don't know what question I was supposed to answer. Our age? We're 38.
I think we're coming at the same problem from two different directions. Sick people can't get insurance without regulatory fiat. Regulatory fiat will cause rates to go up for people with insurance. Those rate increases could make insurance unafordable. Bottom line, it doesn't matter why you can't get insurance (the insurance company excludes you or you can't afford it). Not having insurance is not having insurance.
But that is why the plan cost so much. The subsidies look to be pretty large.
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I don't get as many apps for 60-year-olds as younger people with families, but of the ones that apply, usually about 80% get approved when going with Anthem. Then again, I do a lot of pre-screen underwriting to make sure they can get approved before sending in an application. I hardly write any Aetna because their rates suck and I don't like the way they handle their rate-ups and practice of splitting family members on to separate policies.
38-year-old couple in Virginia:
Anthem $6k deductible HSA - $199/month
United Healthcare $2500 deductible co-pay plan - $298/month
So, the Mass. plan is 2-3x the price and has a much more limited network, usually the lowest priced ones are local HMO's only. If you want a nationwide network like BCBS is probably more than the $575 mentioned. Add in a few kids and you will see quite a difference.
Subsidies are great....if you're poor. If you make $100k and have to spend $12-18k/year on health insurance (before any out-of-pocket costs, mind you), that's not very attractive when you could be spending 1/3 of that now. Ironically, the people making the most money are the ones that can afford the lowest-cost, highest-cost-sharing option like a $10k deductible HSA plan, but the .gov doesn't want to offer high-deductible HSA plans. Don't forget that the more people spend on health insurance, the less they have to spend on everything else. That'll get the economy going.
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03-04-2010, 01:41 PM
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#16
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Sep 2005
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dgoldenz
Subsidies are great....if you're poor. If you make $100k and have to spend $12-18k/year on health insurance (before any out-of-pocket costs, mind you), that's not very attractive when you could be spending 1/3 of that now. Ironically, the people making the most money are the ones that can afford the lowest-cost, highest-cost-sharing option like a $10k deductible HSA plan, but the .gov doesn't want to offer high-deductible HSA plans. Don't forget that the more people spend on health insurance, the less they have to spend on everything else. That'll get the economy going.
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As a nation we spend 16% of GDP on health care. That works out to $7,600 per person annually ($30,400 for a family of 4). It is simply not possible that everyone can get insured with a real insurance plan for a couple hundred bucks per month. If your health care costs are less than $7,600 per year ($633/month) per person it is only because someone else is paying more or someone else if footing the bill.
So maybe its worth thinking about how it can possibly make economic sense for insurance companies to offer all of those really inexpensive policies you sell when the per-capita cost of US health care is so much higher than the premiums charged. The answer explains a big part of the difference between the cost of insurance in Massachusetts and Virginia.
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03-06-2010, 12:19 PM
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#17
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gone traveling
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 559
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I live in Ma. and although I have insurance from my company I have investigated isurance through the mass connector.
You are right. it is not cheap. however they have to take you no matter what. thats why ma insuance is so high. the other is that most of us who have insurance from our companies don't realize how much the companies pay into the plans . they subsidize about 80 %.
gerry
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03-14-2010, 11:33 AM
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#18
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 146
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__________________
The inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of blessings; the inherent virtue of socialism is the equal sharing of misery.
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03-14-2010, 11:45 AM
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#19
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: VA
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mark500
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Surprise.
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03-14-2010, 12:28 PM
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#20
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mark500
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Quote:
Turnbull and others said it would be fairer to link the formula to the percentage of income a resident is paying toward health insurance. That is similar to the approach proposed by President Obama and the US Senate.
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So the fix is to make it more like what is being proposed at the Federal level?
Somehow I don't think that was the point mark500 really wanted to make, but sometimes it helps to read the article and not just the headline.
Anyhow, cost pressures aren't confined to MA.
Anthem Blue Cross raising individual health insurance rates as much as 39% in CA (and a bunch of other states too). And CA is one of those "low cost" states with lighter regulation . . .
Quote:
"I've never seen anything like this," said Mark Weiss, 63, a Century City podiatrist whose Anthem policy for himself and his wife will rise 35%. The couple's annual insurance bill will jump to $27,336 from $20,184.
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"Low cost"
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