By
Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
President
Obama may very well have blundered in leaving out the nuances when he pledged
during the Congressional deliberations over the Affordable Care Act that “if
you like what you have, you can keep it.”
Yet it would have been difficult to
anticipate in 2009 that only a few years later the opponents of the ACA would
succeed in creating an atmosphere in which much of the public has been made to
believe that the government can do nothing right and the private sector nothing
wrong when it comes to healthcare reform.
It
is amazing how little attention is being paid to the insurance companies whose
cancellation notices are what created the current furor over Obama’s supposed
betrayal. These companies, with the encouragement of penny-pinching employers,
created the substandard plans that must now be eliminated to comply with the
minimum coverage provisions of the ACA.
Affordable
HealthChoices was indeed more affordable than conventional insurance, but that
was because it was full of holes. At the time of Aetna’s announcement,
the Wall Street Journal (5/4/1999) quoted consumer advocate Ron
Pollack of Families USA as saying: “The bottom line for anybody who buys [this
plan] is, ‘Don’t get sick,’ because if you get sick you are going to wind up
with enormous bills.” Some states barred Aetna from selling the plans.
Another
proponent of cut-rate coverage was Wal-Mart, which in the early 2000s, was
putting its workers in plans with deductibles that were far above the norm and
which excluded many kinds of preventive care. In many cases, the plans did not
pay for any treatment of pre-existing conditions during the first year of
coverage (Wall Street Journal, 9/30/2003). These provisions, along with
premium costs that were difficult for many of the company’s low-wage workers to
handle, prompted many Wal-Mart employees to turn to taxpayer-funded programs
such as Medicaid. Nonetheless, Wal-Mart touted its high-deductible approach as
a model for other employers.
Unfortunately,
other companies followed Wal-Mart’s lead. By 2006 there were estimates that
nearly one million people had enrolled in
what were often called mini-medical plans, while millions more were in plans
with more extensive benefits but high deductibles. Other major insurers such as
WellPoint, UnitedHealth Group, Cigna and Coventry (now owned by Aetna) jumped
into the market to sell what Consumer Reports has called“junk insurance.”
These
companies targeted their bare-bones offerings not only at parsimonious
companies but also at those with no employer coverage who turned to the
individual insurance market, especially younger people more inclined to take a
chance on getting by with catastrophic benefits.
Mini-meds
contributed to the epidemic of bankruptcies among people with serious health
conditions and helped drive home the reality that underinsurance was
becoming as serious an issue as those who lacked coverage entirely.
This
threat was highlighted by Democrats on the Senate Commerce Committee, led by
Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, who held a hearing in late 2010 entitled “Are Mini Med Policies Really
Health Insurance?” Sen. Rockefeller took special aim at the mini med
offered by McDonald’s, which capped benefits at $2,000 per year. At the hearing
several Aetna customers described how they were covered for
only a small portion of their expenses when they had major health problems. For
example, a woman who had to go to the emergency room when she lost feeling in
one of her arms and ran up more than $16,000 in bills received only $500 in
coverage from Aetna.
The
ACA was designed to reduce the number of people in bare-bones plans, but the
law did not call for their complete elimination. Insurers can no longer cap the
dollar value of annual benefits, but strange as it sounds, larger employers can offer low-cost plans that exclude
categories of coverage such as hospitalization and still qualify under the new
law. In other words, the real problem may be that not enough policies
are being cancelled.
Whatever
falsity was involved in President Obama’s pledge does not begin to compare with
the deception practiced by insurance companies and miserly employers when they
make holders of bare bones policies think that they have something that
deserves to be called coverage.
Note:
This piece draws from my new Corporate Rap Sheet on Aetna, which can be found here.