Healthcare
Redlining
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
Media
coverage of the Affordable Care Act these days bounces back and forth between
good news and bad. One day the Obama Administration signals that there are more
problems with the employer mandate and once again changes the rules. Two days
later, federal officials are bragging that ACA enrollment is booming and that
even the Young Invincibles are signing up.
Yet
perhaps the most significant recent development is the analysis just published by
the Wall Street Journal on the limited range of plan options
in the ACA exchanges.
The newspaper found that in 515 counties across 15 states
there is only one insurer selling coverage through the online marketplaces. In
more than 80 percent of those counties, the sole insurer is a local Blue
Cross/Blue Shield plan.
The
ACA is premised on the idea that competition would bring down costs and provide
better coverage. The Administration and most Congressional Democrats bought
into that notion so deeply that they were willing to exclude a public option as
unnecessary. That decision looks increasingly bone-headed.
It
is true that those who qualify for federal subsidies may be shielded from the
cost differentials, but a substantial portion of the uninsured earn too much to
qualify for that assistance but are still far from affluent.
A
big part of the problem is that major for-profit insurers such as Aetna and
UnitedHealth Group have been participating in the exchanges on a very selective
basis. The Journal noted that Aetna, for instance, has
“targeted areas with stable levels of employment and income to attract
desirable customers to its marketplace offerings.”
This
is, to put it mildly, infuriating. The ACA was supposed to put a stop to the
tendency of Aetna and the other insurance giants to decline coverage to certain
categories of people, usually because of pre-existing medical conditions. Now
the insurers were supposed to take on all comers, with the federal government
functioning in essence as their marketing arm.
It
turns out that the national insurers had found another way of cherry-picking.
They are simply choosing not to participate in the ACA market in less affluent
parts of the country, where they apparently assume that residents are going to
have too many medical needs. In a presentation to investors, Aetna admitted that it
was participating in exchanges in fewer than one-third of the states.
The
decision to limit the scope of their involvement does not result from any
financial distress on the part of the major players. In recent weeks Aetna,
Humana and Wellpoint have all reported healthy gains in profits for 2013. The
big boys are also getting bigger. Aetna swallowed competitor Coventry Health
Care, which added $14 billion to its annual revenue stream.
For
those of us who advocated a single payer approach, or at least a public option,
the behavior of the insurance companies comes as no surprise. These companies
have always found ways to increase profits at the expense of coverage, and they
always will. Now that they cannot discriminate explicitly against those in poor
health, they will discriminate against communities in which think there is
likely to be larger numbers of less healthy residents. It is an insidious new
form of redlining.
It
is disappointing that the Obama Administration, which is going to such great
lengths to help businesses adjust to the ACA, seems to have little inclination
to help individuals contend with the substandard offerings in some of the
exchanges. For them the Affordable Care Act may be far from affordable.