Wednesday, 1 September 2010

Mid-Week ObamaCare© Implementation Update

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First up (and as previously noted but now confirmed), Aetna will no longer write so-called "child-only" plans. These have been useful in, for example, divorce situations and some group-based scenarios, and are now off the table insofar as Aetna's individual medical plans are concerned. While this may not seem to be a big deal, it's a further erosion in the choices available in the (previously) open market.

This change is effective October 1st for Kentucky and Indiana, and November 1st for Ohio.

If you're tuning in late, these changes are a direct result of ObamaCare©'s careless and destructive assaults on basic risk management principles. For example, the new regs prohibit underwriting on "children" 19 years and under, which, according to the folks at Aetna, "have the potential to significantly increase the cost of premiums and make coverage unaffordable." Quite so.

On the other hand, Medical Mutual is poised to pick up at least a few of Aetna's minors:

"Medical Mutual will continue to accept applications and provide quotes for plans with effective dates of September 23, 2010, through October 31, 2010, for children under the age of 19 (either as a stand-alone product or as part of a family)."

Of course, no one really knows what's going to happen going forward from October. As the folks at MMO told us in email, "the Company reserves the right to withhold final approval based on clarification of state and federal regulations on individual plans or not issue a policy at all."

How's that for Hope and Change?

UPDATE: And this just in from United Healthcare's Golden Rule:

"In previous communications, we had informed you of an impending change to the coverage effective date that would take place on September 1, 2010. Due to broker feedback, this date has been moved to September 6, 2010."

Interesting that they received, and acceded to, what must have been fairly intense pressure from agents.

So beginning with new applications received on or after next Monday:

"Coverage effective dates for Golden Rule renewable health plans will be the later of 30 days after an application is received or the date requested by the customer (but no greater than 60 days)."

Glad they cleared that up.

Health Insurance Bridge to Nowhere

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The folks in Washington that gave us the "bridge to nowhere" have done it again, this time with health insurance. ERRP (Early Retirement Reinsurance Program) as announced by HHS is supposed to make it easier for employers to provide health insurance to early retirees. Congress authorized $5 billion of money they did not have to fund this program until 2014.


Most expect that will not be enough to support the program, but then, what else is new? According to Sunshine News:



Sixty-nine Florida businesses and government entities have been accepted into a new federal program designed to help employers and unions maintain health coverage for early retirees not yet eligible for Medicare.


The Early Retiree Reinsurance Program is designed to be a $5 billion bridge to the new federally mandated health insurance exchanges that begin in 2014.


But U.S. Rep. Bill Posey said the program looks more like a shell game, and it could come up short financially.



Rep. Posey is not the only one with this concern.



"The timing of this announcement by the administration is interesting because earlier this month Medicare trustees issued a report noting on page 183 that the new health-care law will result in nearly 6 million retirees losing their prescription drug coverage from their former employers -- a fact that went largely unreported," said Posey, R-Cocoa.


Posey added, "Nowhere in today’s HHS release is there a reference to HHS’ own warning to retirees that this program is largely unfunded -- by perhaps tens of billions of dollars.



Probably just an oversight . . .



The White House said immediate action was needed to bridge the health-care gap for early retirees, noting that the percentage of large firms providing retiree coverage dropped from 66 percent in 1988 to 29 percent in 2009.



Does the White House actually believe they can magically reverse a trend of the last 20 years when they can't reverse the unemployment and foreclosure trend of the last 2 years? Or do they only care if the voters believe this garbage?


The folks at EBRI, who have a pretty good handle on health insurance costs, have estimated the money for ERRP will run out in 2 years.


Just another stupid government trick from the folks who brought you Obamacrap.

Tuesday, 31 August 2010

Oh No She Din't!

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(That's not a typo - it's yours truly trying to be "hip")

Maybe she just can't help it, but HHS Secretary Shecantbeserious just doesn't quite "get" why those of us who oppose the train-wreck that is ObamaCare© might take some slight umbrage at this:

"So, we have a lot of reeducation to do" [emphasis added]

For those historically-challenged readers, here's why it's so offensive, and telling:

"The re-education camp remained the predominant device of social "control" in the late 1980s. It was used to incarcerate members of certain social classes in order to coerce them to accept and conform to the new social norms."

Looks like Kathy let the ol' mask slip.