Daily Kos

Protecting Insurance Companies on the Backs of the Poor, Part 1

Wed Apr 16, 2008 at 05:17:23 AM PDT

crossposted from unbossed

On April 9, 2008 the Senate Subcommittee on Health Care held a Hearing - "Covering Uninsured Children: The Impact of the August 17 CHIP Directive."

Most of the witnesses were experts in this area who testified about theories and data.

One of the witnesses was the mother of a disabled child, a woman struggling with illness, accidents, and poverty, a woman trying to earn a living and help care for her children.

The pundits will be in the next post. First, let's hear the voice of this mother so we have a context into which to place the data and theories.

The hearing concerned a directive by the Bush Administration issued August 17, 2007 to state health officials concerning SCHIP. Its purpose was to limit the availability of SCHIP by requiring states that enroll children in SCHIP whose families earn more than 250% of poverty level wages.

The poverty threshold wages for 2007 for families with 1-2 children are shown here with what income at each level is 250%:

For a family of
2 - $14,291 - 250% = $35,727

3 - $16,689 (1 child)  
. . . $16,705 (2 children) - 250% = $41,750

4 - $21,027 (1 child)
. . . $21,100 (2 children) - 250% = $52,750

The major concern expressed by a number of witnesses at this hearing was for the plight of private insurance companies.

Those witnesses fretted that poor families who have private insurance might abandon that private insurance and enroll their children in SCHIP. If this were to happen, the private insurance companies would suffer as a result of adverse selection.

Adverse selection in insurance means that only the sickest among us are likely to enroll in insurance at a given cost compared to healthy people, thus increasing the costs of insurance which then causes more healthier people to disenroll, leading to the bankruptcy of private insurance. The only way to avoid this problem is to have everyone - or a wide range of people - enrolled in insurance programs.

First, the data relied on to make this case is flawed. It's not that insurance companies are not having problems these days. They are. But the reasons for these problems go beyond what is happening in connection with SCHIP. Many of them go to the policies advocated by Conservative policy makers. A very readable account of that history may be found in The Great Risk Shift. This page includes summary information about a number of concerns, including health policy.

What is interesting in this argument about poor people, private health insurance, and SCHIP is that there is often an assumption that poor people are poor because of character defects and their own personal irresponsibility.

But in this case, when they try to move their children to better insurance coverage, they are being forced to stay with poorer insurance. Now that would be irresponsible. But, these witnesses argue, it is more important to protect the insurance companies.

The August 17 Directive

The August 17 directive required that states adopt five strategies to minimize substitution of coverage under SCHIP for private coverage. The states must:

* Impose waiting a period of at least one year between the dropping of private coverage and enrollment in SCHIP for children in families with income above 250% of the poverty level;

* Impose cost sharing in SCHIP that approximates the cost of private coverage;

* Monitor health insurance status at the time children apply for the program;

* Verify families’ insurance status through insurance databases; and

* Prevent employers from changing dependent coverage polices to favor a shift to public coverage.

One of the witnesses was a mother from Lebanon, Ohio, a small town in southwestern Ohio. Here is her story about her family’s struggle to find health coverage.

04-09-2008 Testimony on August 17 Directive before the Subcommittee on Health Care of the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance presented on April 9, 2008, by Paula Novak.

Good Afternoon, Chairman Rockefeller, Ranking Member Hatch, and other members of the Subcommittee. My name is Paula Novak. My husband Jeff and I have three children: Cole, Avery, and Seth. We live in Lebanon, Ohio. Today I represent my family and many others like ours that are selfemployed, hard-working and yet struggle to maintain adequate health care coverage. This becomes particularly true when one person in the family has a chronic illness or disability. In our situation, our youngest son, Seth, who is four-years-old, was born with Down Syndrome and struggles with related health and developmental issues.

I want to share with you the effects the August 17 Directive is having on Seth and the rest of my family. This time last year, Ohio was moving to expand its Medicaid/SCHIP program to include children like Seth. The expansion was stopped, however, by the August 17th directive and now Seth, as well as his sister and brother, are uninsured.

My husband Jeff is self-employed in the construction industry. He works hard, specializing in church construction and remodeling. I do some work for the business, though unpaid, but mostly I am needed at home to care for our children and particularly our son, Seth.

Jeff and I and our two older children have been sporadically covered through private insurance that we purchase ourselves. In January 2004, our family was covered by Anthem Blue Cross for about $535 per month. Seth was born January 8, 2004. Medicaid covered Seth’s birth because we did not have a maternity rider on our policy. During that same month the insurance policy came up for renewal and the premium jumped to $800 per month. Jeff was not working in early 2004 due to surgery, so we had to drop the policy. Since we had very little income at that time, we qualified for Medicaid. When Jeff returned to work, the business began to produce a better income and our Medicaid coverage ended. We were able to pick up a policy with Medical Mutual of Ohio for $444 per month, but they declined to cover Seth because of his Down Syndrome. At that time I checked with the top ten insurance companies and dozens of agents trying to find coverage that would include Seth but I was told Seth is deemed as " uninsurable " and the only possibility to cover Seth would be to go through "open enrollment. "

Open Enrollment is a requirement of the Ohio law that the insurance companies will once a year take a limited number of individuals regardless of preexisting conditions. I attempted to enroll Seth during open enrollment and was quoted premiums ranging from $1,200 to $1,800 per month, just for Seth. We cannot afford this additional premium on our current income.

Seth has been uninsured since August of 2007 when his Medicaid coverage ended. He has now been deemed disabled, but the catch here is that our spend-down per month was calculated to be $2,687.00, which must be spent before Medicaid can help. This amount is even more unreasonable than the price quoted for private insurance for Seth under open enrollment.

Now our entire family is uninsured. We were forced to drop the Medical Mutual policy coverage for myself, my husband, and our two older children in January when our carrier raised the premium from about $450 to almost $600 per month. The policy also had a high deductible and we could not afford the cost of the insurance plus the out of pocket requirements.

Our adjusted gross income for 2006 was about 250 percent of the federal poverty level and it appears that our 2007 gross income will be approximately the same.

We were so privileged to be able to participate in the signing of Governor Strickland’s budget in Ohio which included the expansion of Medicaid eligibility to children with family incomes up to 300 percent of the federal poverty level. Under the expansion, Seth would have been able to have the health coverage he so critically needs. Not only Seth, but my other two children would have been able to be covered under this expansion. In a country as prosperous as America, it is just not acceptable that they do not have access to affordable health coverage.

Because of the requirements placed on States by the August 17th directive, Ohio has been unable to implement the expansion it had planned to help children like Seth. We’re proud that Ohio made a commitment to cover Seth and children like him, but we’re deeply troubled by the federal government’s efforts to block that decision in Ohio. Just as an example please let me tell you the needed care Seth has missed due to his lack of coverage. Seth had open heart surgery in March 2007 and missed his one year cardiology follow-up. Seth has missed appointments for eyeexams, thyroid exams, ENT visits to replace tubes in his ears, genetic doctor appointments to track his growth and development, fittings for his orthodics, and very importantly because Seth is still non-verbal, visits to his speech therapist.

As the parents of three uninsured children, I implore you to overturn the August 17th directive and allow States such as Ohio to continue the good they set out to do with the Medicaid expansion. By virtue of his birth, Seth is not entitled to special privileges, however he is entitled to equal privileges which can be provided by the proposed Medicaid expansion. We are ready and willing to contribute to Seth’s health care, but the $1200 premium or $2600 spenddown are simply out of reach for us. We ask you to help us to help Seth by not adding lack of healthcare to the already substantial challenges he must face.  

I thank you for your time and consideration. I would be happy to answer any questions you may have.

The other parts in this series are:

Part 2
Part 3
Part 4

Tags: poverty, health care, schip, chip, health insurance, health, children, Rescued (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 24 comments

  •  Commodities & Insurance, mentioned on B.Moyers (5+ / 0-)

    (think it was a Sen. Reid remark), the two hardest industries to legislate/regulate, toooo much influence on Capital Hill.

  •  We need to take the profit out (7+ / 0-)

    of healthcare. There is no way around it.  Either America believes in life or they believe in only some lives with value. Universal Health Care must come, even if some people object. It is the only moral way to go.

    "Though the Mills of the Gods grind slowly,Yet they grind exceeding small."

    by Owllwoman on Wed Apr 16, 2008 at 05:33:10 AM PDT

  •  Regulating public coverage... (4+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    shirah, environmentalist, Owllwoman, chigh

    ... to protect private insurers.  There can't be a better example of why this country's health care system is so screwed up.

    Anyone who supports health care plans like Obama's or Clinton's, which envision keeping private insurers in place, should contemplate this story.  The institutionalized corruption of our political system makes meaningful regulation of these entities almost impossible:  they'll simply buy enough politicians to purchase impunity.

    To fix health care, we either need to institute public campaign financing to reduce political corruption, or we need to move directly to a single-payer system and throw the insurers out of the business.  I don't see any middle ground.  Both, of course, would be preferable.

    Hanoi didn't break John McCain, but Washington did.

    by Dallasdoc on Wed Apr 16, 2008 at 05:41:06 AM PDT

    •  It really says alot, doesnt it. (3+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      SarahLee, shirah, Dallasdoc

      'Hey!  We'd love to insure you but it might hurt our friends in business so...sorry...'

      The priorities of this nation astound me.

      While Obama and Clinton have proposed decent care plans, they dont go nearly far enough.  They are band-aids on a cancer.  I dont see any middle-ground on this either.  Hence my shock when Richardson said that he wasnt doing any sort of health care reform without the insurance companies.

      Wow.

  •  I find the part about the (4+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    SarahLee, shirah, Bob B, Owllwoman

    struggling insurance companies very interesting.  GOP policies are hitting not only people like Mrs. Novak but also the insurance companies the GOP wants to protect.  What a bizarre set of theories they cling to in the face of all logic and evidence.

    As for Novak and her family...what a terrible mess.  Our family of four is at 250% of poverty also and if it wasnt for SCHIP my infant and his four-year old sister wouldnt be covered - we couldnt afford it.  And they are perfectly and thankfully healthy!!

  •  Insuance Companies are, invariably, (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    SarahLee, shirah, cynndara

    criminal enterprises, run by major capitalist bastards.

    You pay them, they try every way in the book to not pay  you for what you are "buying".

    It's as if they just want your money.

    Fuck them.

    I sued an insurance company recently and went to court last night. I didn't have the sort of document that judge wanted so I didn't get everything I wanted, but I STILL WON. (I am thinking of sending a card to the lawyer that represented them, telling her I would love for her to represent the next people I sue>)

    But insurance companies are just crimes.

    Healthcare companies, which are insurance companies, are the worst.

    I seldom use the word "hate", but I do hate them.

    Bastards.

    There's no money for your issue so long as we're squandering $50 billion a year on the DrugWar. Ben Masel

    by xxdr zombiexx on Wed Apr 16, 2008 at 05:51:47 AM PDT

    •  The concept of insurance is not a bad one (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      SarahLee

      The idea that bad things happen and we pool that risk to support one another is the essence of what a community is.

      However, it is the profit motive that is the problem in this case.

      •  The concept of gambling isn't necesarily bad (2+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        SarahLee, cynndara

        either.

        Insurance is glorified - and state-enforced - for-profit gambling. Particularly car insurance.

        I have given my insurance company a LOT of money since I was 19. Recently when I got rear-ened in my car... they were'nt jack shit worth of help.

        Fuck them.

        It may look good on paper, but it's a crime in practice.

        There's no money for your issue so long as we're squandering $50 billion a year on the DrugWar. Ben Masel

        by xxdr zombiexx on Wed Apr 16, 2008 at 06:11:19 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

    •  I agree (0+ / 0-)

      I carry insurance only as mandated by law, and if I could get around it, I would.  Because I've seen enough to know that if you need it, you won't get it.  The only way to keep the costs down is not to need or use it, in which case, what are you paying for?  Basically, a piece of paper that tells The Law that you are a Responsible Citizen.  I have lots of those pieces of paper; I pay as little as possible for them and keep them like I do my other legal documents (titles, tax receipts, etc.) that represent costs imposed on me by Society.  As for what I get FROM Society ... well.  So far, I haven't had to kill that neighbor up in the hills.  The sherriffs there don't like him much either.  So I suppose I've saved about $10 in ammunition costs.

      •  Are you a Republican? (0+ / 0-)

        The Republicans have become the party of selfishness and greed - go it alone - I made it on my own - screw the other guys. That is what you seem to be advocating.

        Liberals and Democrats have traditionally stood for the principles of community and shared responsibility. That is the concept behind Social Security, which is a from of insurance. Insurance against the ills of old age and the danger of poverty in old age.

        We stand for the principles that we are all in this together.

        There is a problem with insurance these days, and that is greed. It has nothing to do with the basic concept of insurance.

        Or perhaps you see insurance as an investment. You expect a return on an investment.

        But that is investing and has nothing to do with insurance.

        This confusion / conflation is something sold to us by the Republicans. They are using it to destroy Social Security and all sorts of safety nets we so carefully built to protect "the least among us" from destitution.

        Remember that the full name for Social Security is Old Age, Survivor, and Disability Insurance OASDI.

        The Plutocrats in the Republican party don't need to worry about insuring against disaster, but the rest of us do.

        •  I was born and raised (0+ / 0-)

          a Republican.  Certain habits die hard, among them the idea that you should get something for what you pay for.  Insurance, to me, is a prime example of a bad con.  Want me to pay for education and health care for a social safety net for everyone?  Great idea, I'm all for it.  But don't tell me I'm paying for a net for ME and charge me an arm and a leg for what I know is mouse-chewed cord that was always too delicate to stand on.  I'm offended by deceit.

  •  PBS Sick around the world? (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Eddie C, shirah, chigh

    A doc. on PBS - a must see about how other countries deal with healthcare. we behave like a 3rd world country.

  •  Every state could offer (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    elfling, shirah

    __CHIP to children in higher income families since higher income families are required to pay full freight, meaning it doesn't cost any state a cent to cover the higher family income children except for the costs of printing the enabling statute.

    No President Monkeyshines, our S-CHIP program does NOT cover higher family income children. Our __CHIP program does. It simply happens to have the same benefits.

  •  Note that (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    shirah, Hens Teeth

    The August 17 directive required that states adopt five strategies to minimize substitution of coverage under SCHIP for private coverage. The states must:

    * Impose waiting a period of at least one year between the dropping of private coverage and enrollment in SCHIP for children in families with income above 250% of the poverty level;

    * Impose cost sharing in SCHIP that approximates the cost of private coverage;

    * Monitor health insurance status at the time children apply for the program;

    * Verify families’ insurance status through insurance databases; and

    * Prevent employers from changing dependent coverage polices to favor a shift to public coverage.

    Note that:

    * SCHIP is provided by private insurance companies in nearly every state.

    * These rules apply not just to healthy children but to children who have a preexisting condition (which may or may not mean that they are currently undergoing care) and whose families cannot purchase private insurance.

    * In many cases, SCHIP is able to purchase insurance at a far lower rate than business, especially small business.

    * People who buy private insurance already get a substantial subsidy from the federal and state government, since for most people it's tax-deductible. At the 33% tax rate, with the average family policy at $15,000 a year, that's $5,000 from the federal government alone.

    Fry, don't be a hero! It's not covered by our health plan!

    by elfling on Wed Apr 16, 2008 at 09:25:54 PM PDT

    •  I forgot to add (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      shirah, Hens Teeth

      a net effect is that the Novaks might be better off if they worked less. That's idiocy. The poverty line is an artificial construct in the first place (based on the price of groceries in the 1960s) and it has little relation to the reality of what it costs to raise a family today in North Dakota versus urban California versus Ohio.

      Fry, don't be a hero! It's not covered by our health plan!

      by elfling on Wed Apr 16, 2008 at 09:42:10 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  All your points are so correct (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Hens Teeth

        There is soooo much that can be said about poverty and health. And the measure of poverty is a joke. A SICK joke.

        In fact, the GAO has some interesting reports from last year on these issues. link

        And contributing to ill health, no doubt, is the "food insecurity that goes along with poverty. Not just hunger but malnutrition. It's hard to put together a healthy meal at poverty wages. link

        In fact, things are so bad for the poor that Third World diseases are now springing up in poverty areas of the US. link

    •  Monitoring health status of children . . . (0+ / 0-)

      isn't that just amazingly heartless? Who are the people who think this way?

  •  One thing I find curious (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    shirah, Hens Teeth

    Statement of Mr. Dennis Smith, Director, Center for Medicaid and State Operations, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Washington, DC

    Here are a few excerpts from his testimony. Oddly enough, some of his arguments seem to make a case for single payer. For example, in a discussion that presents the problem that expanding coverage for children will lead to "crowd out" - that is, it will entice people to drop private health coverage for their children to enroll them in SCHIP. This will leave, he argues, private insurers stuck with the sickest population. Insurance is supposed to be about spreading risk, so it needs to include the range of population to do so.

    I find it curious that they're assuming the healthy kids will drop out of private insurance and go to SCHIP, and that sick kids will stay in private insurance. That's inexplicable to me. Indeed, if there's any relationship at all, I would expect sick kids to be dropping out of smaller, privately purchased plans, because those are the ones that are at risk for being at higher premiums or being dropped from coverage altogether.

    When my child was ineligible for private insurance due to an alleged preexisting condition, the agent suggested I attempt to enroll her in SCHIP.

    Fry, don't be a hero! It's not covered by our health plan!

    by elfling on Wed Apr 16, 2008 at 09:53:55 PM PDT

  •  Thank you Rescue Rangers (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    elfling, Hens Teeth

    for the rescued tag! A badge of honor in my book.

Permalink | 24 comments