Blue Cross offers guides to health-care ‘tiers’ [The Philadelphia Inquirer]
| By Harold Brubaker, The Philadelphia Inquirer | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
The trick for consumers who sign up for
IBC officials emphasized that tier one, the cheapest, is not a limited or narrow network because customers have access to the entire network; they just have to pay more if they choose a provider -- a doctor or a hospital -- in tier two or three.
Access to a certain specialist, for example, could drive that choice.
The difference to the consumer is significant.
In IBC's HMO Proactive Silver plan, a consumer's out-of-pocket costs for outpatient surgery are
Tier one includes 50 percent of hospitals, 40 percent of primary-care physicians, and 40 percent of specialists in IBC's network, officials at the
IBC is offering 11 other plans on the government-mandated insurance exchange that opened Tuesday, but the tiered plans include a component that has been missing from the market, said
Historically, it has made no difference to the insured patient if the provider's price is
"Now with products like this, you've injected greater price sensitivity to the consumer," he said. "It gives them a reason to care about things. They can determine on their own how much they care."
The consumer's risk is limited by the Affordable Care Act's
AmeriHealth New Jersey did not provide details on its tiers because it is still notifying hospitals.
Hospital officials worry that consumers might not understand price-based tiers.
"High cost can be attributed to a lot of different factors," said
IBC divided hospitals into tiers based on prices in existing contracts and gave hospitals the chance to negotiate lower prices to get into a lower tier.
Walsh would not say how much
Mercy tried to negotiate into a lower tier, but did not reach an agreement. "MHS remains open to negotiating with IBC on participating as a Tier One provider, so that IBC Tier One members continue to have access to our services," Mercy said in a statement.
It is far too soon to say how IBC's tiered network will affect the
Offering tiered networks on the exchange has the advantage of not forcing consumers into constraints, Ario said. "They will have to decide: Is the price break enough for me to trade off?" he said.
Ario had a reservation, though, about price-based tiers that fail to emphasize quality of care. "If it's driven solely by price, that might not work as well for the consumer," he said.
But costs are not always straightforward.
"Maybe the cost-per-episode is more, but you have fewer episodes," said
IBC created the tiered plans in the context of four levels of coverage in the Affordable Care Act, called platinum, gold, silver, and bronze, with platinum the most expensive and bronze the least.
A platinum insurance plan is designed to cover 90 percent of health-care costs, leaving 10 percent for the consumer. A silver plan must cover 70 percent of costs, with 30 percent for the consumer.
For a 40-year-old, the HMO Silver Proactive premium before a possible subsidy is
"If someone can use the tier-one providers, they can get platinum-level benefits in a silver-level product," said IBC vice president
The Breakdown by Tiers
IBC's tiers are based on out-of-pocket costs for consumers, with tier one the least expensive and tier three the most.
Tier 1
Grand View
St. Luke's --
Brandywine
Crozer-Keystone
Taylor
Abington Memorial
Holy Redeemer
Physicians Care Surgical
Aria
Roxborough Memorial
Wills Eye
Tier 2
Lower
Pottstown Memorial
Children's Hospital of
Jeanes
Tier 3
St. Mary
Riddle
Lankenau
Mercy Suburban
Hospital of the
Mercy
Methodist
SOURCE: IBC
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