Lawmakers mull solutions to rising healthcare costs
Over two days of testimony, the task force grappled with the reality that
Co-Chairman Rep.
"The volume of patients is insufficient in a lot of our
Two coverage gaps
On Wednesday, the task force identified two distinct populations falling through the cracks of the current insurance landscape.
The first is the long-discussed Medicaid gap — roughly 16,000 to 19,000 adults in
The second, newer gap involves middle-class families and small business owners earning more than 400% of the poverty level. Following the expiration of enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies from the Inflation Reduction Act, these residents are seeing premiums for a family of four exceed
"My health insurance costs are out of control," he testified personally.
Sen.
"Why is it no longer efficient for me to buy insurance and not pool with a group of other small businesspeople and self-insure?" Love asked, noting that once a family hits the
"We've exceeded the opportunity to do what insurance is designed to do," he said.
Insurance and inflation
Representatives from
Dirk Dijkstal, senior attorney for
Dijkstal explained that federal Medical Loss Ratio laws require insurers to spend 80% to 85% of premiums on medical claims. In recent years,
"
Wyoming Insurance Commissioner
Uncompensated care
On the second day of the meeting, the focus shifted to the providers.
Boley described a "cost-shifting cycle," where inadequate payments from Medicare (paying roughly
"We are charging what's necessary to keep the doors open," Boley said.
He warned that many
The task force spent significant time discussing Title 25, the state's involuntary mental health commitment process, which Johansson called a "microcosm" of the uncompensated care issue. Hospitals are often left fronting the bill for expensive psychiatric stabilization with no clear mechanism to bill private insurance for involuntary stays.
Search for solutions
She advocated for a recalibration toward valuing primary care, noting that countries investing more in primary care spend less overall on healthcare with better outcomes.
Bush highlighted that providing incentives for annual checkups and early diagnosis of chronic conditions like diabetes can save large amounts of money by avoiding catastrophic medical events like amputations.
Similarly, during public comment,
The task force also explored the possibility of expanding the state employee insurance plan, known as EGI, to school districts or the general public.
Funding sources
To support
"It's a very unique model, but it could help consolidate our buying power to help lower costs for our hospitals," Nethercott said, directing staff to draft a bill creating a state GPO administered by the WDH.
The task force also moved forward with a bill draft to repeal a grandfathering provision in the state's 2025 non-compete law. Lawmakers heard testimony that many physicians are trapped by contracts signed before 2025, which limits competition and drives consolidation.
Other action items slated for the next meeting in August include the following:
* An analysis of reinsurance programs in
* A report on expanding medical education seats for nurse practitioners and physician assistants.
* A framework for how healthcare sharing ministries operate as an alternative to traditional insurance.
"We have four more (legislative work) days to provide health insurance affordability to the people of
The task force will reconvene
This story was published on
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