The COVID-19 pandemic may make getting health insurance harder. Here's why.
A week after the presidential election, the
If the court decides that the ACA should be tossed, more than 20 million people -- including at least 1.5 million
Many more people, even some who get it through an employer, would be affected by the reversal of one of the law's most popular insurance rules: protections for people with preexisting conditions. More than one in four people have a medical condition that, before the ACA, would have made them uninsurable.
"Insurance coverage is a little bit like a game of musical chairs," said
Before the Affordable Care Act, insurers selling individual health plans were allowed to deny coverage entirely, exclude coverage for certain medical problems (or body parts), or charge higher rates for "riders" to a policy that would cover a person's preexisting condition.
For instance, in one study of pre-ACA individual health plans, Pollitz found that insurers were willing to sell health insurance to a fictional woman who took prescription medication for seasonal allergies, but excluded coverage for allergies -- and her entire upper respiratory system. Paying out-of-pocket for allergy medications may not seem too harsh, but in this case, if she developed lung cancer or punctured a lung during a car accident, she'd be on her own to pay those expenses, too.
As many as 133 million people have a condition, such as allergies, high blood pressure, or a history of smoking, that could make it harder for them to get insurance, according to the
Depression, anxiety, and substance abuse -- all on the rise during the pandemic -- were routinely excluded from insurance before the ACA mandated that insurance plans cover mental and behavioral health services.
People who developed a medical condition after buying their individual plans weren't necessarily in the clear. Before agreeing to pay a bill for, say, a brain tumor, insurers routinely looked back at a person's medical history for any indication that a problem was brewing.
This practice of evaluating people's underlying medical conditions and determining how expensive they would be to insure -- and whether they should be covered -- is called medical underwriting. It enabled insurers to keep premium prices low by excluding people who would generate costly medical bills.
"It was just math: How can I make claims go away?" Pollitz said. "In a competitive market, when insurers are trying to keep premiums lower than the other guy, it doesn't pay to be more lenient."
For that reason, analysts say COVID-19 would likely be added to the list of preexisting conditions.
Hospitals are billing an average of
Pollitz said it's possible some plans could refuse to sell insurance plans to people who have recovered from a severe case of the virus, while plans being sold to healthy individuals could exclude coverage for any future COVID-19 treatment.
People with employer plans shouldn't ignore the threat of losing the ACA's protections, just because they don't use Medicaid or the individual marketplace.
Employer-sponsored health plans, the most common type of insurance for Americans under age 65, have not been allowed to deny coverage entirely because of a preexisting condition since the 1990s, but could refuse to cover a particular condition for up to one year. The ACA banned such delays. People who changed jobs were guaranteed coverage for their preexisting condition under their new employer's health plan, so long as they didn't have a gap in coverage of more than two months.
But as the pandemic has proved, prolonged stints of unemployment can come up unexpectedly.
"Most of us are, at some point, going to have the need for individual health insurance," Pollitz said.
Millions of people lost their jobs due to pandemic lockdowns, which forced many to navigate the unemployment system and alternatives to employer health insurance for the first time in their careers.
A study by the
Another third were able to regain coverage through a spouse's health plan. And the remaining third signed up for an ACA marketplace plan or became newly eligible for Medicaid.
In states that expanded Medicaid, individuals with annual income up to 133% of the federal poverty level (
About 95,700
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