The future after ACA? Look to Minnesota’s past
The pool operated for more than three decades, and its experience shows that you can cover thousands of people who are denied coverage by private insurers -- but that it isn't cheap for the public or the patients.
A core reform in the federal health law, also known as Obamacare, is the requirement that insurers cover everyone, regardless of any current or past health problems. It proved highly popular with consumers who could not previously buy individual health insurance -- some cancer survivors, for example, or people with severe asthma. But because it reduces insurers' ability to manage risk, some legislators and insurance analysts say it has contributed to instability in the market, causing insurers to raise premiums and limit their offerings.
As an alternative, many
"It actually worked pretty well," said Rep.
'It was unaffordable'
Critics say the risk-pool approach penalizes people who had the misfortune of being sick in the past, regardless of their current health status. The pools charged above-market premiums, and many imposed high deductibles and tight coverage limits.
Beaver turned to MCHA for coverage after she graduated from college. She had survived kidney cancer at age 5 thanks to surgery, chemotherapy and radiation, but that medical history still prompted a health insurer to deny her private coverage.
Beaver, now 38, was grateful for the state-sponsored coverage, but by the time she needed MCHA again in 2003, the cost had increased significantly.
"It was unaffordable for me," Beaver said. "I went for about six months without health insurance coverage, which was definitely nerve-racking -- not only because of the fear of the cancer coming back or some long-term effect from treatment. If somebody would invite me to play in a softball game, I would [say] 'No,' because if I sprained my ankle it's going to bankrupt me."
Today Beaver has health insurance through her work as government relations director in
MCHA was a good strategy "for the environment that we were in prior to the health law," Beaver added. "But the health law was an improvement over that system."
However, some Minnesotans who used MCHA are now seeing even higher premiums in the volatile market under the ACA.
"I consider myself a very healthy person," Doerr said. "I live with asthma but it is not something that limits me. I am very active."
Although her MCHA rates had increased steadily over the years, it was nothing like the premium increases she has seen in the individual market since the ACA took effect. One year after she made the switch, her 2016 monthly premium jumped 45 percent to about
Doerr never thought she would look back on the day when her MCHA rates looked reasonable.
"I was astounded," Doerr said. "It was very tempting to say forget it. But if I can't even get in to see my doctor if I don't have an insurance card, then I am not going to take that risk."
Last-minute shifts in the insurance market allowed her to find a plan at
Others say the individual market under the ACA has grown so volatile and expensive that it's time to go back to high-risk pools.
The last year Wiest purchased coverage through MCHA, he was 64 years old and his premium as a
Now Wiest is covered by
With the high-risk pool "I could go to Mayo -- I could go virtually anywhere," Wiest said.
More restrictions
Health plans in
So far the idea of bringing back high-risk pools is still in the concept stage, with few details ironed out, such as the crucial issue of how they would be funded.
Premiums paid by members cover only part of a risk pool's medical claims, so supplemental revenue would be needed to keep them afloat. MCHA, for example, was subsidized by an assessment on commercial insurers, and even so, there were questions about its long-term financial sustainability.
Sen.
"There are more sophisticated models that are available to us to today," Lourey said.
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