The Health Insurance Provisions of the 2009 Congressional Health Reform Bills: Coverage, Affordability and Costs Sara Collins, Ph.D. Vice President The.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Health Reform and Private Insurance Gary Claxton Vice President Kaiser Family Foundation April
Advertisements

THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Affordable Care Act of 2010: Major Provisions and Implementation Timeline Sara R. Collins, Ph.D. Vice President, Affordable Health.
Making Health Care Reform Happen on the Ground: From Legislation to Implementation and Improvement 2010 Results International Conference June 20, 2010.
Mission: To promote responsible and equitable fiscal policies through research and education Joy Smolnisky, Director 808 N. West Ave., Sioux Falls, SD.
What do I Need to Know about the Affordable Care Act & The Health Insurance Marketplace?
HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM: HIGHLIGHTS OF MERGED SENATE DEMOCRATIC BILL.
Experience, Commitment, Results. Federal Health Care Reform The impact on individuals, employers, and our health insurance coverage… National Worksite.
Federal Healthcare Reform 2009 Presented by: Ronald R. DiLuigi V.P. Advocacy, Govt’ Relations and Public Policy November 14, 2009.
The Hilltop Health Care Reform Simulation Model Hamid Fakhraei, Ph.D. July 2012.
Healthcare Reform A look into the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and what it means to you. Presented by Bill Scuorzo President & CEO.
Introduction to Health Insurance Exchanges. Affordable Care Act (ACA) Insurance Reforms – No lifetime limits, annual limits – Pre-existing conditions.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Health Insurance Exchanges in the House and Senate Health Reform Bills Sara R. Collins, Ph.D. Vice President, Affordable Health Insurance.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Realizing Health Reform’s Potential: Small Businesses and the Affordable Care Act of 2010 Sara R. Collins,
This presentation is a high-level summary and for general informational purposes only. The information in this presentation is not comprehensive and does.
The Artists Health Insurance Resource Center A program of The Actors Fund Center for Emerging.
1 Healthcare Reform and Employee Benefit Trends: What’s the Latest in Both?
Premium Tax Credits under the ACA Cynthia Cox, MPH Kaiser Family Foundation
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act: Overview for Connecticut Financing Coverage expansions individual mandate employer responsibility insurance.
1 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Cheri D. Green This Presentation is not designed or intended to provide legal or professional.
The Affordable Care Act and Covered California El Dorado County Chamber of Commerce January 9, 2013.
Nebraska Appleseed Core Values | Common Ground | Equal Justice.
1 The Affordable Care Act and Texas Implementation Texas Statewide Independent Living Conference April 5, 2011 Stacey Pogue, Senior Policy Analyst,
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act: Health Insurance Exchanges Sara R. Collins, Ph.D. Vice President, Affordable Health.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Achieving and Maintaining Near Universal Coverage Under the Affordable Care Act: Key Issues For Federal and State Policy Makers Sara.
Fall Speaker Series Breaking Down Barriers & Building Access to Healthcare Wednesday, October 26, :30 a.m. La Colombe D'Or Le Grand Salon de la.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Exhibit ES-1. Congressional Health Reform Bills as of December 2009 House of Representatives 11/7/09 Senate 12/24/09 Insurance market.
Health Care Reform and its Impact on Michigan Janet Olszewski, Director Michigan Department of Community Health Senate Health Policy Committee May 5, 2010.
HEALTH IN COLORADO GOVERNOR HICKENLOOPER’S VISION.
Overview of Health Reform Community Memorial Foundation John Bouman Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law May 6,
Healthcare Reform MDI Rotary September, Mount Desert Island Hospital Agenda The Problem Health Reform Bill Outstanding Issues / Challenges Questions.
Medicare, Medicaid, and Health Care Reform Todd Gilmer, PhD Professor of Health Policy and Economics Department of Family and Preventive Medicine 1.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND The 2009 Congressional Health Reform Bills: Insurance Coverage Sara R. Collins, Ph.D., Vice President Rachel Nuzum, M.P.H., Senior.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Figure 1. Insurance Reform Proposals as of December 2009 Senate (H.R. 3590) 12/24/09 House of Representatives (H.R. 3962) 11/7/09.
Federal Health Reform in California Lucien Wulsin Insure the Uninsured Project 2/10/2010.
Exhibit ES-1. The Percentage of Young Adults Uninsured Declined over 2010–2012, While Rates Rose in Other Age Groups Note: Totals may not equal sum of.
Modeling Health Reform in Massachusetts John Holahan June 4, 2008 THE URBAN INSTITUTE.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Exhibit 1. Employer Coverage Continues to Be Major Source of Coverage for Employees of Larger Firms Percent of firms offering health.
Health Care Reform September 18 th, Individual Marketplace O Which individuals can purchase insurance on the exchange? O Individuals who do not.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Essential Health Benefits Under the Affordable Care Act: HHS Guidance and Key Implementation Issues Sara R. Collins, Ph.D. Vice President,
Health Reform: An Overview Unit 4 Seminar. The Decision The opinions spanned 193 pages, upholding the individual insurance mandate while reflecting a.
Small Business Conversations
Rite of Passage: Young Adults and the Affordable Care Act of 2010
Health Reform: What It Means to Our Community
Young, Uninsured and In Debt:
The Income Divide in Health Care:
Presenting on behalf of the author team
Commonwealth Fund Staff November 2009
Benefits Group Manager
Health Care Reform Employer Checklist
California Health Reform Proposal
For a middle-age person, before tax credits, premiums for comparable coverage would be similar under each plan Annual individual market premium for a silver.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Help on the Horizon:
Texas & National Health Reform Who Will Gain Coverage; Issues for Texans and State Government January 15, 2010 Anne Dunkelberg, Assoc. Director,
State Coverage Initiatives Chiquita Brooks-LaSure June 15, 2007
Among 282 million people under age 65
Premium contribution as a share of income
Commonwealth Fund Staff January 2010
Projected Savings and Effectiveness of System Reform Provisions in House and Senate Reform Bills 2010–2019 (in billions) CBO Estimate of Budget Savings,
Percent of adults ages 19–
Health Care Reform: What It Means for You Jewish Family Service Austin Alamo Breast Cancer Foundation December 16, 2010 Stacey Pogue, Senior Policy.
Annual premium amount paid by policy holder and premium tax credit
Health Reform: What It Means to Our Community
Credit per employee $9,435—projected family premium 50% employer
CBO estimate of Affordable Care Act of 2010
Annual premium amount paid by policy holder and premium tax credit
Major Sources of Savings and Revenues Compared with Projected Spending, Net Cumulative Effect on Federal Deficit, 2010–2019 Dollars in billions CBO estimate.
CBO estimate of Affordable Care Act of 2010
Premium contribution as a share of income
Poverty level Income Premium contribution as a share of income
Uninsured young adults ages 19–29 Federal Poverty Level Percent
Presentation transcript:

The Health Insurance Provisions of the 2009 Congressional Health Reform Bills: Coverage, Affordability and Costs Sara Collins, Ph.D. Vice President The Commonwealth Fund November 19, 2009

Congressional Health Reform Bills As Of Nov. 2009   Senate 11/19/09 House of Representatives 11/7/09 Insurance Market Regulations GI, adjusted CR 3:1; report medical loss ratio; in 2010: uninsured eligible for high risk pools; no annual or lifetime limits or rescissions, dependent coverage to 26 GI, adjusted CR 2:1; 2010: meet 85% medical loss ratio; uninsured eligible for high-risk pools, no annual or lifetime limits or rescissions, dependent coverage to 27 Individual mandate Penalty $750/year per adult in household phased in at $95 in 2014, $350 in 2015, $750 in 2016; exempts premiums >9.8% of income Penalty: 2.5% of the difference between MAGI and the tax filing threshold up to the average national premium of the “basic” benefit package Exchange Regional, state, or substate National or state Plans offered Private, public, and co-op Eligibility for exchange Individuals and small businesses 50–100, 100 by 2015, 100+ at state option Individuals and small businesses <25 in 2013; <50 by 2014; <100 by 2015; 100+ after 2015 Minimum benefit standard, tiers Essential health benefits 60%–90% actuarial value, Four tiers; catastrophic policy for young adults <30 and those exempt from individual mandate Essential health benefits 70%–95% actuarial value, four tiers Premium / cost-sharing assistance Sliding scale 2%–9.8% of income up to 300% FPL/ flat cap at 9.8% 300%–400% FPL; cost-sharing subsidies for 100%–200% FPL Sliding scale 1.5%–12% of income up to 400% FPL; cost-sharing subsidies and lower out of pocket max 133%–350% FPL Medicaid / CHIP expansion Up to 133% FPL Up to 150% FPL Shared Responsibility / Employer Pay-or-play Firms >50 FTEs pay uncovered worker fee of $750 Small employer tax credit; young adults can stay on parent’s health plan to age 26 Play or pay; firms >$500,000 payroll 72.5% + prem. contribution for indiv/ 65% + for families; sliding scale phased-in from 2% to 8% of payroll at $750,000; Small-employer tax credit; young adults can stay on parent’s health plan to age 27 Source: SR Collins, K Davis, J Nicholson, S Rustgi, R Nuzum, The Health Insurance Provisions of the 2009 Congressional Health Reform Bills: Implications for Coverage, Affordability, and Costs, The Commonwealth Fund, Nov. 2009.

CBO estimate of Senate Bill CBO estimate of House Bill Major Sources of Savings and Revenues Compared with Projected Spending, Net Cumulative Effect on Federal Deficit, 2010–2019 Dollars in billions CBO estimate of Senate Bill CBO estimate of House Bill Total Net Impact on Federal Deficit, 2010–2019 –$130 –$109 Total Federal Cost of Coverage Expansion and Improvement $748 $891 Medicaid/CHIP outlays 374 425 Exchange subsidies 447 602 Small employer subsidies 27 25 Payments by uninsured individuals –8 –33 Play-or-pay payments by employers –28 –135 Associated effects on taxes and outlays –64 6 Total Savings from Payment and System Reforms –$491 –$427 Productivity updates/provider payment changes –154 –177 Other improvements and savings –337 –250 Total Revenues –$387 –$574 Excise tax on high premium insurance plans –149 — Surtax on wealthy individuals and families –461 Other revenues –238 –113 Source: The Congressional Budget Office Preliminary Analysis of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Nov. 18, 2009, http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=10731. The Congressional Budget Office Analysis of H.R. 3962, The Affordable Health Care for America Act, Incorporating the Manager’s Amendment Offered by Representative Dingell, Nov. 6, 2009, http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=10710.

Trend in the Number of Uninsured Non-elderly, 2012–2019 Under Current Law and Senate and House Bills Millions Note: The uninsured includes unauthorized immigrants. With unauthorized immigrants excluded from the calculation, nearly 94% and 96% of legal nonelderly residents are projected to have insurance under the Senate and House proposals, respectively. Data: Estimates by The Congressional Budget Office. Source: SR Collins, K Davis, J Nicholson, S Rustgi, R Nuzum, The Health Insurance Provisions of the 2009 Congressional Health Reform Bills: Implications for Coverage, Affordability, and Costs, The Commonwealth Fund, Nov. 2009.

Source of Insurance Coverage Under Current Law and Two Proposals, 2019 Millions 18 M (6%) Uninsured Among 282 million people under age 65 6 M (2%) Exchange (Public Plan)* 24 M (9%) Uninsured 4 M (1%) Exchanges (Public Plans) 54 M (19%) Uninsured 24 M (9%) Exchange (Private Plans) 26 M (9%) Exchanges (Private Plans) 16 M (6%) Other 16 M (6%) Other 16 M (6%) Other 15 M (5%) Nongroup 9 M (3%) Nongroup 35 M (12%) Medicaid 50 M (18%) Medicaid 10 M (4%) Nongroup 50 M (18%) Medicaid 162 M (57%) ESI 152 M (54%) ESI 159 M (56%) ESI *CBO estimates 20% of people enrolled in exchange will choose the public plan under the House bill. Employees whose employers buy coverage through the exchange are counted as covered through the exchange. Source: Preliminary Analysis of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Congressional Budget Office Letter to the Honorable Harry Reid, November 18, 2009, http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=10731. Preliminary Analysis of the Affordable Health Care for America Act, Congressional Budget Office Letter to the Honorable Charles Rangel, October 29, 2009, http://cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=10688&zzz=39710.

Minimum Benefit Package Requirements Senate House Four tiers 1st tier (Bronze) actuarial value: 60% 2nd tier (Silver) actuarial value: 70% 3rd tier (Gold) actuarial value: 80% 4th tier (Platinum) actuarial value: 90% Out-of-pocket maximum capped at HSA level of $5,950 for individuals and $11,200 for families Young adult catastrophic policy, covering preventive services, would be available Essential health benefits package at four cost-sharing tiers 1st tier (Basic) actuarial value: 70% 2nd tier (Enhanced) actuarial value: 85% 3rd tier (Premium) actuarial value: 95% 4th tier (Premium-Plus) actuarial value: 95% plus oral health and vision care Annual out-of-pocket maximum $5,000 for individuals, $10,000 for families Source: Commonwealth Fund analysis of health reform proposals.

Premium Subsidies Premium Subsidy Senate House Sliding scale credits based on 2nd lowest cost silver plan such that premium contributions are no greater than 2% of income for 100% FPL or less to 9.8% of income for 300–400% FPL; If employer coverage contribution is <9.8% of income, not eligible for subsidies Premium subsidy for purchase through exchange so contribution is limited, as share of income, to: 133–150% FPL: 1.5–3.0% 150–200% FPL: 3.0–5.5% 200–250% FPL: 5.5–8.0% 250–300% FPL: 8.0–10.0% 300–350% FPL: 10.0–11.0% 350–400% FPL: 11.0–12.0% (based on average premium of 3 lowest cost plans) If employer coverage contribution is <12% of income, not eligible for subsidies Source: Commonwealth Fund analysis of health reform proposals.

Cost-Sharing Credits and Limits Senate House Cost-sharing subsidies limit cost-sharing thus increasing actuarial value of essential benefits to: 100–150% FPL — 90% 150–200% FPL — 80% OOP limit for 100–200% FPL is 1/3 HSA limit $1,964 OOP limit for 200–300% FPL is 1/2 HSA limit $2,975 OOP limit for 300–400% FPL is 2/3 HSA limit $3,927 Cost-sharing is eliminated for preventive services Cost-sharing credits reduce limits on cost-sharing, thus increasing actuarial value of basic plan to: 133–150% FPL: 97% 150–200% FPL: 93% 200–250% FPL: 85% 250–300% FPL: 78% 300–350% FPL: 72% 350–400% FPL: 70% Annual OOP limits (individual/family) 133–150% FPL: $500/$1,000 150–200% FPL: $1,000/$2,000 200–250% FPL: $2,000/$4,000 250–300% FPL: $4,000/$8,000 300–350% FPL: $4,500/$9,000 350–400% FPL: $5,000/$10,000 Note: OOP is defined as “out-of-pocket” costs. AV is defined as “actuarial value.” Source: Commonwealth Fund analysis of health reform proposals.

Premium Caps as a Share of Income Under Senate and House Bills Medicaid Medicaid Medicaid Note: Under the Senate bill, people are eligible for Medicaid up to 133% FPL; under the House bill, people are eligible for Medicaid up to 150% FPL. Source: SR Collins, K Davis, J Nicholson, S Rustgi, R Nuzum, The Health Insurance Provisions of the 2009 Congressional Health Reform Bills: Implications for Coverage, Affordability, and Costs, The Commonwealth Fund, Nov. 2009.

Percent of Income Spent on Premiums 2009–2019 If the Percent of Total Premiums Paid by Families Remains Constant, Senate Bill and House Bill* Percent of income spent on premiums 150% FPL 200% FPL 300% FPL 400% FPL *For a family of four in a medium-cost area in 2009 (age 40). Premium estimates are based on Senate Silver Plan, AV = 0.70, House Basic Plan, AV = 0.70; 2009 premium estimates are from Kaiser Family Foundation Health Reform Subsidy Calculator – Premium Assistance for Coverage in Exchanges/Gateways, http://healthreform.kff.org/Subsidycalculator.aspx. Source: SR Collins, K Davis, J Nicholson, S Rustgi, R Nuzum, The Health Insurance Provisions of the 2009 Congressional Health Reform Bills: Implications for Coverage, Affordability, and Costs, The Commonwealth Fund, Nov. 2009. 10

Percent of Total Annual Medical Costs, Excluding Premiums, Paid by Enrollee Net of Subsidies Under Senate and House Bills* Percent Medicaid Value of plan paid by enrollee Medicaid Medicaid *For a family of four in a medium-cost area in 2009 (age 40). Cost-sharing estimates are based on: Senate Silver Plan, AV = 0.70; House Basic Plan, AV = 0.70. Under the Senate bill, people are eligible for Medicaid up to 133% FPL; under the House bill, people are eligible for Medicaid up to 150% FPL. Source: Commonwealth Fund analysis of proposals. Premium estimates are from Kaiser Family Foundation Health Reform Subsidy Calculator – Premium Assistance for Coverage in Exchanges/Gateways, http://healthreform.kff.org/Subsidycalculator.aspx.

Penalties for Non-Compliance With the Individual Mandate Under Senate and House Bills Estimated family premium, Senate & House = $9,435 Senate Hardship Exemption Premium > 9.8% of income Penalty per Person Estimated single premium, Senate & House = $3,500 House Senate (2016) = $750 Senate (2015) = $350 Senate (2014) = $95 Income Note: The penalty under the Senate bill is implemented at $95 in 2014 and increases to $750 in 2016. The House penalty is calculated as 2.5% of the difference between average modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) and the tax filing threshold. Calculations begin at $20,000 because that is the point where MAGI exceeds the tax filing threshold. People are exempt if they have household incomes under 133% FPL or if premiums are greater than 9.8% (Senate). Projected premiums are under House and Senate proposals. Source: Commonwealth Fund analysis of the proposals; Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, “Average Modified Gross Income and Average Modified Adjusted Gross Income Across Cash Income Levels, 2009”, Oct 15, 2009 available at www.taxpolicycenter.org/numbers/displayatab.cfm?Docid=2486&DocTypeID=1.

Small Business Tax Credits Under Senate and House Bills for Family Premiums $9,435 – projected family premium under Senate & House 50% employer contribution 65% employer contribution $6,133* Credit per Employee $4,718* $4,718* $4,718* *To be eligible for tax credits, firms must contribute 50% of premiums per family under the Senate plan, and 65% under the House plan. Firms receive 35% and later 50% of their contribution in tax credits under Senate, and 50% of contribution under House. Note: Projected premium for a family of four in a medium-cost area in 2009 (age 40). Premium estimates are based on: Senate Silver Plan, AV = 0.70; House Basic Plan, AV = 0.70. Senate defines small firms as those with fewer than 25 employees with average wages below $40,000. House defines small firms as those with average wage less than $20,000 or fewer than 10 employees; credits phase out until average wage equals $40,000 or up to 25 employees. Source: Commonwealth Fund analysis of proposals. Premium estimates are from Kaiser Family Foundation Health Reform Subsidy Calculator, http://healthreform.kff.org/Subsidycalculator.aspx.

Acknowledgements www.commonwealthfund.org Karen Davis, President Rachel Nuzum, Senior Policy Director Jennifer Nicholson, Associate Program Officer, Affordable Health Insurance Sheila Rustgi, Program Associate, Affordable Health Insurance www.commonwealthfund.org