In California access to top docs and hospitals dwindles under Obamacare
By Jennifer Popik, JD, Robert Powell Center for Medical Ethics
Californians with health insurance obtained through the Obamacare exchange are continuing to find themselves being turned away when they seek out many top health care specialists and hospitals, according to the latest report in an ongoing investigation by the Los Angeles Times.
The Obama Health Care exchange (called Covered California within the state) has the power to exclude insurance plans in the exchange based on rate increases. The problem is the plans often need to raise rates to ensure access to high-level life-saving care. Because plans are worried about being booted from doing business in the state exchanges, they have slashed costs by dramatically reducing access to highly effective–and therefore more expensive–doctors and medical centers.
In a September 28, 2014, piece, “Obamacare doctor networks to stay limited in 2015″, reporters Chad Terhune, Sandra Poindexter, Doug Smith chronicle the result:
“The state’s largest health insurers
are sticking with their often-criticized narrow networks of doctors, and
in some cases they are cutting the number of physicians even more,
according to a Times analysis of company data.”
Narrow networks are one way insurers are attempting to keep premiums unrealistically low.Another way people are being denied access is through pushing insurance plans that normally only allow the use of in-network providers—what most people used to call “closed-panel Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs)” (although their label has now changed):
In addition to shedding doctors, California’s biggest insurers have promoted more restrictive policies known as EPO, or exclusive-provider organization, plans. Unlike a more generous PPO [“Preferred Provider Organization”], an EPO typically does not provide any coverage for out-of-network providers. Consumers would be responsible for the full charges if they left their network.
California officials seem pleased with the reduction in health care access despite rampant consumer complaints, because it means less money devoted to saving lives and preserving health. From the LA Times piece:
Sabrina Corlette, a research
professor at Georgetown University’s Center on Health Insurance Reforms,
said …”It’s been a low priority for insurance companies to maintain
these provider directories, and states really aren’t pushing back on
narrow networks….”
“Covered California endorses the
industry’s narrow network strategy as a way to keep premiums affordable.
The state has credited it for helping produce two straight years of
lower-than-expected premiums for individual coverage. Rates for 2015 are
expected to increase 4.2%, on average.”
The LA Times article explained:
Health Net has proposed the most
dramatic change for 2015, the data show. It’s dumping the PPO network . .
. and switching to a plan with 54% fewer doctors and no out-of-network
coverage, state data show…. Health Net said its cutbacks were necessary
to avoid even steeper rate hikes and it’s confident the smaller network
will be sufficient.
Under Obama Administration regulations, any plan with a year-to-year premium increase exceeding 10% is to be treated as suspect.
This means that insurers who hope to be able to gain customers within the exchanges have a strong disincentive to offer any adequately funded plans that do not drastically limit access to care. So even if you contact insurers directly, outside the exchange, you are likely to find it hard or impossible to find an adequate individual plan. (See documentation at www.nrlc.org/medethics/healthcarerationing.)
When the government limits what can be charged for health insurance, it restricts what people are allowed to pay for medical treatment. While everyone would prefer to pay less–or nothing–for health care (or anything else), government price controls prevent access to lifesaving medical treatment that costs more to supply than the prices set by the government.
Many experts predict that when the exchanges are opened to employees of all businesses in 2017, many employers will end their present coverage and force their workers into the constricted exchange plans. Just as most businesses have gradually moved away from “defined benefit” pension plans under which retirees were guaranteed a certain income, replacing them with “defined contribution” programs under which employees must instead rely on their own contributions to their 401(k) retirement plans while receiving some matching contributions from employers, experts predict most businesses will stop offering their employees health insurance directly, instead providing them a lump sum they can use toward the cost of exchange health plans.
So the dramatic cutbacks in access to those specialists and medical centers that provide expensive care for hard-to-treat, challenging illnesses and injuries are likely to spread beyond the health plans for individuals and small businesses now most directly affected to include the insurance plans covering almost all Americans.
“As more and more insurers exclude top-level medical centers like Johns Hopkins, M.D. Anderson, and UCLA Medical Center, such go-to facilities for advanced care will have no economic option but to shrink to shells of their current capacities,” says Burke Balch, JD, director of National Right to Life’s Powell Center for Medical Ethics.
Balch warns, “If Obamacare’s rationing proceeds unabated, within five to ten years we can expect most of America’s top-rated specialists either to retire or to move overseas to locales like the Cayman Islands, Singapore, and Malaysia, which are already attempting to assume the leadership role in cutting-edge medicine once held by the United States. Unless changes in Congress and the Presidency make possible the adoption of Senator Pat Roberts’ (R-KS) ‘Repeal Rationing in Support of Life Act’ [www.nrlc.org/communications/releases/2014/release040114/] or similar legislation, the time may not be too distant when Americans needing advanced medical care had better have their passports – and their bank accounts – ready.”
You can follow up-to-date reports here: powellcenterformedicalethics.blogspot.com
Source: NRLC News
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