In 2014, we were supposed to see profound
health care reform per the 2011 Affordable Care Act – but how much of that
reform will roll out on time?
Best Regards,
Kevin Kroskey
2 - money.cnn.com/2013/07/03/smallbusiness/obamacare-employer-mandate/index.html [7/3/13]
3 - abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2013/07/house-to-vote-next-week-to-delay-individual-mandate/ [7/11/13]
4 - online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324520904578553871314315986.html [6/19/13]
5 - reuters.com/article/2013/07/08/us-usa-healthcare-obamacare-idUSBRE96700R20130708 [7/8/13]
6 - webmd.com/health-insurance/news/20130711/is-us-health-care-reform-on-track-for-2014 [7/11/13]
7 - lansingstatejournal.com/article/20130707/NEWS04/307070073/Clock-ticking-Michigan-Medicaid-expansion [7/7/13]
8 - benefitspro.com/2013/06/03/employers-ignoring-ppaca-wellness-incentives [6/3/13]
9 - benefitspro.com/2013/05/31/putting-off-ppaca-with-early-plan-renewals#.UdQRNFW13Vk.email [5/31/13]
The federal government has already
conceded that it can’t enforce the employer
mandate portion of the Affordable Care Act by 2014. On July 2, the Obama
administration gave businesses with 50 or more employees a 1-year reprieve from
having to provide affordable health insurance to full-time employees (people
working 30 or more hours weekly).1,2
What’s
the progress on the state exchanges? The progress report isn’t good. As the Wall Street Journal noted last month, even the Government Accountability Office thinks
that a “timely and smooth implementation of the exchanges by October 2013
cannot yet be determined.”4
Small businesses and the
self-employed are supposed to be able to find affordable coverage through these
online marketplaces. The small business exchange rollout has already
encountered glitches. In some states, only one insurance carrier has shown
interest in them; the state of Washington is simply postponing its exchange
because no carrier wanted to provide small business plans statewide. In 2014,
businesses will be asked to select and offer one insurance plan from the
exchanges to their workers. In the initial conception, they could elect to
offer employees multiple insurance options. The federal Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services are overseeing the implementation of the individual exchanges
in 33 states; 17 other states and the District of Columbia are setting up their
own exchanges.4
Individual exchanges in 34 states
will be created via the federal government – but on July 5, it quietly granted
another concession. The Department of Health and Human Services relaxed a
requirement for the 16 other states and the District of Columbia to verify the
income and health coverage status of applicants to those individual exchanges.
These 17 exchanges will only check the income eligibility of applicants at
random next year, and they will wait until 2015 to check if applicants are
getting employer-sponsored health benefits.5
The WSJ learned that states running their own exchanges had missed, on
average, 44% of the interim deadlines for these projects through the end of
March. Still, DHHS chief technology officer Todd Park told CNBC that the state
exchanges are "on track" and will allow open enrollment beginning October
1.4,6
Where do things stand state-by-state with the Medicaid
expansion? Just 23 states and the District of
Columbia have signed up for it. (You’ll recall that the Supreme Court allowed
states to opt out of it when it ruled that the ACA was constitutional in 2012.)
In
these states and in Washington D.C., those with earnings of up to 138% of the
federal poverty level may qualify for Medicaid (that works out to earnings of
$15,856 for an individual and $32,499 for a family of four). The
expansion of Medicaid in these states doesn’t require the federal government to
recreate the wheel, but delays could happen in other ways. In Michigan, for
example, state legislators have passed their own version of a Medicaid
expansion requiring a 90-day federal review process, which will put Michigan weeks
behind in enrolling participants in expanded Medicaid coverage.6,7
Do
employers even care about the ACA’s incentives? The ACA opens the
door for employers to markedly increase the percentage of employee benefits
represented by wellness incentives. Yet in a survey of 1,000+ employers
conducted by Virgin HealthMiles and Workforce
Magazine, just 25.8% of companies surveyed said they intended to draw on
wellness provisions of the ACA to enhance employee health benefit offerings. A
lack of information about such incentives may be a factor here for both employers
and employees. In fact, the survey also polled almost 10,000 workers at these
companies and found that while 87.2% looked at health and wellness packages when
considering a job, half of the respondents said they were “not aware of, or
need to know more about, health and wellness programs offered by employers.”8
Finally, an analysis from the renown insurance consulting
firm Millman says that individual premiums could grow 25-40% costlier due to
the ACA with small market group premiums rising 6-12%. On the other hand,
Humana estimates that by renewing individual and group health plans before
2014, a workplace with predominantly younger and healthier employees could see
rates rise by 15% or less. Unsurprisingly, a number of major carriers are
expected to offer early renewals.9
Best Regards,
Kevin Kroskey
This
article adapted with permission from MarketingLibrary.net, Inc.
Citations.
1 - kansascity.com/2013/07/03/4328512/qa-on-impact-of-health-law-delay.html
[7/3/13]Citations.
2 - money.cnn.com/2013/07/03/smallbusiness/obamacare-employer-mandate/index.html [7/3/13]
3 - abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2013/07/house-to-vote-next-week-to-delay-individual-mandate/ [7/11/13]
4 - online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324520904578553871314315986.html [6/19/13]
5 - reuters.com/article/2013/07/08/us-usa-healthcare-obamacare-idUSBRE96700R20130708 [7/8/13]
6 - webmd.com/health-insurance/news/20130711/is-us-health-care-reform-on-track-for-2014 [7/11/13]
7 - lansingstatejournal.com/article/20130707/NEWS04/307070073/Clock-ticking-Michigan-Medicaid-expansion [7/7/13]
8 - benefitspro.com/2013/06/03/employers-ignoring-ppaca-wellness-incentives [6/3/13]
9 - benefitspro.com/2013/05/31/putting-off-ppaca-with-early-plan-renewals#.UdQRNFW13Vk.email [5/31/13]