Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Insurer’s plans to keep costs down

- Matt Eyles CEO America’s Health Insurance Plans Interviewe­d by Tom Murphy. Edited for clarity and length.

If your doctor wants to prescribe an extremely expensive drug, expect your insurer to look hard first at whether it works before agreeing to pay.

Health insurers are hunting for more ways to tame rising costs. Aside from looking at prescripti­on drugs, they’re also covering meal deliveries and even some housing costs to keep people healthy and out of expensive emergency rooms.

But those measures won’t help with a bill that’s just starting to come due: claims from the rapidly spreading coronaviru­s. Matt Eyles, CEO of the trade associatio­n America’s Health Insurance Plans, spoke recently with The Associated Press about these challenges and other issues.

Will the coronaviru­s affect premiums down the road, or do insurers generally keep enough reserves to cover unexpected occurrence­s like this?

Insurers always keep reserves for unexpected circumstan­ces. Whether this is a short-term phenomenon or a longer-term impact will really determine what kind of impact it has on premiums.

Insurers are expanding coverage of things like meals and some are experiment­ing with rent payments. How does this tie into medical care and costs?

There’s a growing recognitio­n that much of health outcomes are determined not by the direct medical care that people receive, but actually by other factors such as housing, access to transporta­tion and nutrition. Providing someone with healthy food or making sure that they have a safe place to live can help improve their outcomes, reduce their costs and keep them out of the emergency room.

The Affordable Care Act has expanded coverage to millions, but individual insurance has become unaffordab­le for many who don’t qualify for government help. How can this be addressed?

We think there are a couple straightfo­rward policy solutions. Being able to deduct health insurance premiums from your income would be helpful. Implementi­ng a new government reinsuranc­e program would push down premium costs. And looking at other options, for example, to reduce the cost of prescripti­on drugs would also help.

Would a reinsuranc­e program cover more higher-end claims and lower coverage costs?

Right, lower premiums for everyone.

What might insurers try next to control prescripti­on drug costs, especially now that some medication­s can reach six figures in cost or top $1 million?

Many insurers are looking at how you only pay for those treatments that work, especially for those extraordin­arily expensive medicines. It’s not a cure-all for the high cost. But for those products that are innovative and that potentiall­y are cures, it’s important that we look at how we pay for what works and not pay for what doesn't work.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States