Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

1 state’s approach to market’s ills

Alaska created health care fund via tax on insurers

- By JoNel Aleccia

ANCHORAGE — When Andy Hawk needed hernia surgery last year, his biggest worry wasn’t the operation’s cost but whether he’d heal in time to lead a spring bearhuntin­g expedition on Kodiak Island.

For the first time, the selfemploy­ed gunsmith in Alaska, the state with the nation’s highest medical costs and most volatile insurance market, had some protection. He had coverage for all but $10,000 of the $45,000 tab.

“Before that, I was just damn lucky,” said Hawk, 52, who turned to the Affordable Care Act marketplac­e in 2013.

Hawk was relieved last month when Republican leaders in Washington, D.C., hastily withdrew a House bill to replace parts of the ACA. The legislatio­n’s failure left the health care law intact while the GOP regroups on how to address rising insurance costs. The issue is particular­ly acute in Alaska, the fourth-mostexpens­ive state in terms of overall cost of living, where a standard knee replacemen­t may cost five times what it does in Seattle and pricey air ambulance rides are common in emergencie­s.

Individual health insurance premiums here climbed almost 40 percent annually after the ACA went into effect, and high health-care costs drove all but one provider, Premera Blue Cross, out of the market this year.

Hawk and his girlfriend, Jennifer Jolliffe, a self-employed acupunctur­ist, are watching closely as state leaders grapple with preventing the marketplac­e from collapsing in Alaska. Officials are seeking a $51.6 million federal waiver to shore it up.

“I just want everyone to have health insurance,” said Jolliffe, who in 2009 suffered a life-threatenin­g bacterial infection that for her underscore­d the importance of insurance.

Most of Alaska’s more than 738,000 residents receive health coverage through employers or government programs. About 30,000 obtained it through the Medicaid expansion allowed by the ACA, and a smaller number of residents are in the law’s insurance exchange.

For the latter, rates have soared because insurers in the vast but sparsely populated state couldn’t sign up enough healthy people to offset costs for those with expensive conditions such as end-stage renal disease and cancer.

Premera reported that last year it paid about $67 million in claims for individual members on the Alaska exchange — with more than $16 million going for just 20 patients.

“Alaska has been quite a story over the last few years,” company spokeswoma­n Melanie Coon said. “It’s not like other states.”

With the market approachin­g collapse, Alaska tackled the problem in a novel way. Lawmakers voted last year to levy a 2.7 percent tax on all insurers to create a $55 million reinsuranc­e fund that covers bills for high-cost patients, stabilizin­g the individual market for all other customers.

“The reinsuranc­e program could be a model for others across the U.S.,” said Eric Earling, a senior vice president with State of Reform, a nonpartisa­n health policy communicat­ion group. For now, it’s working. Premera just reported that it made $20 million in Alaska’s individual market last year, and instead of the expected premium increase of more than 40 percent for 2017, its rates rose only 7.3 percent.

Still, premiums remain the nation’s highest: $904 a month for a 40-year-old nonsmoker in Anchorage on Premera’s second-lowest silver plan, which sets the benchmark for subsidy levels. Enrollment on the individual exchange has taken a hit, falling from about 23,000 people in 2016 to about 19,145 this year, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

“Some of them just could not afford it,” said Lori WingHeier, director of the state Division of Insurance.

The reinsuranc­e fund — approved by a Republican­dominated legislatur­e and signed by an independen­t governor — was a one-year deal designed to prevent the state’s insurance market from imploding.

For a longer-term solution, state officials in December submitted a waiver proposal to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services asking that the federal government funnel $51.6 million that would have been paid for 2018 premium subsidies into the reinsuranc­e program. It would be authorized for five years, with a renewal option.

Such waivers have been encouraged by Tom Price, the new health and human services secretary, and Wing-Heier said she expects Alaska’s to be approved “quite quickly” after state lawmakers tweak the final language during their current session.

Alaska’s all-Republican congressio­nal contingent — Rep. Don Young and Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan — has remained steadfastl­y opposed to the ACA but did not favor the recent GOP House bill. Murkowski called it “a reckless repeal process” and vowed that she wouldn’t support plans to cap federal funds for Medicaid that could endanger the newly insured.

That was welcome news to people like Cindy Stark, 61, who runs a small sewing and embroidery business outside Anchorage and gained health insurance through the Medicaid expansion.

She was badly injured in horse-riding accidents in 2003 and 2008 and had struggled to pay her previous policy’s $950 monthly premium and $5,000 deductible.

“I have asthma and chronic pain,” she explained recently. “My medicine now keeps me on track.”

Back at the Anchorage gunsmith shop, where custom rifles and rebuilt shotguns line the walls beneath moose antlers and a wolverine pelt, Hawk has a similar take. The ACA isn’t perfect, he said, but its insurance coverage means that he and Jolliffe can lead active Alaskan lives — hunting, fishing, skiing — without worrying about the costs of a medical catastroph­e.

Hawk worries about President Donald Trump’s vow to let the ACA “explode” and fears that, even without a full repeal, the administra­tion will go out of its way to undermine the law.

“I don’t understand why they couldn’t just fix it,” he said.

 ?? ASH ADAMS/KAISER HEALTH NEWS ?? Gunsmith Andy Hawk, 52, is watching closely as Alaska leaders continue to work on the state’s health care marketplac­e.
ASH ADAMS/KAISER HEALTH NEWS Gunsmith Andy Hawk, 52, is watching closely as Alaska leaders continue to work on the state’s health care marketplac­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States