The Boston Globe

Biden to curb use of ‘junk’ insurance

Limits duration of some plans

- By Noah Weiland

WASHINGTON — the Biden administra­tion announced thursday that it had finalized a new regulation that curbs the use of short-term health insurance plans that do not comply with the affordable Care act, reversing a move by the trump administra­tion to give consumers more access to cheaper but skimpier plans.

Under the new rule, the short-term plans will be able to last for only 90 days, with an option for a one-month extension.

In 2018, the trump administra­tion issued a rule allowing the plans to last for just under a year, with the option of renewing them for a total duration of up to three years. previously, under an obama-era policy, the plans were required to last less than three months.

The plans, often with lower premiums than those found on the affordable Care act’s marketplac­es, do not have to cover people with preexistin­g conditions. they are also free from the health law’s requiremen­t that plans offer a minimum set of benefits, such as prescripti­on drug coverage and maternity care.

Democrats deride the socalled short-term, limited-duration plans as “junk” insurance, and the obama-era policy was meant to ensure that healthy consumers could not use that option to sidestep the affordable Care act’s marketplac­es, leaving a sicker pool of customers enrolling in the comprehens­ive plans offered under the health law.

The white House cast the new rule as a way to fortify the marketplac­es. In a briefing with reporters wednesday, neera tanden, president Biden’s domestic policy adviser, said that 45 million americans were now covered through the marketplac­es or the expansion of medicaid under the affordable Care act. more than 20 million people signed up for plans on the marketplac­es during the most recent open enrollment period.

“President Biden is not taking his foot off the gas,” tanden said.

Supporters of the short-term plans have said that the less expensive options are well suited for people who are unable to afford a marketplac­e plan. Brian Blase, who worked on the 2018 rule as a white House official under then-president Donald trump, said the plans were also ideal for contract and self-employed workers, including those with incomes too high to qualify for more generous subsidies on the affordable Care act’s marketplac­es.

Blase said the new rule could cause insurers offering marketplac­e plans to face less competitio­n. sick consumers buying a three-month plan could also lose coverage without a better immediate option, he added.

“nobody benefits,” he said. But critics of the short-term plans have warned that insurers can mislead consumers who enroll in them, including people who might be eligible for free coverage through the affordable Care act’s marketplac­es. the new regulation requires insurers to provide a disclaimer explaining what the short-term plans cover.

In its announceme­nt thursday, the white House cited a man in montana who had accumulate­d more than $40,000 in health costs because his cancer was considered a preexistin­g condition, and a woman in pennsylvan­ia who had undergone an amputation and received roughly $20,000 in bills that her plan would not cover.

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