The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Rise in premiums lays bare 2 Americas on health care

- By Ricardo Alonso Zaldivar

WASHINGTON » Michael Schwarz is a self-employed business owner who buys his own health insurance. The subsidized coverage “Obamacare” offers protection from life’s unpredicta­ble changes and freedom to pursue his vocation, he says.

Brett Dorsch is also selfemploy­ed and buys his own health insurance. But he gets no financial break from the Affordable Care Act. “To me, it’s just been a big lie,” Dorsch says, forcing him to pay more for less coverage.

Schwarz and Dorsch represent two Americas, pulling farther apart over former President Barack Obama’s health care law. Known as the ACA, the law rewrote the rules for people buying their own health insurance, creating winners and losers.

Those with financial subsidies now fear being harmed by President Donald Trump and Republican­s intent on repealing and replacing the ACA. But other consumers who also buy their own insurance and don’t qualify for financial help feel shortchang­ed by Obama’s law. They’re hoping repeal will mean relief from rising premiums.

The ACA sought to create one big new market for individual health insurance in each state. It required insurers to accept all customers, regardless of medical problems. And it provided subsidies to help low- and moderate-income people afford premiums.

These newly vested ACA customers joined consumers already in the market, to make a new insurance pool. Policies offered to all had to be upgraded to meet new federal standards for comprehens­ive benefits, raising premiums. And many of the new customers turned out to be sicker than insurers expected, pushing rates even higher.

Consumers who didn’t qualify for government financial help wound up bearing the full cost of premiums. They also faced the law’s new requiremen­t to carry health insurance or risk fines.

“One (group) is angry and one is incredibly grateful,” said Robert Blendon of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. If Trump and congressio­nal Republican­s aren’t careful, their actions could stoke fresh grievances without solving longstandi­ng problems of access and cost.

Consider what happened to Schwarz and Dorsch this year, as premiums for a standard plan through HealthCare.gov jumped an average of 25 percent.

Schwarz and his wife are in their mid-20s and live in Tampa, Florida. He has his own commercial photograph­y business and she’s pursuing a graduate degree in speech-language pathology.

The sticker price of their HealthCare.gov policy went up about 20 percent, but what they pay monthly is about $115 lower than last year. Not only did their subsidy cover the rise in premium, they’re also getting more help because their income went down when Schwarz’s wife returned to school full time.

“Being uninsured is not an option,” said Schwarz. If Republican­s take away his subsidy, “I would have to change careers and find a job that offered health insurance,” he said.

Dorsch and his wife live in Wilmington, Delaware, and are in their mid-50s. He has a wholesale business supplying electronic­s to retail stores and has been buying his own health insurance for years. He gets no financial help from the ACA.

Dorsch said their insurance company wanted to raise the monthly premium to $2,050, or nearly $25,000 a year. They settled for a skimpier plan that still costs $1,350 a month and has a very high deductible.

“In four years my health insurance has more than doubled and I have less coverage,” said Dorsch. “It’s ludicrous.”

He voted for Trump. “He saw the reality that Obamacare has been a nightmare for most Americans, unless you are poor or in a very difficult situation,” said Dorsch.

The Congressio­nal Budget Office estimates that the pool of people buying individual health insurance is basically split down the middle among subsidized customers like Schwarz and those who get no help, like Dorsch.

Republican proposals to tie tax credits to age, not income, would help Dorsch. But they may not be generous enough for Schwarz.

“It’s trying to find the way to help the one without hurting the other that’s really tricky,” said Nicholas Moriello, a health insurance broker from Newark, Delaware.

“If we had a way to help the person whose premium has become unaffordab­le without hurting the person we are currently subsidizin­g.”

 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo taken Mike Schwarz, sole proprietor of Mike Schwarz Photograph­y, poses for a photo in Tampa, Fla. Schwarz is a self-employed business owner who buys his own health insurance. The subsidized coverage “Obamacare” offers provides him...
CHRIS O’MEARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo taken Mike Schwarz, sole proprietor of Mike Schwarz Photograph­y, poses for a photo in Tampa, Fla. Schwarz is a self-employed business owner who buys his own health insurance. The subsidized coverage “Obamacare” offers provides him...

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