USA TODAY US Edition

Some insurers showing they can find profits in Obamacare

Congress, Trump are promising to repeal and replace program

- Jayne O’Donnell @jayneodonn­ell USA TODAY

One of the most vocal insurers about the problems with the Affordable Care Act marketplac­e made nearly $400 million in one state already this year, documents show.

Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina lost about $400 million on ACA individual plans sold on Healthcare.gov in 2014 and 2015. After raising rates by about 32% for 2016, the company made nearly the same amount for the first three quarters of 2016 for all individual plans sold on and off the exchange, data filed with the state department of insurance show.

However, company spokeswoma­n Darcie Dearth says BCBSNC’s insurance data so far this year — which show the difference in what it paid in claims compared to what it received in premiums — doesn’t include operating expenses. And, she says, costs are indeed still rising and the new customers the company will have next year represent a “big unknown.”

Katherine Hempstead, who heads the health insurance team at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, says, “It could be that at least some of these plans are turning a corner, and some may have hit bottom in 2015 in terms of financial performanc­e.”

She added, “There is a continual process of learning and adjustment, as you would expect in a new market.”

As Congress and the incoming Donald Trump administra­tion consider repealing and replacing Obamacare, supporters say what worked with the law — like getting 20 million people insured — has been overshadow­ed by the focus on insurers’ claims about losses and the soaring rates for those who don’t get heavily subsidized plans.

“Plans have been very vocal about describing features of the market that they think are not working optimally ( but) they are also learning what they can do to improve their experience,” Hempstead says.

When Aetna announced in August it was leaving the exchanges in 11 of the 15 states it sells in, it said it had a pretax loss of $200 million on its individual insurance plans in the second quarter of this year and total pretax losses of more than $430 million since January 2014 on its individual insurance plans. Nearly all of these policies are sold on the ACA exchanges. At the time, CEO Mark Bertolini said the move would “limit our financial exposure moving forward.”

Aetna made nearly $12 million on individual ACA plans in Texas and more than $8 million in Pennsylvan­ia, according to financial filings with state regulators, and is exiting the Healthcare.gov exchange in both states anyway. Asked to comment on decisions to leave states where it was making money, Aetna spokesman T.J. Crawford said, “We don’t discuss performanc­e at the state level.”

After United Healthcare and Aetna announced plans to leave North Carolina, BCBS increased its request for a rate hike from 18% to 24%. The company said it would need to insure about 260,000 more than expected.

“It’s important that we are equipped to cover all of our customers’ health expenses and service needs,” Brad Wilson, BCBSNC president and CEO, said in a blog post at the time. “This is how insurance works for everyone.”

Wilson said he had been undecided about remaining in the market because he wasn’t sure “operationa­lly, we could handle it,” according to the Triangle

Business Journal. North Carolina’s Department of Insurance fined BCBSNC nearly $4 million in September over massive technical and customer service problems, including incorrect policy cancellati­on notices and delayed premium refunds.

Along with higher rates for 2017, BCBSNC dramatical­ly reduced the number of plans they offer and added more plans that have higher cost sharing depending on what doctors and hospitals are used.

“Our conclusion is that it is too soon to comment on the financial performanc­e of ACA plans,” said Dearth. “We still have one quarter to go for this year, and fourth quarter is typically a high medical utilizatio­n period.”

Mario Molina, CEO of insurer Molina Healthcare, was more optimistic than some of his larger competitor­s on his company’s last earnings call. “The marketplac­es are generally performing well,” he said. “They only require modificati­on and adjustment, not wholesale change.”

Michael Neidorff, CEO of insurer Centene, told investors in October that his company’s exchange “experience continues to be favorable” and it expected its ACA plans to continue to be profitable in 2017.

“Sometimes the things that are working get less attention,” Hempstead said.

“There is a continual process of learning and adjustment, as you would expect in a new market.” Katherine Hempstead, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

 ?? TIM LOEHRKE, USA TODAY ?? Brad Wilson is president and CEO of BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina.
TIM LOEHRKE, USA TODAY Brad Wilson is president and CEO of BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina.

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