Yuma Sun

GOP touts lower premiums, but other insurance costs to rise

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WASHINGTON — Republican­s are touting lower premiums under their health care legislatio­n, but that reflects insurance that would cover a smaller share of the cost of medical bills.

The fine print is getting lost in the translatio­n.

Consumers might pay less up front every month, but if you break a bone or get hospitaliz­ed for a serious illness, you could be on the hook for a bigger share of the bill.

Premiums under the Senate bill would average about 30 percent lower in a few years, the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office said in its analysis this week. Overlooked is that the lower premiums envision a switch to “bronze” plans that now come with a $6,000 individual deductible, much higher than the current standard “silver” plan with a $3,600 deductible.

Another caveat: Not everybody would see lower premiums.

Insurers will be able to charge older adults up to five times more, compared with a threefold difference under current law, the health care overhaul passed under former President Barack Obama.

Also, the GOP would give lower-income people less financial help from the government, which means many might not be able to afford coverage. Lowerincom­e people get less assistance with premiums in the Senate bill and the GOP would also phase out extra help that many receive with deductible­s and copayments.

“I think there’s some fine print,” said Cori Uccello of the American Academy of Actuaries, a group representi­ng profession­als who make long-range economic estimates on health and pension programs. “Premiums are going down for a couple of reasons: the plans are getting less generous ... and the age distributi­on of people purchasing coverage would be younger.”

The 2010 Affordable Care Act was intended to solve problems of access and affordabil­ity for millions of Americans who don’t have job-based insurance. Instead, it’s been a roller-coaster ride, and not only because of entrenched political opposition from Republican­s.

Double-digit premium increases have hit many states. While consumers who get federal subsidies are insulated, several million are taking a direct hit: Those who buy individual policies outside the program, or make too much to get financial help. It’s this group that some GOP lawmakers had in mind when they launched their selfprocla­imed health care “rescue mission.”

“It will bring affordabil­ity to people across this country who are suffering under the curse of high premiums, and high deductible­s and high out-of-pocket costs,” Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., said of the Senate GOP bill.

But Uccello and other experts caution that cost problems might just continue, only in a different form.

One longtime “Obamacare” critic said Republican­s risk making some of the same mistakes that Democrats did with their original legislatio­n.

Industry consultant and blogger Robert Laszewski said lawmakers should start over and try to design a system along the lines of the Medicare prescripti­on drug benefit, a collaborat­ion between the government and insurers that has solid bipartisan support, even if its cost to taxpayers is a problem.

“The way to fix insurance markets is to get a much higher sign-up rate and the Republican­s are going in the opposite direction,” said Laszewski.

Republican­s “are not bringing costs down — they are only bringing the front-end premium down,” added Laszewski. Healthy people looking at a plan with a $6,000 deductible might just decide to roll the dice and remain uninsured.

The Congressio­nal Budget Office says insurance markets will be stable in most areas under current law or the Republican legislatio­n. But trade-offs lurk beneath that 30,000-foot level assessment.

What’s gotten most attention is the CBO’s projection that at least 22 million fewer Americans would have health insurance under either Republican bill, the one that passed the House or the Senate version.

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