Los Angeles Times

Insurers’ prices pass muster

Two regulatory agencies find latest proposed increases to be reasonable.

- By Chad Terhune chad. terhune@ latimes. com Twitter:@ chadterhun­e

Two state regulatory agencies find 2015 healthcare rate hikes to be reasonable. But they are eyeing narrow networks.

California regulators won’t challenge the next round of health insurance rate increases in the state exchange, but insurers’ narrow networks of doctors and hospitals are drawing tougher scrutiny.

The state’s two insurance regulators didn’t find proposed premiums for 2015 individual coverage to be unreasonab­le among the 10 health plans in the Covered California exchange. Rates statewide are climbing 4.2%, on average, in the exchange for 2015.

Those decisions by the California Department of Managed Health Care and the state insurance department clear these rates to be used when open enrollment starts Nov. 15. These rates also apply to individual coverage outside the state’s Obamacare marketplac­e.

“After careful and indepth analysis, the DMHC found that the health plans’ proposed premium rates are actuariall­y sound,” said Shelley Rouillard, director of the Department of Managed Health Care.

The insurance department said it came to a similar conclusion on rates sought by Health Net Inc., the only company it was reviewing in this case.

But health insurers aren’t off the hook entirely.

Officials added that they are taking more time to examine insurance company lists of doctors and hospitals submitted for next year to ensure patients have adequate access to care.

In response to consumer complaints, the Department of Managed Health Care has been investigat­ing whether Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield of California violated state law by misleading customers about their networks and making it too difficult to get treated.

The Times reported this week that Health Net is discarding its PPO exchange plan and replacing it with a more restrictiv­e policy with 54% fewer doctors statewide. But Health Net said it’s adding more providers and supplying that informatio­n to regulators.

Consumers can search for physicians taking Obamacare coverage in The Times’ new statewide database at www. latimes. com / obamacare doctors.

This rate- review process could look far different if voters approve Propositio­n 45 next month.

The hotly contested initiative would give the state’s elected insurance commission­er the power to reject health insurance rate increases deemed excessive or unreasonab­le for individual and small- business policies.

State regulators can make that determinat­ion now but have no authority to block a rate hike.

Health insurers have contribute­d more than $ 37 million to defeat Propositio­n 45.

In reports filed with regulators, Consumers Union said Anthem, Blue Shield and Health Net all failed to supply enough informatio­n to justify their rate increases and the group questioned their assumption­s about rising medical costs and the health of new enrollees.

Consumers Union, the publisher of Consumer Reports, was hired by the managed-healthcare agency to conduct an outside review of rate filings as part of a federal grant program.

In particular, the group challenged the 6% average rate increase Blue Shield sought for nearly 1.7 million individual policyhold­ers in and outside the exchange.

Consumers Union asked why Blue Shield isn’t using some of its record- high $ 4.4 billion in reserves to hold down rates. Blue Shield’s surplus has doubled since 2006, state records show.

The nonprofit San Francisco insurer said its reserves have nothing to do with rate increases and that money has been put aside for the future benefit of its policyhold­ers.

Betsy Imholz, special projects director at Consumers Union, said she would have liked to have seen lower rates for cashstrapp­ed California families.

“The rates from Covered California came in pretty good,” shesaid,“but we were hoping they would be shaved a little.”

 ??  ?? STATE healthcare agency Director Shelley Rouillard called plans’ rates “actuariall­y sound.”
STATE healthcare agency Director Shelley Rouillard called plans’ rates “actuariall­y sound.”

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