Los Angeles Times

Skimpy policies, ample hazards

- DAVID LAZARUS

It never fails to astonish that the biggest critics of Obamacare seem to have no clue how insurance works.

They wrap their criticism in high-minded declaratio­ns of “choice” and “personal freedom,” but the bottom line is that insurance — all insurance, not just health coverage — is a tool for risk management, and there are smart, efficient ways to do that and stupid, expensive ways to do it.

Conservati­ves by and large have picked stupid and expensive as the way to go.

The Trump administra­tion this week issued a final rule on “short-term, limited duration insurance” that officials say will invigorate the market with more options.

In reality it will undermine overall coverage with cheaper, less-comprehens­ive policies that will make things worse for sick people.

Not least among the problems with these “short-

term” policies, which in fact can last up to three years, is that they once again allow insurers to deny coverage or charge higher prices to people with preexistin­g conditions.

“Health insurance markets work best when the risk pool is broad because ultimately everyone gets sick or injured, often through no fault of their own,” said Gerald Kominski, director of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

“Segmenting the market by health status provides a benefit while you’re healthy, then penalizes you when you get sick and need insurance the most,” he told me.

Full disclosure: I’ve got a big, honking preexistin­g condition — Type 1 diabetes — so I’m not an innocent bystander. Before passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2010, I was uninsurabl­e in the individual insurance market if, God forbid, I lost my employer-based group coverage.

That’s the kind of thing that causes sleepless nights, let me tell you.

I’ve been asked by conservati­ves on more than one occasion what I assume is a well-meaning (although sadly ignorant) question: “Why should I have to pay for your healthcare?”

The answer, of course, is the same reason you pay to help protect my home from fire and my car from accidents — because I’m helping pay for covering your home and your car.

“You’re also paying for my national defense, and believe it or not, you or a close family member will be sick one day,” said Dana Goldman, director of USC’s Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics.

It seems ridiculous that it has to be spelled out, but apparently lots of conservati­ves decided to skip class when the topic of insurance came up in Econ 101.

As a risk-management tool, the entire system is predicated on the idea of spreading potential danger as widely as possible — that is, among the greatest number of policyhold­ers — to provide the best possible coverage at the lowest possible price. The more people in the risk pool, the lower everyone’s costs.

“Anything that expands the risk pool is welcome,” said David Dranove, a professor of health industry management at Northweste­rn University’s Kellogg School of Management.

He said asking why you should pay for someone else’s healthcare “is like asking for a refund on fire and police protection because we didn’t need it last year.”

“We can’t fund these things after the fact,” Dranove observed. “We have to pay in advance, before we face these risks. That is the whole point of insurance.”

Even so, these basic economic principles seem lost on conservati­ves in general and the Trump administra­tion in particular.

Yes, these skimpier short-term policies will be cheaper than coverage available through Obamacare exchanges, and, yes, that will undoubtedl­y be very appealing to younger, healthier people who believe they have no need for more comprehens­ive plans.

But the end result is that you’ve now splintered the risk pool, with the young and healthy banding together for more affordable insurance, and older or sicker people suddenly stuck with higher costs because they now represent a greater risk to insurers.

“It benefits people who are currently healthy, until they get sick, for example, with a chronic illness,” UCLA’s Kominski said. “Then they may find themselves priced out of the market, or unable to get insurance at any price.”

The White House estimates that premiums for short-term plans could run as little as a third of the cost of the more substantia­l coverage available through the Affordable Care Act.

“For many who’ve got preexistin­g conditions or who have other health worries, the Obamacare plans might be right for them,” Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said on Fox News. “We’re just providing more options.”

This is a shockingly thickheade­d thing for the country’s top health official to say.

More options in this case mean higher costs for people with medical needs.

The Trump administra­tion, in its eagerness to showcase the no-frills omelet it just cooked, is ignoring all the broken eggs it dropped on the floor and the sink full of dirty dishes.

“Much less expensive healthcare at a much lower price,” President Trump crowed recently, “will cost our country nothing. We’re finally taking care of our people.” No, we’re not. We’re pandering to shortsight­ed people who place self-interest before the interests of society.

And the cost to the country is potentiall­y enormous as higher premiums for the sick compel some people to forgo coverage or skip treatment.

This in turn can lead to a surge in medical-related bankruptci­es and to more people turning to emergency rooms for care — by far the most expensive way of delivering healthcare, which can drive up premiums for everyone.

Meanwhile, 20 Republican-led states are challengin­g Obamacare in federal court, demanding that the law’s protection­s for people with preexistin­g conditions be declared unconstitu­tional.

In an act of stunning pettiness, the Trump administra­tion has refused to defend the federal law and has sided with those who’d rather see people with preexistin­g conditions fend for themselves.

I’ll say it again: This is a stupid and expensive way of trying to insure Americans, who already pay twice as much for healthcare as people in other developed countries.

It’s not rocket science. Insurance has been used to hedge against risk since the Middle Ages. We know how it works and we know how it works best.

Only a fool will tell you he can beat the system.

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 ?? Washington Post ?? “WE’RE JUST providing more options,” Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said.
Washington Post “WE’RE JUST providing more options,” Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said.

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