Title: Health Insurance for the Sick
1Health Insurance for the Sick
Holly Whelan, MPA Health Action 2006
Conference Washington, D.C. January 27, 2006
2Health Insurance For The Sick
- Health insurance options available when losing
job-based coverage - Basics of each program
- What actions states have taken to help consumers
obtain and keep health insurance when job-based
coverage ends
3Health Insurance For The Sick
- For a person with a serious illness like
diabetes, HIV/AIDS, cancer, multiple sclerosis,
etc., obtaining health insurance coverage after
losing job-based insurance is not easy - Why?
4The Three As
- Access is it available?
- Medical underwriting excludes those who need it
most. - Affordability can people with serious illnesses
afford it? - Adequacy does it cover the needs of those with
serious health care concerns?
5What Happens When You Lose Health Insurance
Coverage?
- If losing job-based coverage
- COBRA
- State Continuation Coverage
- HIPAA
- Conversion Coverage
- State high-risk pool
- Individual policy
- Other job-based coverage
6COBRA
- Available to employees of businesses with more
than 20 workers - Certain groups are exempt (churches,
church-affiliated orgs, etc) - Costs can be prohibitive full cost plus 2
administration fee - Health benefits are exactly the same as they were
as an employee
7COBRA What States Have Done
- Massachusetts
- Will pay for 60 of the cost of COBRA if you are
eligible for unemployment benefits
8State Continuation Coverage
- Available in 41 states
- Applies to employees of businesses with less than
20 workers - Workers must have been covered under the employer
group health plan for a set period of time to
become eligible (varies per state) - Cost prohibitive - full cost plus an
administration fee - Benefits may be the same as when employed, but
can vary
9State Continuation Coverage What States Have
Done
- States that do not offer continuation coverage
- AK, AL, AZ, DE, ID, IN, MI, NJ, PA, VA, WA
- Some states offer continuation coverage for an
extended period of time (18-36 months) - CA, CO, CT, FL, IL (if divorced or widowed), KY,
MD, MA, MN, NV, NH, NY, NC, ND (for annulment or
divorce), RI (except for disability), SD, TX
(except termination of coverage), WV, WI
10HIPAA
- Must have had 18 months of prior group coverage
and used up any COBRA or state continuation
coverage - Options vary greatly among states (individual
policies, high-risk pool, etc) - Cost-prohibitive based on state limitations
- Benefits available can vary based on type of
coverage and state limits
11HIPAA What States Have Done
- States that do not require HIPAA-eligible
individuals into state-high risk pool - AZ, CA, DC, DE, FL, GA, HI, ID, ME, MA, MI, MN
(some), MO (some), NV, NJ, NM, NY, NC, OH, OR
(some), PA, RI, TN, VT, VA, WA, WV - States requiring greater benefits than HIPAA
standard policies - FL (some), GA (some), ID, ME, MA, MI, MN, MT, NV,
NJ, NM (some), NY, OH (some), OR, PA, VT, VA
12Conversion Coverage
- When leaving a fully-insured group health plan,
some states allow employees to convert their
coverage to an individual policy. - Approximately 38 states offer conversion
coverage, though variation occurs in what must be
offered, etc. - Cost-prohibitive
- Benefits vary greatly though in some states
coverage is similar to what was available as an
employee
13Conversion Coverage What States Have Done
- States that do not offer conversion coverage
- AL, AR, DE, HI, LA, ME, MA, MS, NE, OR, SD, TX
- States that allow more than 30 days to elect
conversion coverage - CA, FL, NY, SC, UT
- States without a minimum prior length of coverage
requirement - AZ, AR, CT, ID, MN, NJ, NM, NC, ND, OK, SC, VT,
VA, WA
14State High Risk-Pool Coverage
- Over 30 states have established high-risk pools,
though they are underutilized - Pre-existing condition waiting periods vary (3
months -12 months) - Cost prohibitive most common reason why
high-risk pool coverage not purchased by people
with diabetes (ADA and Georgetown, 2004). - Benefits vary, but coverage can be limited
15State High-Risk Pools What States Have Done
- Maryland
- Eliminated pre-existing condition waiting period
- Reduced monthly premium to make coverage more
affordable - Montana
- Instituted high-risk pool subsidy for those who
meet income guidelines (currently closed) - Alabama and South Dakota
- Only accept individuals into high-risk pool who
are HIPAA-eligible
16Individual Health Insurance Policies
- Most states allow insurers to turn people down
for individual coverage based on the status of
their health - Individuals with chronic illnesses are negatively
affected - Policies can be expensive if available
- Coverage may not include all of the health care
needs of an individual, though mandated benefits
must be covered
17Individual Health Insurance Policies What
States Have Done
- States without medical underwriting
- NY, NJ, MA, VT, ME
- MI, PA, VA, NC, DC for Blue Cross policies
- No rating limits in VA, NC, DC
18Additional Resources
- American Diabetes Association
- www.diabetes.org/statehealthinsurance
- Georgetown University Health Policy Institute
- www.healthinsuranceinfo.net