I Hate Dialysis Message Board
Dialysis Discussion => Dialysis: News Articles => Topic started by: okarol on March 24, 2009, 12:55:50 PM
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U.S. health insurers seek individual coverage mandate
14 mins ago
* Insurers want coverage mandate for Americans
* Insurers could then guarantee coverage
* Study shows premiums rising faster than incomes
By Donna Smith
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - All Americans should be required to obtain health insurance as part of a sweeping overhaul that President Barack Obama says is needed to expand coverage and reduce soaring costs, insurance industry representatives told Congress on Tuesday.
If insurers are required to end the practice of excluding coverage for pre-existing medical conditions, then such a mandate will be necessary to keep insurance premiums affordable, Karen Ignagni, who heads the America's Health Insurance Plans, told a Senate panel.
"Clearly the market today doesn't work because we don't have everyone in," Ignagni told the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committee.
Insurers are worried that without the individual mandate, people would wait until they become sick to obtain insurance.
The requirement that health insurers enroll all who seek coverage regardless of their medical history is likely to be part of the healthcare overhaul legislation being drafted in the Democratic-led Congress. It is less clear whether a mandate for individuals to obtain insurance also will be part of the plan or how such a mandate would be enforced.
A number of lawmakers from both parties do not like the idea of imposing an insurance mandate on people who may or may not be able to afford it. During his presidential campaign last year, Obama argued against an insurance mandate, while his rival for the Democratic nomination, Hillary Clinton, backed the idea.
PREMIUMS RISING FASTER THAN INCOMES
About 200 million Americans have private health insurance, including about 170 million with insurance provided through their employers. An estimated 46 million Americans are without any health insurance.
A study released by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation on Tuesday showed that since 1994, when Congress unsuccessfully tried to overhaul the U.S. healthcare system, the costs of purchasing individual health insurance have risen nearly eight times faster than average U.S. incomes.
Obama wants Congress to enact by the end of this year legislation revamping the $2.5 trillion U.S. healthcare industry to expand coverage and control soaring costs that have put many U.S. companies that provide health benefits to workers at a competitive disadvantage.
"An enforceable individual coverage requirement, combined with subsidies and other changes to make coverage affordable, is the best way to ensure that all Americans have continuous access to insurance coverage and high-quality care," Aetna Inc Chairman and Chief Executive Ronald Williams told the committee.
Len Nichols of the New America Foundation, a nonpartisan think tank, agreed that the overhaul should include an individual mandate. He also said a government plan should be among the insurance options available to people.
A government option is a central issue in the overhaul debate and Republicans and Democrats are sharply divided over it.
The insurance industry opposes a government plan, saying it would put the private industry at a competitive disadvantage. But many health reform advocates say a public plan is needed to promote competition in the insurance industry.
"The market is broken now, it is not working, and the consequence of that is a lot of people have lost their trust" in private insurance, Nichols told the panel. He said a public plan offering could be designed in a way so that it does not undermine private insurance and competes with it on an even playing field.
(Editing by Mohammad Zargham)
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090324/hl_nm/us_healthcare_usa_congress_2
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:waiting; :stressed;
Is this from the same president and Congress that just last week wanted to take away insurance form our VETERANS and make them pay???
Big goverment doesnt work. We do totaly need to reign in pricing and overhaul our healthcare system this is true. But we dont need lawmakers and congressmen making rules that they are not qualified to make.
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They say that requiring all Californians to have auto insurance has kept our rates low. I don't know if that's true, and I know there are still some uninsured drivers in Los Angeles, but insurance isn't the same as it used to be (for autos I mean.) In the old days you paid your premiums and they covered your accident claim. Now, they cover your accident but raise your rates for 3 years to re-coop their losses. So even if you made no claim in 20 years while continuing to pay in, they can still raise your rates. Scary to imagine that happening with health insurance!