Health Reform Fattens Big Insurance and Taxes the Young

A young adult now paying $500 a year for health insurance may pay closer to $4,000 after health reform

By Bernadine Healy, M.D.

Posted: August 17, 2009

Dr. Bernadine Healy

Dr. Bernadine Healy

By Bernadine Healy, M.D.

The only institution that might surpass Congress in drawing the wrath of otherwise polite Americans at lawmakers' town hall meetings this month is the health insurance industry. Too many people have faced smothering increases in premiums, delays and denials of claims when they are sick, and fears of being cast aside altogether if they have pre-existing conditions.

The angry so-called mobs at these town halls may have sniffed out the Kabuki courtship dance taking place between Big Insurance and the Obama administration. Two months back, these two parties were holding hands at the White House, hellbent on getting health reform done fast—and before the public caught on to some pesky details. Details, for example, that show reform narrows—to tight government specifications—rather than expands health insurance choices for virtually all individuals. Or that reform will not save money but take a trillion or more of taxpayer dollars, not counting patients' own new spending.

Insurers agreed months ago to clean up at least some of their hated practices, such as denying insurance for prior illnesses and canceling coverage when someone gets sick. In return, they stand to get some colossal plums: a mandate not only that every American buy health insurance but that the mandated insurance be "comprehensive," another word for expensive. What polishes this plum even more is that the new clients these companies will pluck from the ranks of 45 million uninsured Americans will tilt toward healthy people who are young and working, a group relatively inexpensive to cover and a fount of revenue and profit.

Take a concrete example. Imagine a 25-year-old man, perhaps your son, just starting out in life, with good health but a skimpy income. Right now, despite being laden with school loans and a car that's not quite paid for and trying to save up for a house—all on maybe $35,000 a year—he can get health insurance that will meet his needs at this stage in his life and contribute toward the national goal of universal coverage. To do this he might buy a catastrophic-care policy that covers him for major medical events, like a bad skiing accident, that could otherwise bankrupt him. This might cost as little as $500 to $600 a year and typically comes with inexpensive primary-care access. But under Obamacare, he would have to pay a premium closer to $4,000—a potential back-breaker that might force him to take a government handout, further burdening his fellow taxpayers.

That's because, as mandated by the House bill, his premium must be no less than half the highest premium paid by an older, less healthy adult in the same plan. By tightly harnessing the premiums of the young and healthy to those of the old and sick, reform would redistribute dollars belonging to younger Americans—much as Medicare and Social Security already do. But reform would hide this spreading of wealth by folding it into premiums, rather than revealing it on paychecks. Forced by government and enforced by the Internal Revenue Service, these hefty premiums would amount to a middle-class tax.

These considerations alone paint a picture different from what's being sold by the president and many lawmakers. Despite what has been claimed, reform begins to resemble a taxation policy just as much as an excise tax on beer and Coke would. And contrary to what many assume, existing plans that people want to keep may vanish if the insurer finds bigger profits in its new plans.

Lawmakers of every stripe are no angels here and warrant the tough scrutiny that town-hallers are now demanding. Health insurance companies may be demonized by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her colleagues, but those same lawmakers happily take Big Insurance money and invite industry people to closed-door meetings where lobbyists are privy to information not available to the public.

The president has used anger toward private insurers to build steam behind his cherished public insurance option. Critics call the public option a Trojan horse that makes way for a single-payer—or socialized—healthcare system. Obama says no; rather, it's a way of keeping private insurance companies honest. Yet he keeps inviting the presumably dishonest scoundrels to the White House in search of their blessing. At the same time, lawmakers will not commit to adopting the public option for their own care. In any case, it now seems to be on life support. The Senate, which still has not released a reform bill, is rumbling about replacing the public option with an ill-defined, watered-down series of nonprofit cooperatives.

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burhfordel of ID @ Nov 09, 2009 15:34:53 PM

Cut costs

The implication to the below is that if we knew how much a colonoscopy or heart operation we can skip the procedure and take our chances. I would guess the outcome to be DEATH in the majority of the cases.

Consumers’ ignorance of what services truly cost blurs the connection between their rising insurance premiums and prices, setting the stage for those prices to soar ever higher

Colonoscopy: When paid by Medicare, the fee is roughly $450. Insurance companies secretly

negotiate a maze of different prices, generally two to five times that. But as the trade group America’s Health Insurance Plans recently reported, patients who have to pay their own bill, because they are uninsured, are seeking care outside of their insurer’s network, or their insurer has denied their claim, can face retail charges as shameless as $10,000. And how can it be that Medicare pays $40,000, prix fixe, for the same heart operation, by

the same doctor, at the same hospital, that costs patients paying privately $80,000 to $120,000

Adam Selene of AR @ Sep 11, 2009 23:21:38 PM

Doctors are flunkies who paid there way through medical school

Before malpractice reform we need doctors that did not cheat there way or pay there way through medical school.

I mean does any doctor actually study any more or just pay there way through.

I have not had A Doctor that I could trust for over thirty years, I am 50 and I do not want to see what kind of flunkies you have nowadays. I would do better with a witch Doctor.

Of course there is a lot of waist in health care. I bet if they were brave enough to do a study you would find the average American takes at least 6 pills or more a day. That makes the drug lords (pharmaceutical companies) very happy. But if we pass health care reform they might get caught so they are fighting it tooth and nail so things will not change and they can still sale there drugs to you.

I have epilepsy and the best thing that ever happened to me is I did not get help and I could not afford my medication after about 6 months I never felt better I was 16 at the time and still had seizers but more if I ended up in a hospital so I avoid hospitals like the plague because if you ever had one you know it is not no fun. I am going on four years now not seeing a doctor except to see them with my step dad for my step dad. And I feel to healthy to ever trust them flunkies again.

Don D. Brock

Don D. Brock of AZ @ Sep 10, 2009 22:13:48 PM

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