Three CO-OPs have failed or will fail by the start of open enrollment on November 1st, according to a July report from HHS's Office of Inspector General. However, CO-OP executives remain optimistic, claiming the report provides an outdated assessment and that many CO-OPs have exceeded enrollment projections. While some CO-OPs are struggling with losses, others report growing their membership substantially. The future of CO-OPs remains uncertain as they try to compete against larger, more established insurers that are merging to reduce costs.
An advocacy group has developed a decision support tool to help consumers choose health insurance plans on public exchanges. The tool shows that out-of-pocket costs can vary by up to 600% depending on the metal level (bronze, silver, gold, platinum) of the chosen plan. By entering expected medical expenses and prescriptions, the tool calculates costs across different plan options and identifies the most cost effective choice. This is important because consumers often choose the lowest premium plan without considering other out-of-pocket costs, which can lead them to spend more over the course of the year.
The Oregon-based Health Republic Insurance Co., which is winding down operations, filed a $5 billion class action lawsuit against the federal government for not fully funding the ACA's risk corridors program as intended. Twelve of the original 23 CO-OPs created under the ACA have failed or are winding down due to large financial losses, including nearly $400 million collectively lost by the remaining 11 CO-OPs in 2015. However, some CO-OP executives believe diversifying their markets beyond just the individual exchange and not over-relying on risk corridors funding helped their CO-OPs remain financially viable.
Carriers are expected to make changes to the plans they offer on public exchanges for 2017. This may include offering fewer gold and platinum plans due to high losses on these plans. Carriers may also increase the actuarial value of bronze plans to make them more attractive to consumers. Some carriers will target specific populations they can effectively manage the risk for. The tightened special enrollment period rules may also impact pricing and participation on the exchanges.
(1) The future of the Affordable Care Act is uncertain as Republicans plan to dismantle it, leaving health plans and consumers in an ambiguous situation.
(2) Insurance carriers may gain more freedom to experiment with plan designs if essential health benefits are no longer required, and short-term plans could resurge without the individual mandate.
(3) The future of the public insurance exchanges is a major question, as carriers push for more time to decide whether to continue offering plans on the exchanges amid political uncertainty.
Mercer Capital's Value Focus: Healthcare Facilities | Mid-Year 2016 |Mercer Capital
Mercer Capital's Healthcare Facilities Industry newsletter provides perspective on valuation issues. Each newsletter also includes macroeconomic trends, industry trends, and guideline public company metrics.
1. The document analyzes the potential impact and costs of state-based reinsurance programs using data from 2012-2015.
2. It estimates that reinsurance subsidies could range from $6.4 billion to $16 billion annually depending on the attachment point and coinsurance rate.
3. Reinsurance costs are estimated to range from close to $300,000 in Illinois to $2 billion in California under sample programs with an 80/20 coinsurance split.
The document discusses public and private health exchange models implemented as part of the Affordable Care Act. The public exchanges have primarily provided coverage to low-income Americans but at a high cost. Many states had issues developing the necessary IT infrastructure for their exchanges. Major private insurers have exited the public exchanges due to financial losses. Cover California is presented as a more successful public exchange model. Private exchanges have grown as employers shift costs to employees, but need more transparency and support for insurers and consumers. Both models need continued reform to improve outcomes.
Continuous Medicaid Eligibility for Newly Eligible Adults The Next Big ThingJamie A. Brennan
The document discusses continuous Medicaid eligibility for newly eligible adults. It notes that while CMS suggested this option to streamline enrollment, no states have implemented it. Continuous eligibility could provide adults with 12 months of coverage regardless of income changes. The benefits include better care coordination, reduced churn, and lower administrative costs. However, states have been reluctant due to the federal matching rate and workload. The article argues the benefits outweigh the challenges.
An advocacy group has developed a decision support tool to help consumers choose health insurance plans on public exchanges. The tool shows that out-of-pocket costs can vary by up to 600% depending on the metal level (bronze, silver, gold, platinum) of the chosen plan. By entering expected medical expenses and prescriptions, the tool calculates costs across different plan options and identifies the most cost effective choice. This is important because consumers often choose the lowest premium plan without considering other out-of-pocket costs, which can lead them to spend more over the course of the year.
The Oregon-based Health Republic Insurance Co., which is winding down operations, filed a $5 billion class action lawsuit against the federal government for not fully funding the ACA's risk corridors program as intended. Twelve of the original 23 CO-OPs created under the ACA have failed or are winding down due to large financial losses, including nearly $400 million collectively lost by the remaining 11 CO-OPs in 2015. However, some CO-OP executives believe diversifying their markets beyond just the individual exchange and not over-relying on risk corridors funding helped their CO-OPs remain financially viable.
Carriers are expected to make changes to the plans they offer on public exchanges for 2017. This may include offering fewer gold and platinum plans due to high losses on these plans. Carriers may also increase the actuarial value of bronze plans to make them more attractive to consumers. Some carriers will target specific populations they can effectively manage the risk for. The tightened special enrollment period rules may also impact pricing and participation on the exchanges.
(1) The future of the Affordable Care Act is uncertain as Republicans plan to dismantle it, leaving health plans and consumers in an ambiguous situation.
(2) Insurance carriers may gain more freedom to experiment with plan designs if essential health benefits are no longer required, and short-term plans could resurge without the individual mandate.
(3) The future of the public insurance exchanges is a major question, as carriers push for more time to decide whether to continue offering plans on the exchanges amid political uncertainty.
Mercer Capital's Value Focus: Healthcare Facilities | Mid-Year 2016 |Mercer Capital
Mercer Capital's Healthcare Facilities Industry newsletter provides perspective on valuation issues. Each newsletter also includes macroeconomic trends, industry trends, and guideline public company metrics.
1. The document analyzes the potential impact and costs of state-based reinsurance programs using data from 2012-2015.
2. It estimates that reinsurance subsidies could range from $6.4 billion to $16 billion annually depending on the attachment point and coinsurance rate.
3. Reinsurance costs are estimated to range from close to $300,000 in Illinois to $2 billion in California under sample programs with an 80/20 coinsurance split.
The document discusses public and private health exchange models implemented as part of the Affordable Care Act. The public exchanges have primarily provided coverage to low-income Americans but at a high cost. Many states had issues developing the necessary IT infrastructure for their exchanges. Major private insurers have exited the public exchanges due to financial losses. Cover California is presented as a more successful public exchange model. Private exchanges have grown as employers shift costs to employees, but need more transparency and support for insurers and consumers. Both models need continued reform to improve outcomes.
Continuous Medicaid Eligibility for Newly Eligible Adults The Next Big ThingJamie A. Brennan
The document discusses continuous Medicaid eligibility for newly eligible adults. It notes that while CMS suggested this option to streamline enrollment, no states have implemented it. Continuous eligibility could provide adults with 12 months of coverage regardless of income changes. The benefits include better care coordination, reduced churn, and lower administrative costs. However, states have been reluctant due to the federal matching rate and workload. The article argues the benefits outweigh the challenges.
The document discusses healthcare reform and its potential repeal. It notes that while repeal seems out of reach currently, many aspects of the law have already taken effect. These include eliminating pre-existing condition exclusions for children, covering dependents until age 26, and minimum loss ratios for insurance companies. The document also discusses the costs and implementation of state health insurance exchanges. It provides the perspective of the author who has advised on the impacts of healthcare reform.
US Healthcare Reform Landscape - Addendum to June 2018 Presentation to the Ch...Dan Wellisch
This is an addendum to the June 2018 presentation (to the Chicago Technology For Value-Based Healthcare Meetup https://www.meetup.com/Chicago-Technology-For-Value-Based-Healthcare-Meetup/) containing interesting info. about what may replace the Affordable Care Act
Good Foundations: Building Healthcare M&A and Real EstateDuff & Phelps
Several fundamental shifts have changed the face of healthcare in North America. A new report, “Good Foundations: Building Healthcare M&A and Real Estate,” published in association with Mergermarket, explores the way healthcare companies are increasingly embracing innovative ways to raise capital and fund future projects, including selling real estate assets to third-party capital providers.
Richard Lieberman, Chief Data Scientist at Mile High Healthcare Analytics, gave a presentation on the current state of the individual and small group health insurance markets after the King v. Burwell Supreme Court decision. Some of the key points discussed included that the decision stabilized the markets by allowing subsidies to continue, with CBO predicting 23 million people covered in 2016. Repeal efforts are likely to continue as a political rallying cry rather than a realistic goal. Challenges remain in reaching the uninsured, stabilizing premium increases, and transitioning to value-based payments. Risk adjustment programs are working to balance risk across insurers but auditing has been delayed and accuracy remains an issue requiring education.
The document discusses a legislative post audit report on the potential costs and savings of expanding access to state-funded substance abuse treatment programs in Kansas. The summary estimates that serving an additional 4,500 to 7,000 individuals would cost the state $7 million to $11 million. While treatment could reduce spending on other services by $1 million to $7 million, this would not fully offset the cost of expanded treatment. The report found that increased substance abuse treatment in Kansas is unlikely to achieve significant net savings for the state based on the estimated costs of treatment and limited estimated savings for other state services.
With 2016 underway – and a constant need to stay atop the ever-changing regulatory environment – make sure you are aware of the primary topics the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and financial regulators will focus on this year.
Among the hot topics, we’ll touch on rulemaking that will impact:
Data quality
Military Lending
Alternative data
Access to credit
This document provides information about building a better credit report. It discusses rights under the Fair Credit Reporting Act and Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act. It explains how to legally improve an inaccurate credit report by disputing errors with credit reporting companies and furnishing businesses. It also provides tips on dealing with debt and avoiding credit scams.
http://ekinsurance.com/personal/how-to-buy-long-term-care-insurance/
Statistics indicate that over half of all people over age 50 will require long-term care.
The Guide to Health Insurance Exchanges provides an overview of what the exchanges are and how they work, as well as reports on what happened right after they opened. The guide will help both employers and consumers to better understand exchanges by explaining the different types including public exchange for individuals, the SHOP exchange for small businesses, or a private marketplace for larger companies.
The document discusses potential litigation risks insurers may face related to implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). It identifies two key expectations that may drive litigation if unfulfilled: 1) that everyone will have guaranteed, robust health insurance coverage; and 2) that costs associated with health insurance will stabilize or decrease over time. The document outlines four specific risk areas where insurers could face legal challenges, including challenges to benefit determinations and scope of coverage, issues related to the establishment of insurance exchanges, disputes over medical loss ratio calculations and rebates, and challenges to insurers' risk adjustment calculations. It concludes that insurers should plan ahead for potential litigation challenges as key ACA reforms are implemented.
The document discusses issues with the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and its impact on healthcare costs and businesses. It argues that the ACA will increase premiums for individuals and businesses through higher taxes. The ACA fails to control overall healthcare costs due to inelastic demand. As a result, the costs of the ACA are unsustainable and detrimental to small businesses.
The document provides information on how consumers can obtain free credit reports and specialty reports from credit bureaus and other agencies. It explains that consumers are entitled by law to one free credit report per year from each of the three major credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion). Contact information and instructions are given for ordering free annual reports from the credit bureaus and specialty reports on tenant history, employment history, property insurance claims, and medical records. Errors should be disputed directly with the credit bureaus.
The implementation of Obamacare has resulted in clear sectoral winners and losers. Hospitals have emerged as major beneficiaries, with a steady decline in uncompensated care costs as the percentage of insured patients increases. This has boosted hospital revenues and operator earnings. Electronic health record software companies have also benefited from growing demand driven by Obamacare's mandate for healthcare providers to adopt digital health records. In contrast, medical device companies have been adversely impacted by a 2.3% tax on domestic device sales, forcing cuts to jobs and R&D spending, especially hurting small companies.
The American Health Care System - Long PaperDivya Kothari
The document discusses the evolution of the American healthcare system from a state-run Medicaid program to the current system established under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). It outlines some of the key stakeholders in the new system, including healthcare providers, insurance companies, the government, and recipients. It also analyzes some of the risks and challenges that each of these stakeholders face, such as high costs, eligibility determination issues, security risks with sensitive health data, and rising insurance premiums and deductibles. The implementation of the ACA website in particular faced major technical issues that highlighted systemic risks when large-scale technology projects are not properly planned and coordinated.
The new HIPAA rules have expanded the definition of a business associate, greatly increasing the number of vendors that hospitals must have agreements with. Business associate data breaches can be expensive and damaging to a hospital's reputation. Hospitals often underestimate the number of business associates they have, leaving many unidentified and unmanaged, increasing risk. Effective board oversight requires understanding compliance challenges and risks, and ensuring hospitals have policies and agreements in place with all identified business associates.
This document provides information about patient enrollment strategies and navigator programs to help enroll uninsured individuals in health insurance plans. It discusses the role of navigators in educating patients and connecting them to coverage options. The document outlines accountability for enrolling consumers and ensuring they receive the best coverage that meets their needs. It also provides details on a navigator organization's strategy of partnering with hospitals to enroll uninsured patients at the point of care when they are most receptive.
The document discusses options for maximizing Medicaid enrollment in Maryland under health care reform. It describes how other states and federal programs actively enrolled eligible individuals through proactive strategies like determining eligibility based on existing data sources without requiring applications. Specific policies discussed for Maryland include determining Medicaid eligibility from tax data, limiting application questions to eligibility factors, allowing individuals to request eligibility determinations, basing eligibility on receipt of other benefits, and integrating eligibility across Medicaid and the health insurance exchange. The document argues these strategies can significantly increase enrollment but that affordability still needs to be addressed so low-income individuals will enroll and utilize coverage.
Reasons for the Popularity of Medical Record TheftOPSWAT
After a slew of data breaches in 2014, the FBI warned the healthcare industry that cyber-criminals would be directing more attention their way in 2015. The healthcare industry has become an increasingly valuable target for cyber thieves, and in some cases, a much easier target to attack, due to their often less than adequate investment in cyber security. What is it about the healthcare industry that has captured the cyber criminals' interest in the last few years?
This white paper covers various topics including industry data breach statistics, the value of credit card data versus medical record data, healthcare spending on cyber security and the impact of BYOD on industry vulnerability to data breaches. This white paper also highlights various solutions for protecting medical record data including multi-scanning, email security and the protection of endpoint devices.
From the Desk of Mike Wojcik May Newslettermikewojcik
The document is a newsletter from The Horton Group providing updates on healthcare reform and employee benefits topics. It includes summaries of reports on rising healthcare costs, reasons for high US healthcare spending compared to other countries, and a study finding that over half of individual health plans would not meet requirements under the Affordable Care Act. It also lists upcoming topics to be covered in future issues such as prescription drug trends, worksite wellness initiatives, industry news, and notification of upcoming workshops. The newsletter seeks to help clients reduce costs and complexity in healthcare.
Mr. Wojcik provides a newsletter update for his clients on various healthcare topics. He explains that he took a break from newsletters to avoid spreading misinformation during the uncertain healthcare reform period. The newsletter includes sections on "Know Your Employee Benefits" tips, healthcare cost analytics, compliance updates, wellness program trends, and industry news. It aims to help clients control costs, workload, and anxiety around benefits.
The document discusses healthcare reform and its potential repeal. It notes that while repeal seems out of reach currently, many aspects of the law have already taken effect. These include eliminating pre-existing condition exclusions for children, covering dependents until age 26, and minimum loss ratios for insurance companies. The document also discusses the costs and implementation of state health insurance exchanges. It provides the perspective of the author who has advised on the impacts of healthcare reform.
US Healthcare Reform Landscape - Addendum to June 2018 Presentation to the Ch...Dan Wellisch
This is an addendum to the June 2018 presentation (to the Chicago Technology For Value-Based Healthcare Meetup https://www.meetup.com/Chicago-Technology-For-Value-Based-Healthcare-Meetup/) containing interesting info. about what may replace the Affordable Care Act
Good Foundations: Building Healthcare M&A and Real EstateDuff & Phelps
Several fundamental shifts have changed the face of healthcare in North America. A new report, “Good Foundations: Building Healthcare M&A and Real Estate,” published in association with Mergermarket, explores the way healthcare companies are increasingly embracing innovative ways to raise capital and fund future projects, including selling real estate assets to third-party capital providers.
Richard Lieberman, Chief Data Scientist at Mile High Healthcare Analytics, gave a presentation on the current state of the individual and small group health insurance markets after the King v. Burwell Supreme Court decision. Some of the key points discussed included that the decision stabilized the markets by allowing subsidies to continue, with CBO predicting 23 million people covered in 2016. Repeal efforts are likely to continue as a political rallying cry rather than a realistic goal. Challenges remain in reaching the uninsured, stabilizing premium increases, and transitioning to value-based payments. Risk adjustment programs are working to balance risk across insurers but auditing has been delayed and accuracy remains an issue requiring education.
The document discusses a legislative post audit report on the potential costs and savings of expanding access to state-funded substance abuse treatment programs in Kansas. The summary estimates that serving an additional 4,500 to 7,000 individuals would cost the state $7 million to $11 million. While treatment could reduce spending on other services by $1 million to $7 million, this would not fully offset the cost of expanded treatment. The report found that increased substance abuse treatment in Kansas is unlikely to achieve significant net savings for the state based on the estimated costs of treatment and limited estimated savings for other state services.
With 2016 underway – and a constant need to stay atop the ever-changing regulatory environment – make sure you are aware of the primary topics the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and financial regulators will focus on this year.
Among the hot topics, we’ll touch on rulemaking that will impact:
Data quality
Military Lending
Alternative data
Access to credit
This document provides information about building a better credit report. It discusses rights under the Fair Credit Reporting Act and Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act. It explains how to legally improve an inaccurate credit report by disputing errors with credit reporting companies and furnishing businesses. It also provides tips on dealing with debt and avoiding credit scams.
http://ekinsurance.com/personal/how-to-buy-long-term-care-insurance/
Statistics indicate that over half of all people over age 50 will require long-term care.
The Guide to Health Insurance Exchanges provides an overview of what the exchanges are and how they work, as well as reports on what happened right after they opened. The guide will help both employers and consumers to better understand exchanges by explaining the different types including public exchange for individuals, the SHOP exchange for small businesses, or a private marketplace for larger companies.
The document discusses potential litigation risks insurers may face related to implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). It identifies two key expectations that may drive litigation if unfulfilled: 1) that everyone will have guaranteed, robust health insurance coverage; and 2) that costs associated with health insurance will stabilize or decrease over time. The document outlines four specific risk areas where insurers could face legal challenges, including challenges to benefit determinations and scope of coverage, issues related to the establishment of insurance exchanges, disputes over medical loss ratio calculations and rebates, and challenges to insurers' risk adjustment calculations. It concludes that insurers should plan ahead for potential litigation challenges as key ACA reforms are implemented.
The document discusses issues with the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and its impact on healthcare costs and businesses. It argues that the ACA will increase premiums for individuals and businesses through higher taxes. The ACA fails to control overall healthcare costs due to inelastic demand. As a result, the costs of the ACA are unsustainable and detrimental to small businesses.
The document provides information on how consumers can obtain free credit reports and specialty reports from credit bureaus and other agencies. It explains that consumers are entitled by law to one free credit report per year from each of the three major credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion). Contact information and instructions are given for ordering free annual reports from the credit bureaus and specialty reports on tenant history, employment history, property insurance claims, and medical records. Errors should be disputed directly with the credit bureaus.
The implementation of Obamacare has resulted in clear sectoral winners and losers. Hospitals have emerged as major beneficiaries, with a steady decline in uncompensated care costs as the percentage of insured patients increases. This has boosted hospital revenues and operator earnings. Electronic health record software companies have also benefited from growing demand driven by Obamacare's mandate for healthcare providers to adopt digital health records. In contrast, medical device companies have been adversely impacted by a 2.3% tax on domestic device sales, forcing cuts to jobs and R&D spending, especially hurting small companies.
The American Health Care System - Long PaperDivya Kothari
The document discusses the evolution of the American healthcare system from a state-run Medicaid program to the current system established under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). It outlines some of the key stakeholders in the new system, including healthcare providers, insurance companies, the government, and recipients. It also analyzes some of the risks and challenges that each of these stakeholders face, such as high costs, eligibility determination issues, security risks with sensitive health data, and rising insurance premiums and deductibles. The implementation of the ACA website in particular faced major technical issues that highlighted systemic risks when large-scale technology projects are not properly planned and coordinated.
The new HIPAA rules have expanded the definition of a business associate, greatly increasing the number of vendors that hospitals must have agreements with. Business associate data breaches can be expensive and damaging to a hospital's reputation. Hospitals often underestimate the number of business associates they have, leaving many unidentified and unmanaged, increasing risk. Effective board oversight requires understanding compliance challenges and risks, and ensuring hospitals have policies and agreements in place with all identified business associates.
This document provides information about patient enrollment strategies and navigator programs to help enroll uninsured individuals in health insurance plans. It discusses the role of navigators in educating patients and connecting them to coverage options. The document outlines accountability for enrolling consumers and ensuring they receive the best coverage that meets their needs. It also provides details on a navigator organization's strategy of partnering with hospitals to enroll uninsured patients at the point of care when they are most receptive.
The document discusses options for maximizing Medicaid enrollment in Maryland under health care reform. It describes how other states and federal programs actively enrolled eligible individuals through proactive strategies like determining eligibility based on existing data sources without requiring applications. Specific policies discussed for Maryland include determining Medicaid eligibility from tax data, limiting application questions to eligibility factors, allowing individuals to request eligibility determinations, basing eligibility on receipt of other benefits, and integrating eligibility across Medicaid and the health insurance exchange. The document argues these strategies can significantly increase enrollment but that affordability still needs to be addressed so low-income individuals will enroll and utilize coverage.
Reasons for the Popularity of Medical Record TheftOPSWAT
After a slew of data breaches in 2014, the FBI warned the healthcare industry that cyber-criminals would be directing more attention their way in 2015. The healthcare industry has become an increasingly valuable target for cyber thieves, and in some cases, a much easier target to attack, due to their often less than adequate investment in cyber security. What is it about the healthcare industry that has captured the cyber criminals' interest in the last few years?
This white paper covers various topics including industry data breach statistics, the value of credit card data versus medical record data, healthcare spending on cyber security and the impact of BYOD on industry vulnerability to data breaches. This white paper also highlights various solutions for protecting medical record data including multi-scanning, email security and the protection of endpoint devices.
From the Desk of Mike Wojcik May Newslettermikewojcik
The document is a newsletter from The Horton Group providing updates on healthcare reform and employee benefits topics. It includes summaries of reports on rising healthcare costs, reasons for high US healthcare spending compared to other countries, and a study finding that over half of individual health plans would not meet requirements under the Affordable Care Act. It also lists upcoming topics to be covered in future issues such as prescription drug trends, worksite wellness initiatives, industry news, and notification of upcoming workshops. The newsletter seeks to help clients reduce costs and complexity in healthcare.
Mr. Wojcik provides a newsletter update for his clients on various healthcare topics. He explains that he took a break from newsletters to avoid spreading misinformation during the uncertain healthcare reform period. The newsletter includes sections on "Know Your Employee Benefits" tips, healthcare cost analytics, compliance updates, wellness program trends, and industry news. It aims to help clients control costs, workload, and anxiety around benefits.
Rising healthcare costs are driving large-scale changes in the health insurance market. Insurers are merging with health systems to better manage costs. New market entrants like Oscar, Clover, and Nuna are using data and technology to improve care coordination. Private insurance exchanges allow larger employers to define contributions for workers to purchase plans. The use of high-deductible health plans paired with health savings accounts is increasing as a way for consumers to have more control over healthcare spending. Upcoming bipartisan legislation aims to further reforms to HSAs to accommodate chronic disease prevention and wellness.
The document discusses providing concise yet informative summaries of healthcare related news and legislation to clients. It aims to help clients understand challenges from the Affordable Care Act and determine solutions. The author will start a blog called "From the Desk of Mike Wojcik" to share healthcare market trends, legislative updates, and topics relevant to human resources challenges. The overall goal is to help the current healthcare model survive as more efficient, affordable and accessible to all.
The document summarizes recent studies and trends related to rising healthcare costs in the US. It discusses projections that healthcare spending will grow faster than GDP over the next decade and account for 20% of national spending by 2020. It also outlines strategies that large employers are using to better manage costs, such as engaging employees in wellness programs, linking provider strategies to quality outcomes, and using health technology. Additional sections provide updates on provisions and guidelines under the Affordable Care Act.
The document discusses rising healthcare costs in the US and a new study projecting that health care spending will grow faster than GDP over the next decade. It also summarizes strategies that large employers are using to control costs, such as account-based health plans, engagement of employees in wellness programs, and accountability measures. Updates on the Affordable Care Act include expanded preventive coverage for women and guidelines for employer health subsidies in 2014.
This document summarizes the 26th Annual Rate Survey published by Medical Liability Monitor. It provides a state-by-state overview of changing medical malpractice insurance rates as of July 1, 2016. The survey reports rates for three specialties - internal medicine, general surgery, and obstetrics/gynecology - from the major medical malpractice insurers in each state. While medical malpractice insurance rates have remained stable in recent years, factors like increasing severity of claims payments and consolidation among hospitals and physicians could impact rates and profitability for insurers in the future.
Consumer-Centric Healthcare: 2015--The Tipping Point Has Arrived (Report by William Blair)
Consumers—in tandem with disruptive healthcare technology and healthcare services providers—are the key to solving many of US healthcare's woes, particularly the unsustainably high cost of care.
Public exchanges, private exchanges, and high-deductible health plans are growing quickly. Disruptive forces of competition will create a lower-cost system that promotes the growth of highly efficient, low-cost, and high-quality providers and technologies.
The continued movement of financial and quality risk back to providers (and increasingly to consumers themselves) is encouraging providers and consumers to seek preventive medicine, cost efficiency, clinical efficacy, and overall value in healthcare. In turn, this could drive significant change regarding the primary point of care delivery (rapidly moving outside the hospital), the overall cost of healthcare and investment decisions made by healthcare providers.
Consumer-centric healthcare providers will experience strong top- and bottom-line growth over the coming years. Investors in both the public and private-equity markets will achieve superior long-term returns by identifying and investing in these companies.
Chris Evert, the Chief Supply Chain Officer of Medical Technologies Corporation, must find major cost savings to offset taxes imposed by the Affordable Care Act. The U.S. medical device industry faces pricing pressures from group purchasing organizations that consolidate hospital purchases. Medical device manufacturers rely on distributors to supply products to hospitals, but distributors have narrow margins and cannot fully pass on tax increases. Large hospital systems are forming through consolidation to manage costs in a shifting reimbursement environment focused on patient outcomes rather than service volume.
Health insurance exchanges critical success factors for payersApoorv S
The document discusses the key success factors for payers to succeed in health insurance exchanges established under the Affordable Care Act. It states that payers will need to shift from a B2B model to a B2C model focused on individual consumers. Specifically, payers will need to 1) offer a wide range of cost-effective products tailored for individuals and small groups, 2) have a strong presence in the Medicaid market, 3) invest in care management and wellness programs for the uninsured population, and 4) ensure their technology and operations are ready to support exchanges and new members. The exchanges will significantly impact payers and those who adapt to the new retail environment effectively may lead the industry.
IBM's Watson technology will be used by WellPoint to help improve patient care and reduce costs. Watson will initially be used by nurses to review doctor treatment requests and manage patient cases. WellPoint believes Watson can process medical information quickly and help ensure patients receive the right care.
The document discusses the issue of the uninsured in the United States. It outlines key points of an AHIP proposal to address the crisis, including expanding Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program, establishing Universal Health Accounts, and enacting new tax credits. It discusses how the uninsured crisis affects both the insured and uninsured through rising costs, and how Health Net is working with other insurers and through AHIP to help develop solutions to expand coverage.
This document discusses several common payment mechanisms used in the US healthcare system, including Medicaid/Medicare, out-of-pocket expenses, and preferred provider organizations (PPOs). Medicaid/Medicare accounts for a large portion of US healthcare spending and debt. Patients are also responsible for out-of-pocket costs like co-payments that are rising faster than incomes. PPOs allow patients to choose providers both in and out of their insurance network, and these plans are becoming more popular for Medicare recipients. Billing and payment collection are essential to fund the entire healthcare system.
The document discusses rising healthcare costs in the US and a new study projecting that healthcare spending will increase substantially over the next decade. It also summarizes strategies that large employers are implementing to better manage costs, such as health improvement programs, engagement of employees, accountability measures, and use of technology. Finally, it provides legislative updates on expanded preventive care coverage for women and subsidies available through the Affordable Care Act.
How to Manage Population Health Effectively in Accountable Care OrganizationsPhytel
The Affordable Care Act authorized a Medicare shared-savings program for accountable care organizations, and private payers are also contracting with ACOs. To succeed, ACOs must learn how to manage population health effectively.
Can 6 words impact millions of people !Prashant Roy
The Supreme Court is considering a challenge to the Affordable Care Act that hinges on the interpretation of six words - "an exchange established by the states". If the plaintiffs' argument is accepted, insurance subsidies would only be available in states that set up their own exchanges, not those relying on the federal marketplace. This could cause 7.5 million people to lose subsidies, resulting in higher premiums and fewer people able to afford coverage. It would disrupt insurer business models and the larger marketplace ecosystem created to support ACA reforms. Millions of insured people could lose their healthcare based on the interpretation of these six words.
hCentive Health Insurance Exchange PlatformAlisha North
Take advantage of hCentive's deep expertise in the healthcare insurance industry. Browse through or download our white papers to get an in-depth understanding of the industry.
Final ProjectThe major written assignment, a Health Policy Ana.docxvoversbyobersby
The document outlines the requirements for a major health policy analysis paper assignment. It provides details on the 9 sections that must be included: 1) problem statement, 2) background, 3) landscape identification, 4) alternatives section, 5) side-by-side tables of alternatives, 6) recommendations, 7) implementation strategy, 8) implementation planning, and 9) references. Students are asked to analyze a health-related problem and policy options for a state governor's office, researching online sources and the library. The paper should be 15-20 pages long.
The rising costs of health care are unsustainable and threaten Americans' access to affordable care. While the Affordable Care Act improved access to insurance, it did little to address the underlying cost drivers. Blue Cross lost over $400 million on its ACA business in the past two years due to sicker-than-expected customers with high medical claims. Reforms are needed like stronger enforcement of the individual mandate to broaden the risk pool and reduce costs.
1. 3 CO-OPs Have 6% of
Exchange Market
4 Table: Average Total
2014 MLR for CO-OPs
5 Minnesota, N.Y.
Exchanges to Offer Basic
Health Program This Fall
6 On Exchanges,
Millennials Are Willing to
Trade Access for Price
7 CMS Urges Moderate
Rates; Myriad Factors
Could Push Them Up
8 Upcoming Transparency
Rules Could Have
Carriers Seeing ‘Stars’
9 ACOs ‘Make Sense,’ but
May Confuse Brokers,
Members
10 Table: Individual Premium
Rates for Medica’s ACO-
Based Exchange Plans
12 Recent E-News Alerts
Has Death of CO-OPs Been Exaggerated?
Despite OIG Report, Execs Remain Upbeat
Less than two years after opening their doors, Consumer Operated and Oriented
Plans (CO-OPs) appear to be on the ropes. Two of the original 24 non-profit carriers —
created as part of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) — won’t be around when open enroll-
ment begins Nov. 1. And a July 24 report from HHS’s Office of Inspector General paints
a bleak picture of the CO-OPs that remain. But executives overseeing the fledgling
insurance companies say the OIG report offers an outdated and inaccurate assessment.
They remain upbeat about their ability to succeed in a market dominated by larger and
more established carriers.
According to OIG, 21 of 23 CO-OPs are losing money, 13 are falling short of enroll-
ment goals and some might not be able to pay back their shares of the $2.4 billion in
aggregate government loans provided to help launch the entities. As of Dec. 31, 2014,
half of the nation’s CO-OPs had achieved less than 50% of their projected enrollment,
and five had less than 10% of projected enrollment. The low enrollments and net losses
Contents HHS Says Competition Kept Rates Low;
Still, More Plans Look to Exit Exchanges
People who purchased 2015 coverage through a public exchange had more choice
than they did the previous year. And markets that offered the greatest number of plans
had “significantly enhanced consumer choice and lower premiums” compared to mar-
kets with fewer options, according to a report released by HHS July 27.
But competition on exchanges appears to be eroding as large publicly traded com-
panies prepare to merge and other carriers abandon unprofitable markets.
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Mexico, a subsidiary of Health Care Service
Corp. (HCSC), is unlikely to sell qualified health plans (QHPs) through the state’s ex-
change for the 2016 plan year, the Office of the Superintendent of Insurance said Aug.
11. The Blues plan, which covers about 35,000 people through New Mexico’s state-
based exchange. Last year, total claims costs for individual plans exceeded premiums
collected, resulting in a $19.2 million loss. In May, the Blues plan proposed an average
51.6% premium increase for its 2016 QHPs (HEX eNews Alert, 5/27/15).
New Mexico Insurance Superintendent John Franchini contends the insurer failed
to offer sufficient information to justify the rate revision. “Based on the data presented,
our analysis could only substantiate a much lower increase,” he said in a prepared
statement.
But HCSC spokesperson Lauren Perlstein says an independent actuarial firm re-
viewed the initial proposal and concluded the rates were reasonable and adequate. The
Blues plan later offered to eliminate some of the more expensive QHPs, which would
have resulted in an average rate increase of 11.3%, she tells HEX. “That rate proposal
would provide HMO products and rates that are in line or in some markets lower than
our competitors, even with the requested rate increase,” she says. About one-third of
the New Mexico Blues plan’s exchange members are enrolled in an HMO. Franchini’s
office hasn’t responded to that proposal yet.
continued on p. 11
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Volume 5, Number 8 • August 2015
Managing Editor
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Executive Editor
Jill Brown
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3. August 2015 Inside Health Insurance Exchanges 3
Christopher Condeluci, a principal at CC Law &
Policy in Washington, D.C., worked for the Senate Fi-
nance Committee when the CO-OP idea was born. In a
recent blog post, he explains that some CO-OPs under-
priced their products in hopes of capturing market share,
but didn’t capture enough healthy risk to offset sicker
enrollees. He says it’s “hard to believe” that the CO-OPs
will be able to re-pay the start-up and solvency loans.
Bonder, however, notes that all CO-OPs predicted
they would lose money for the first two to three years.
“Anytime you start a new business, particularly in health
insurance, there are incredible barriers to entry. You have
to assume you’re going to lose money in the first couple
of years. We were all approved with that notion. So to
come back now and ask why the CO-OPs are losing
money is ludicrous,” she asserts. “I don’t know when it
shifted from a three-to-five-year start-up phase to a 9-to-
12-month frame of success,” says Bonder.
Cynthia Jay, chief marketing officer at Health Repub-
lic Insurance of New Jersey, adds that every CO-OP is ex-
periencing a unique set of circumstances. “As with new
start-ups in any industry, let alone an industry undergo-
ing its most sweeping changes in nearly half a century, it
shouldn’t come as a surprise that the CO-OPs lost money
in their first year of existence.”
Some CO-OPs Report Big Growth
Here’s a look at the most recent enrollment data from
seven CO-OPs:
u Arches Health Plan: The Utah-based CO-OP ended
July with 56,464 members. Greene projects enrollment of
between 60,000 and 70,000 in 2016. About 65% of those
members are enrolled in individual plans and 35% are
small groups. Greene says Arches’ current MLR is run-
ning in the mid-80s (see table, p. 4), and assets are more
than $56 million. The company’s risk-based capital is at
500% — double the state requirement of 250%. Arches
intends to grow its group enrollment to about 60% of its
overall business. The group market, Greene says, “is the
foundation for the long-term sustainability of a health
insurance company.”
u Health Republic Insurance of New Jersey: The CO-OP
is having “a phenomenal year” and has experienced
immense growth in 2015. “Unfortunately, this growth is
not reflected in the OIG report. We now have more than
55,000 members — far surpassing our original enroll-
ment projections — and have established our brand in
the New Jersey marketplace,” says Cynthia Jay, the CO-
OP’s chief marketing officer. She says the CO-OP isn’t
concerned over its ability to repay federal loans.
u Health Republic Insurance of New York: The CO-OP
is the market leader on the state’s Small Business Health
Options Program (SHOP) exchange, says Debra Fried-
man, the CO-OP’s president and CEO. The New York-
based CO-OP says it has introduced two new Qualified
Health Plans (QHPs) and one small-group product for
2016.
u Health Republic of Oregon: For the second quarter of
the year, Bonder says her CO-OP added 400 lives in the
small-group market, while most other carriers in the state
lost enrollment. She also touts a retention rate above 90%.
The insurer has about 4,000 individual members. Carri-
ers that sold individual qualified health plans in Oregon
lost money last year, she says. Many of the state’s young
and healthy either opted to remain uninsured or enrolled
in the state’s expanded Medicaid program. Rates for 2016
are expected to be significantly higher.
u InHealth Mutual: The Ohio-based CO-OP is on target
to meet its enrollment projections and now covers more
than 22,000 members on and off the state’s federally run
exchange. Enrollment is split between its small-group
and individual products. CEO Jesse Thomas says the
company already has “adequate capital reserves.”
u Kentucky Health Cooperative, Inc.: The OIG report
notes that the CO-OP ended 2014 with about 57,000
members. While that number has dropped to 53,000 as
of July 2015, the CO-OP maintains the number is still
“tens of thousands more members than we had planned
for based on actuarial forecasts provided in 2013,” says
spokesperson Susan Dunlap. The CO-OP’s goal for 2016
is to retain as much of its existing enrollment as possible.
u Land of Lincoln Health: The Illinois-based carrier
says it surpassed its goal of 50,000 members in the last
open-enrollment period. This year, the company says it
plans to continue promoting its Preferred Partners plans
— engineered with local providers to offer members
convenient, affordable access to high-quality health care
— with an added focus on educating members about
getting the most benefit from these innovative plans.
u Meritus: The OIG report notes that just 869 people
purchased coverage from Arizona’s Meritus — a mere
4% of its initial enrollment target of 24,000. The CO-OP,
however, says it now covers nearly 56,000 Arizonans —
about 28% of people who purchased coverage through
Arizona’s federally run exchange.
To see a copy of OIG’s 27-page report, visit https://
oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region5/51400055.pdf.
Contact Bill Borden for Shehata at wborden@
kpmg.com, Greene at sgreene@archeshealth.org,
Janine Sheedy for Land of Lincoln at jsheedy@mchc.com,
Michelle Moore for InHealth Mutual at moore-galvin@
mindspring.com, Michael O’Leary for Jay at moleary@
newjersey.healthrepublic.us, Tara Schuh for Friedman at
tschuh@healthrepublicny.org, or Lee Dawson for Bonder
at ldawson@healthrepublicinsurance.org. G
Web addresses cited in this issue are live links in the PDF version, which is accessible at HEX’s
subscriber-only page at http://aishealth.com/newsletters/insidehealthinsuranceexchanges.
5. August 2015 Inside Health Insurance Exchanges 5
and out-of-pocket costs under the Essential Plan in 2016,
compared to about $1,830 in 2015 if they were enrolled
in a QHP, according to the New York Dept. of Financial
Services.
Minnesota’s BHP entity, known as MinnesotaCare,
has been in existence for more than 20 years, according
to the state. State lawmakers spent much of 2014 bring-
ing that program in line with federal BHP requirements.
MinnesotaCare provides coverage to low-income resi-
dents through a state tax on Minnesota hospitals and
health care providers, federal Medicaid funds and enroll-
ee premiums. The federal government took over paying
half the cost for most adults without children on Minne-
sotaCare in August 2011 as part of the bridge to the ACA
and the BHP funding opportunity. Before that, there was
no federal match for adults without children on Minne-
sotaCare. Moving some of those beneficiaries into a BHP
allows federal dollars to cover 95% of the costs.
121,155 BHP Enrollees Expected
BHP services will be provided via managed care
organizations. In 2015, eight managed care organizations
and county-based purchasing plans provide services
to MinnesotaCare enrollees. The total cost of Minneso-
taCare for state fiscal year 2014 was $520 million. Of that,
$242 million came from the federal government, $31 mil-
lion from premiums and $247 million from the state.
For state fiscal year 2017 — the first full year of full
BHP funding — projected MinnesotaCare enrollment is
121,155 individuals. The projected cost is $824 million
($351 million from the federal government, $34 million
from premiums and $438 million from the state), accord-
ing to the Minnesota Dept. of Human Services.
To qualify for MinnesotaCare, individuals must have
household income at or below 200% of the FPL and not
be otherwise eligible for Medical Assistance, the state’s
Medicaid program. Individual MinnesotaCare premiums
are on a sliding income-based scale and range from $0
to $80 per month. Children under age 21, some military
families and families with an enrolled American Indian
do not pay a monthly premium, according to the Minne-
sota Dept. of Human Services. Enrollees are responsible
for copayments for certain services such as prescription
drugs ($3/prescription), non-emergency visits to the
emergency room ($3.50/visit), and eyeglasses ($25).
Other States May Wait for 1332
While other states might consider adding a BHP,
Bachrach suggests they are more likely to restructure the
subsidy after 2017 when states can apply for a 1332 waiv-
er (HEX 3/15, p. 1). Under a 1332 waiver, a state could
develop a version of a BHP and receive 100% of the dol-
lars, unlike the 95% allowed under a BHP, and might be
Minnesota, N.Y. Exchanges to Offer
Basic Health Program This Fall
The New York Dept. of Financial Services on July 31
said a new insurance plan — dubbed the Essential Plan
— would be available to people whose annual income is
at or below 150% of the federal poverty level ($17,655 for
an individual and $36,375 for a family of four).
The Essential Plan was created under the Basic
Health Program (BHP) provision of the Affordable Care
Act (ACA). New York and Minnesota appear to be the
only states that intend to offer a BHP for the 2016 plan
year. And BHPs might not make sense in other states.
“Those two states are unique at this point in time,
and they have a set of circumstances where the BHP
makes sense for them,” says Deborah Bachrach, a for-
mer New York Medicaid director who now is a partner
in the law firm Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, LLP. Unlike
most states, New York uses state funds to provide health
coverage to low-income legal immigrants who have been
in the country less than five years. Adding a BHP option
will allow New York to substitute federal funds for state
funds. In addition, New York’s Medicaid program, prior
to the ACA, provided coverage to parents with incomes
higher than 138% of the FPL. The BHP enabled the state
to continue to provide affordable coverage to these indi-
viduals, but now with federal, rather than state dollars,
she explains.
BHPs Sit Between Exchange and Medicaid
The ACA allows states to install a BHP for indi-
viduals earning between 133% and 200% of the federal
poverty level (FPL) who are not otherwise eligible for
Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program,
other government programs or employer-sponsored
insurance. Under New York’s BHP, people who earn up
to 200% of the FPL ($23,540 for an individual and $48,500
for a family of four) will pay a $20 monthly premium.
While the BHP concept was outlined in the ACA,
it wasn’t until last October that CMS issued a proposed
notice on the rules. Final guidance followed in February
2015 for BHPs that would be offered for the 2016 plan
year. Federal funding for a BHP equates to 95% of pre-
mium and cost-sharing subsidies that would have been
provided to individuals through public exchange cover-
age, HHS said on Oct. 21.
New York’s Essential Plan will offer coverage simi-
lar to Qualified Health Plans (QHPs) sold through the
state-run exchange, but will have no annual deductible
and low copayments. A person who earns about $20,000
a year and uses moderate health care services, includ-
ing an inpatient hospital stay, prescription drugs and
doctor’s visits, will pay about $730 a year for premiums
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6. 6Inside Health Insurance Exchanges August 2015
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Health Plan Week, AIS’s Value-Based Care News and Medicare Advantage News.
allowed to expand the program to individuals who earn
more than 200% of the FPL, she explains.
States are going to have to figure out the likely fiscal
implications for implementing a BHP, says Matt Salo, ex-
ecutive director of the National Association of Medicaid
Directors. “There will be fiscal implications, and they
could be positive or negative, but there will be implica-
tions,” he says.
Some states that expanded Medicaid eligibility, as
called for by the ACA, wound up with far greater en-
rollment than anticipated. But that enrollment could be
indicative of a population that sought care through a
fragmented system of emergency rooms and free clinics.
Kentucky, for example, saw higher-than-expected
Medicaid enrollment, but determined that not expanding
the program might cost more in the long run. Medicaid
expansion is very hard to reverse.
At a June hearing, House Ways and Means Over-
sight Subcommittee Chairman Peter Roskam (R-Ill.)
questioned HHS Sec. Sylvia Burwell about BHP pro-
grams. New York, he said, will spend an estimated $2.5
billion on the program, but he contended the funding
had not been appropriated. Roskam’s office did not re-
spond to HEX’s request for comment on BHP funding.
Contact Salo at matt.salo@medicaiddirectors.org and
Bachrach at dbachrach@manatt.com. G
On Exchanges, Millennials Are Most
Willing to Trade Access for Price
While health insurers have been criticized for their
use of narrow provider networks, the strategy is popular
with people who buy coverage through public insurance
exchanges, particularly younger participants, according
to the results of a survey published Aug. 3 by the Deloitte
Center for Health Solutions.
Among exchange participants, there is a willingness
to accept limited provider access for a lower price point.
That was true among all age groups, but was most strik-
ing among millennials where about 80% were willing to
make that trade-off conceptually, says Paul Lambdin, a
director at Deloitte Consulting and an author of the re-
port. Focusing on that angle, he says, could give local car-
riers and provider-sponsored health plans an edge over
bigger competitors.
“The larger carriers certainly have the scale, efficien-
cies and cost advantages, but don’t have the agility to
appeal to all of the different market segments. The chal-
lenge for the large insurers is to appeal locally to consum-
ers,” he tells HEX.
Consumers who purchase coverage on exchanges
are most interested in convenience, competitive prices
and demonstrated value, according to the study. But
demonstrating value to the most profitable members —
young and healthy people who rarely access the health
care system — is a challenge for an industry that tradi-
tionally has not focused on consumers.
“Health plans have to remember who their best
customer is, and they’re not used to thinking like that.”
Discounted gym memberships and access to telemedi-
cine are among strategies that could demonstrate value
to a millennial who doesn’t access the system frequently,
he suggests.
The study, which was conducted in March, com-
pared people who purchased health coverage through an
exchange with those who have it through their employer,
Medicare or Medicaid. It determined that exchange en-
rollees better understand their benefits and costs and are
more likely to compare providers and services on price
and, to some extent, quality.
They also are willing to switch plans, thrusting car-
riers into a new arena of having to continually win over
this segment based on price, product and service. The
survey did not distinguish between people who en-
rolled through a state exchange and those who enrolled
through a federally run exchange.
Cost Is Top Reason for Switching
Here’s a look at some of the highlights from the
study:
u Price is the top reason people switch plans: Among
those who renewed exchange-based coverage for 2015,
45% chose a new plan. Price was cited as the most com-
mon reason for switching. It could be that people didn’t
understand what they purchased the first year. “If all
you did last year was pay out of pocket, you’re probably
going to look for something with lower out-of-pocket
costs,” says Lambdin.
u Exchanges have a positive image: Despite their failed
rollout in 2013, public exchanges have become a trusted
source of information. Lambdin suggests that having
“the government’s seal of approval” provides consumers
with a sense that the products have been screened and
that the marketplaces are a safe place to shop — 35% of
consumers said they viewed exchanges nearly as favor-
ably as health care providers.
u Exchange enrollees are most likely to use tools: Slight-
ly more than half of exchange enrollees used an online
tool to compare and negotiate prices among doctors and
hospitals, versus 45% of people with employer-based
coverage and 36% for those on Medicare.
u Brand takes a back seat to price: Once prices stabilize
on exchanges — which likely is a few years off — brand
will resonate more with consumers. Provider-sponsored
7. August 2015 Inside Health Insurance Exchanges 7
plans could have a leg up in that area, particularly if a
consumer has a strong connection to a local hospital.
u Price stability won’t happen anytime soon: Although
recently reported 2016 premiums on the California ex-
change seem tempered, insurers in some markets have
had to raise rates significantly to correct prior-year mis-
calculations, Lambdin says.
“There is a lot of disruption still for 2016….You will
still see a lot of disruption going into this year and going
into next year. The next couple of years you will see win-
ners and losers,” he says.
Download a copy of “Public Health Insurance Ex-
changes: Opening the Door for a New Generation of
Engaged Health Care Consumers” at http://tinyurl.
com/pcpag8y. G
While CMS Urges Moderate Rates,
Myriad Factors Could Push Them Up
When the 2016 open-enrollment period begins this
fall, premiums for qualified health plans (QHPs) sold
through New York’s state-run insurance exchange will
be an average of 7.1% higher than they were for the 2015
plan year, the New York State Dept. of Financial Services
(DFS) said July 31. Carriers that sell QHPs through the
state-run New York State of Health exchange had re-
quested an average 10.4% increase.
Subscribers who have not yet signed up for Web access — with searchable newsletter archives, Hot Topics, Recent Stories and more —
should click the blue “Login” button at www.AISHealth.com, then follow the “Forgot your password?” link to receive further instructions.
Claims experience, rising medical costs, expensive
specialty pharmacy drugs, the phase-out of the tempo-
rary reinsurance program in the Affordable Care Act
(ACA) and an expansion of the small-group market are
among the factors that will influence 2016 rates for the
individual and small-group markets, according to an
issue brief released Aug. 5 by the American Academy of
Actuaries.
The economic slowdown that began in 2008 is
credited with holding down medical trend. But medical
spending will continue to grow and costs for prescription
drugs, in particular, are expected to increase due to the
availability of high-cost specialty drugs (e.g., for hepatitis
C, high cholesterol and cancer).
The first year of the reinsurance program was in-
tended to reimburse carriers for 80% of claims from
$45,000 up to a cap of $250,000. While the reinsurance
program fell short of its collections goal with just $8.7 bil-
lion, submitted claims totaled $7.3 billion, which allows
CMS to reimburse high-cost claims at 100% and have
money left over (HEX 7/15, p. 1).
The three-year program will reimburse 50% of high-
cost claims above $70,000 for 2015 and above $90,000 for
2016. While the program impacted rates by as much as
14% for 2014, that change in reimbursement is likely to
reduce net claims by between 6% and 11% for 2015 and
between 4% and 6% for 2016, according to the report. Re-
insurance and risk adjustment, along with risk corridors,
make up the so-called 3Rs provision of the ACA.
Narrow Networks:
How to Avoid Legal, Regulatory and PR Landmines
¾¾ How is network adequacy determined by federal and state regulators…for HMOs and PPOs?
¾¾ What risks do health plans face when limiting primary care doctors?
¾¾ How do state any-willing-provider laws impact how narrow a network can be?
¾¾ How are payers structuring contractual arrangements to remain in compliance with state
any-willing provider laws?
¾¾ Why must quality metrics be considered when building narrow networks?
¾¾ What steps should carriers take to avoid discrimination claims from providers?
¾¾ What penalties do carriers face if CMS determines a Medicare Advantage plan doesn’t have
enough providers accepting new patients?
Join Terese A. Mosher Beluris and Jeremy Earl of McDermott Will & Emery LLP,
Tom Mikuckis of Oliver Wyman and Helaine I. Fingold of Epstein Becker Green
for a Sept. 29 Webinar.
Visit www.AISHealth.com/webinars or call 800-521-4323
continued
8. 8Inside Health Insurance Exchanges August 2015
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Q&A With American Academy of Actuaries
In a telephone interview with HEX, David Shea, a
member of the Academy’s Individual and Small Group
Markets Committee, and health actuary for the Bureau of
Insurance in Virginia, offered his thoughts on factors that
will have the biggest impact on rates for the 2016 plan
year:
HEX: In July, HealthCare.gov CEO Kevin Counihan
wrote a letter to state regulators urging them to approve
only moderate rate increases. How much of an impact
does something like that have on state regulators and
the rates they approve?
Shea: In the first year of exchanges, it was challeng-
ing for everyone because everyone was reaching into
the great unknown. Moving into 2016, there is a bit more
information. Regulators will look at all of the filings as
they’ve done in the past. Actuaries have to follow their
codes of conduct and standards of practice not only
when they are preparing rate filings, but also when
they’re reviewing rate filings. Those standards have been
in place for a long time. It’s challenging on both sides.
Decisions need to be actuarially supported and, from the
regulator’s standpoint, they need to understand how the
actuary came up with those assumptions. Sometimes
you hear comments about [regulators] being tougher, but
it’s always been that way.
HEX: When 2016 rates were proposed in the spring,
some industry observers suggested carriers might have
artificially increased their requests due to the then-
unknown outcome of the Supreme Court’s King v. Bur-
well decision. Did that uncertainty prompt higher rate
requests?
Shea: Personally, I didn’t see that. But I think a lot of
carriers may have taken the position….given they didn’t
know how [the case] would turn out. There was an ac-
knowledgement on both sides of the fence that a decision
in favor of the plaintiff could trigger a huge change in the
market. A few carriers did send signals that if the deci-
sion went in favor of the plaintiff that they reserve the
right to change their assumption. They had to presume
status quo. In some states, they were allowed to resubmit
rates had the decision gone the other way.
During the bumpy implementation of the Afford-
able Care Act (ACA), Section 1311(e)(3) was pushed
off to the side as the dust settled. But HHS indicated
Aug. 11 that it will soon release guidance for quali-
fied health plan (QHP) issuers to submit operational
information beginning in 2016. The information could
be used to build a national dataset of plan informa-
tion for all commercial market insurers, but CMS is
starting with the exchanges. Carriers that sell QHPs
in states relying on the federal exchange platform will
send data to CMS via email until a dedicated platform
is built. Data collection will be phased in to allow time
for testing, HHS said.
The ACA envisioned a quality rating system simi-
lar to the stars program, which CMS has used to rate
Medicare Advantage (MA) plans for the past seven
years (HEX 10/30/14, p. 1). A stars-like rating system
for exchanges is expected by 2017.
Additional operational information from carriers
would give employers and consumers another tool
for evaluating coverage options. It also could be used
by exchanges to establish a quality-based criterion for
carriers that want to sell coverage.
“CMS is taking a cautious first step, but the trans-
parency data eventually could facilitate consumer
comparison tools, more thorough and empirical
oversight by regulators, or even active purchasing,”
says Mike Adelberg, a former senior official in CMS’s
Center for Consumer Information and Insurance
Oversight (CCIIO), now at FaegreBD Consulting in
Washington, D.C. “This starts what will be a multi-
year process….The end-point is impossible to know.”
Carriers will be required to provide information
related to cost sharing for out-of-network services,
retroactive claims denials, and rules and review pro-
cesses for members who want to use non-formulary
drugs.
A parallel requirement under the Public Health
Services Act (PHSA 2715A) essentially applies the
same disclosure rules to non-QHPs sold in the indi-
vidual market, as well as to fully insured and self-
insured group plans.
“The employer community has been hoping it
would never come out because disclosing this infor-
mation is administratively burdensome,” says Chris-
topher Condeluci, a principal at CC Law & Policy in
Washington, D.C. On a 1-to-10 scale of importance, he
says the rule is a seven for employers.
For more information about implementation, see
the Dept. of Labor’s Aug. 11 notice at www.dol.gov/
ebsa/pdf/faq-aca28.pdf.
Upcoming Transparency Rules Could Have Carriers Seeing ‘Stars’
9. August 2015 Inside Health Insurance Exchanges 9
Web addresses cited in this issue are live links in the PDF version, which is accessible at HEX’s
subscriber-only page at http://aishealth.com/newsletters/insidehealthinsuranceexchanges.
HEX: In setting rates for 2014 and 2015, there was a
lot of guesswork on the part of actuaries. How did they
do?
Shea: They had a lot of plates spinning. Most impor-
tant was the solvency of insurance companies. At the end
of the day, we hear about how high rates are, but people
also want 100% assurance that when they file a claim,
the company that they bought insurance from will be
there to pay that claim. It created a new dynamic in the
market. Rates were much easier to compare among carri-
ers in a state. You have to make sure your rates are set to
cover claims and administrative expenses. Actuaries did
a pretty good job flying blind. They aren’t flying blind
anymore, but the blindfold isn’t entirely off. They do
have some experience, but that varies by state. The first
people to enroll were more likely to be less healthy. For
some people, this was their first time entering the health
insurance market. The subsidies made it possible. As
time has gone on, it seems like our enrollees have gotten
a little bit healthier.
HEX: Is that dissipation of a pent-up demand some-
thing that is factored into rate calculations?
Shea: Some carriers explicitly acknowledged pent-up
demand, and in some cases they have reduced or elimi-
nated that factor. They feel like the pent-up demand they
saw [in 2014 and 2015] has passed.
HEX: It seems that the reinsurance program worked
as intended. But what sort of an impact will the decreas-
ing reimbursements have on rates?
Shea: From an actuarial standpoint, if the govern-
ment is going to pay less for 2015 than 2014, that’s going
to look like a [cost] increase. The main reason individual
carriers did so well in the reinsurance program is it is
funded by the entire health insurance market, includ-
ing large group and self-insured employers. There were
more funds than expected to pay for reinsurance claims
for 2014, but that year is now water under the bridge.
HEX: The definition of a small group is set to expand
from 50 or fewer employees to 100 or fewer under the
ACA. What impact will that have on rates?
Shea: It all hinges on the morbidity of the 51-100
[employee] market in each state compared to the morbid-
ity of the current small-group market. If the larger small
groups are healthier than the smaller ones, that could
serve to lower rates, but if they aren’t as healthy, that will
raise rates. It’s a matter of relativity. What does the larger
group size look like compared to the smaller group size?
See the Academy’s brief, “Drivers of 2016 Health
Insurance Premium Changes,” at http://tinyurl.com/
q67vuhs.
Contact David Mendes for Shea at mendes@actuary.
org. G
ACOs ‘Make Sense’ for Exchanges,
But May Confuse Brokers, Members
With consumers and employers looking to trim cov-
erage costs while ensuring high-quality care, public and
private insurance exchanges might be an ideal vehicle for
insurance plans that include an accountable care organi-
zation (ACO). Only a handful of ACO plans, however,
are being marketed on either type of exchange.
David Muhlestein, senior director of research and
development at Salt Lake City-based consulting firm
Leavitt Partners, says the ACO model makes sense for
the exchanges. The model, he explains, helps to reduce
coverage costs by managing where enrollees receive care.
Aetna offers ACO products on both public and
private exchanges. Its public-exchange ACO plans are
sold in Arizona through an ACO relationship with Ban-
ner Health Network in Phoenix; in Houston through a
relationship with Memorial Hermann, and in Virginia
through a relationship with Carilion Clinic and Riverside
Health System. In addition, Innovation Health, the health
insurer jointly owned by Aetna and Inova Health Sys-
tem, offers its plans on Virginia’s federally run exchange.
Medica May Expand Exchange ACOs
Medica Health Plans offered three ACO-type prod-
ucts through Minnesota’s state-run exchange. Each
is paired with a provider system, such as the Mayo
Clinic. The insurer might work with providers in other
parts of the state to expand its ACO portfolio on the
exchange, but no decisions have been made. In 2012,
Medica became the first carrier in Minnesota to make an
ACO product available to the individual market. Such
products have since proliferated in the state’s individual
market.
“We see ACOs as one of the few remaining ways
to control costs under health care reform, and offer a
lower premium alternative to more traditional network
products,” says Medica spokesperson Greg Bury. Part-
nering with key providers is “the best way to provide
an integrated clinical/payer experience where we take
the consumer out of the middle of the traditional com-
plex relationship between providers and carriers,” he
says. “ACOs allow a laser-focus on improving the end-
to-end health care consumer experience.”
While early results are encouraging, he says the
uptake, particularly on broker-sold business, has been
somewhat less than expected. The market has grown
accustomed to networks with almost every provider
included across a state or region, and may be slow to
change. However, as premiums increase, there could be
more migration into the ACO plans, he adds.
continued
10. 10Inside Health Insurance Exchanges August 2015
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One hurdle has been in convincing brokers and
potential customers that the model is not a return to a
1980s-style HMO. While some ACO-based insurance
products place severe limits on providers that can be
seen outside the ACO, Medica’s products offer broad
open access for primary and specialty care. The model
doesn’t use a referral approach and doesn’t require en-
rollees to select a primary care clinic.
There is a belief within the ACO community that
shared savings has short shelf life, Muhlestein tells HEX.
“Shared savings is built on the premise of taking money
out of the system, so eventually you are going to take all
of the slack out and reach a new baseline,” he explains.
Provider groups, which are being asked by carriers to
take on increased risk, might decide to build their own
ACO-based products and sell them on exchanges by
either building or buying an insurance subsidiary or
partnering with an existing carrier to process claims.
“The question is, once you’ve maxed out shared
savings, what’s next?” he asks. The ACO model might
not be any more effective at holding down coverage costs
than a narrow-network plan. But unlike narrow-network
plans, the goal of an ACO is to use payment models to
improve the quality of care while reducing costs.
As we increase the number of distribution channels
for health insurance, it’s going to make sense for ACOs
and health plan products to take advantage of the im-
proved distribution bandwidth, adds Dan Schuyler, a
senior director at Leavitt Partners.
For coverage that began Jan. 1, Aetna offered ACOs
to group retiree and other employer customers on its pro-
prietary private exchange. The company also offers ACO
products through other third-party private exchanges,
says spokesperson Sherry Sanderford. In November
2014, Aetna acquired bswift, which provides a technol-
ogy platform that offers a retail shopping experience for
health insurance exchanges and employers nationwide.
That acquisition is part of the company’s private ex-
change strategy.
Medica also operates its own private exchange
where it offers five ACO-based products and a broader
network within the ACO group. Employers that choose
to offer coverage through the exchange give their work-
ers a choice between the ACOs and the more expensive
broader network option. To ensure adequate specialist
representation, the broader option includes some special-
ists who are part of the ACO but not part of the major
care system at its core. According to Bury, 93% of mem-
bers enrolled in ACO networks re-enroll each year dur-
ing open enrollment, indicating high satisfaction with the
program, he says.
Contact Bury at greg.bury@medica.com, Sander-
ford at sanderfords@aetna.com and Jordana Choucair
for Schuyler and Muhlestein at jordana.choucair@
leavittpartners.com. G
Carriers Look to Retain Workers
If Small-Group Market Fades
Rather than offering health coverage that complies
with the Affordable Care Act (ACA), many small firms
have dropped coverage and encouraged workers to buy
individual products through a public exchange.
The ACA doesn’t require small employers (i.e., those
with fewer than 50 workers) to offer health insurance to
their workers. While attrition in the small-group market
is nothing new, transitional guidance that allows employ-
ers to continue their pre-ACA coverage expires in Octo-
ber 2016 in a majority of states. Moving to coverage that
complies with the ACA will be more expensive for small
firms and could prompt them to consider alternatives
such as encouraging low-wage and part-time employees
to buy coverage through the public exchanges.
Over the past two years, Blue Cross Blue Shield of
Kansas City has seen almost 5,000 small-group members
migrate to individual plans. In response, the insurer last
year reorganized its sales department. Under the new
arrangement, small-group and individual markets are
merged and are serviced by one of two sales teams. Each
team oversees 750 brokers who focus on both segments,
says Ron Rowe, vice president of sales.
“We made this change because we thought the
small-group market was going away. We decided we
needed to get in front of it and manage it.” It was a big
Average Individual Premium Rates for
Medica’s 2015 ACO-based Exchange
Plans, by Metal Level
Metal Level Provider Group Premium*
Catastrophic
Inspiration HealthEast $134.66
Medica with Mayo Clinic $154.76
North Memorial Acclaim $128.32
Bronze
Inspiration HealthEast $208.87
Medica with Mayo Clinic $240.07
North Memorial Acclaim $199.05
Silver
Inspiration HealthEast $237.62
Medica with Mayo Clinic $273.09
North Memorial Acclaim $226.43
Gold
Inspiration HealthEast $275.97
Medica with Mayo Clinic $317.17
North Memorial Acclaim $262.98
*Average premiums based on a non-smoking 40-year-old individual.
SOURCE/METHODOLOGY: Calculated by AIS from data in AIS’s Health
Insurance Exchange Database: 2015 Plans and Premiums. For more
information or to order, call (800) 521-4323 or visit http://aishealth.
com/marketplace/health-insurance-exchange-database.
11. August 2015 Inside Health Insurance Exchanges 11
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should click the blue “Login” button at www.AISHealth.com, then follow the “Forgot your password?” link to receive further instructions.
Will Exchange Competition Grow?
continued from p. 1
In a prepared statement, Janice Torrez, vice president
of external affairs at the New Mexico Blues plan, said that
without an “adequate” increase on premium rates, the
insurer is left with little choice but to limit its offerings in
the individual insurance market next year.
Amy Dowd, CEO of the New Mexico Health Insur-
ance Exchange, says that if the New Mexico Blues plan
pulls out of the exchange, there will still be plenty of
choice for consumers looking to shop on the exchange
during open enrollment this fall.
The New Mexico Blues plan isn’t the first carrier to
step away from a public exchange. Aetna Inc. in July said
it wouldn’t offer 2016 coverage through Washington,
D.C.’s exchange. Assurant Health, which sold coverage
through public exchanges in 16 states this year, left the
health insurance business in the spring (HEX 5/15, p. 10).
Two Community Operated and Oriented Plans won’t
continue, and nearly all of the remaining CO-OPs are in
the red, according to a recent report from the Office of
Inspector General (see story, p. 1). Four of the nation’s
five largest health plan operators are awaiting regulatory
approval to combine. And PreferredOne, the low-cost
leader on Minnesota’s exchange in 2014, opted not to
participate for 2015 after capturing 60% of the exchange’s
business (HEX 9/18/14, p. 1).
Now that carriers have more information about their
new exchange members, they have either adjusted their
rates to reflect that population or they have exited the
market. Some carriers have proposed rate hikes of more
than 50%. If insurers can’t sustain a provider network
at any rate, they have to exit some markets, says Ashraf
Shehata, KPMG’s advisory leader for health plans.
And securing low rates from provider networks is
getting more difficult as carriers enter the third year of
public exchanges, he adds. The strength of the provider
market means some health systems are able to refuse to
cut rates for products sold on exchanges, Shehata says.
They’re asking why they should make price concessions
for exchange-based products when they’re getting pretty
good pricing right now through Medicare Advantage
and traditional Medicare. Even Medicaid, in states that
expanded the program, is offering providers relief from
bad debt. “Providers are starting to stand up now and
say, ‘maybe I don’t want to take some of these conces-
sions.’ As a result, the environment is changing for rates
to start increasing.”
Will M&A Push Costs Higher?
According to the HHS report, most Americans who
signed up for coverage on the federally run health ex-
changes for 2015 had more options than they had the
prior year. A market-by-market analysis concludes that
the increased competition helped hold down the growth
in premiums. Christopher Condeluci, a principal at CC
Law & Policy in Washington, D.C., questions the timing
of the report, which was released shortly after the na-
tion’s largest carriers took steps toward consolidation.
On July 24 — a month after acquisition talks broke
down — Cigna Corp.’s board agreed to be acquired by
Anthem, Inc. in a deal valued at $54.2 billion. The pro-
posed acquisition, which is expected to face close regula-
tory scrutiny, could close by the end of 2016. Earlier in the
month, Humana Inc. agreed to be acquired by Aetna Inc.
for about $37 billion in cash and stock. A combined Aetna
Inc./Humana Inc. entity would represent a quarter of
change, he recently told HEX sister publication The AIS
Report on Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans.
The federal subsidies available to low-wage workers
through public exchanges have fueled an exodus from
the small-group market, which is expected to grow as the
definition of small-group increases to 100 or fewer em-
ployees under the Affordable Care Act. Wellthie, a health
care IT company, recently launched a decision-support
platform that it says will make it easier for health plans to
retain members by helping employers and their workers
evaluate coverage options as they transition from group
coverage to individual insurance.
Wellthie CEO Sally Poblete says if employers view
their insurance carrier as a consultative partner, their
employees are more likely to consider enrolling in indi-
vidual or group plans offered by that carrier. She notes
that while a business owner can’t require workers to
buy insurance if an employer discontinues coverage, the
employee could face a tax penalty for being uninsured. A
communication platform helps explain the penalty and
offers strategies for navigating the exchanges.
While there are differences between small-group and
individual products, she says there are many similarities
from a rating perspective. Prior to launching Wellthie
two years ago, Poblete spent eight years at Anthem, Inc.,
where she led various aspects of product development
for commercial insurance.
The group-to-individual program generates simul-
taneous quotes for small-group and individual product
options, estimates for federal subsidies and penalties,
and monthly and annual cost breakdowns for employers
and employees.
While many health plans report a shrinking small-
group market, the changing market also is an opportu-
nity, Poblete says.
Visit http://wellthie.com. G
12. 12Inside Health Insurance Exchanges August 2015
Call Bailey Sterrett at 202-775-9008, ext. 3034 for rates on bulk subscriptions or site licenses, electronic
delivery to multiple readers, and customized feeds of selective news and data…daily, weekly or whenever you need it.
Recent E-News Alerts
These items were included in E-News Alerts that were
transmitted since the last print issue of HEX was
published on July 16:
August 12, 2015
• Booz Allen Wins $202 Million Contract for
HealthCare.gov
• Vermont Exchange Cut Backlog In Half, Shumlin
Says
• Eligibility Verification for Federal Exchanges Fell
Short
• Automatic Data Processing Launches Private
Exchange
August 5, 2015
• New York Slashes Requested Exchange Rate Hikes
to 7.1%
• Most SEP Enrollees Lost or Are Losing Coverage
• Cost of Coverage Trumps Provider Choice on
Exchanges
• Nearly All CO-OPs Are In the Red
July 29, 2015
• Another CO-OP Bites the Dust
• Covered California Touts 4.2% Average Rate Hike
For 2016
• Study Shows Exchanges Were Effective at Re-
Enrollment
• Estimated 300,000 Tax Filers Paid Fine for Being
Uninsured
July 22, 2015
• Contractor Agrees to Refund $45 Million for
Maryland’s Failed Exchange
• GAO ‘Secret Shoppers’ Expose Flaws in Exchange
Eligibility Checks
• Private Exchanges Are Poised to Alter Employer-
Based Insurance
• Minnesota Exchange Rolls Back Projections
To retrieve copies of these E-News Alerts, visit HEX’s
subscriber-only Web page at AISHealth.com. If you
need a password or other assistance, please contact
AIS’s customer service department at 800-521-4323
or custserv@aishealth.com.
all members enrolled via public exchanges. Also in July,
Medicaid managed care operator Centene Corp. said
it would purchase Health Net, Inc. in a cash and stock
transaction valued at around $6.8 billion (HEX 7/15, p. 8).
“The Administration apparently wants to get out in
front of the Aetna-Humana and Anthem-Cigna merg-
ers to tamp down any perceived hysteria about reduced
competition,” Condeluci wrote in his blog.
While consolidation of the large publicly traded
health plans is certain to have an impact on the competi-
tive landscape, it isn’t likely to be severe given the com-
plementary nature of the deals, says Howard Lapsley, a
partner in Oliver Wyman Group’s Health & Life Sciences
division. “And believe it or not, there are still plans —of
all types — on the sidelines actively contemplating join-
ing the fray, or expanding, and are feeling more confident
as more information becomes available, even as the rein-
surance and risk corridor programs are set to expire,” he
says.
The merged companies will have more clout when
negotiating rates with providers, but they won’t neces-
sarily use that clout to drive rates down, says Shehata.
“What they might do instead is drive preferred provider
networks around some of their specialty products,” he
says. As health systems consolidate, they are better able
to protect their pricing power in the market. Unlike
health plans, they are combining forces to keep prices
up. Carriers that are able to replicate provider networks
across multiple products, such as Medicare Advantage,
Medicaid and exchanges, will be better positioned to cre-
ate leverage across that health system, he adds.
Other Carriers Might Fill Void
With no prior claims history, carriers had to lever-
age many assumptions when building rates for their
exchange products. In many cases these assumptions
were not realized. That led to losses and departures from
the exchange. “As the program stabilizes, carriers should
become more confident in their ability to underwrite,
which could increase competition,” says Laurie Doran,
chief financial officer at Boston Medical BMC HealthNet
Plan/Well Sense Health Plan, an insurance company
owned by Boston Medical Center that sells coverage
through the Massachusetts exchange. The company has
more than 300,000 members. Doran says if there continue
to be incentives for provider organizations to develop
health plans, there are likely to be more of them on the
exchanges. “Individuals shopping for insurance…may
find well-priced limited network offerings desirable, as
long as they are comfortable with the providers who are
available. This offers a growth opportunity for account-
able care organizations that are willing to develop insur-
ance capabilities.”
To see the Office of the Superintendent of Insurance’s
statement on the New Mexico Blues plan, visit www.osi.
state.nm.us/docs/BCBSNM.pdf.
Contact Richard Wolosz for Doran at richard.
wolosz@bmchp-wellsense.org, Lapsley at howard.
lapsley@oliverwyman.com, Bill Borden for Shehata at
wborden@kpmg.com and Perlstein at lauren_perlstein@
bcbsil.com. G
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