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Displaying results 1 - 25 of 65 for health insurance rate review. Subscribe to this search

  1. article The premise and promise of health insurance rate review in Ariz.

    Wednesday, April 25, 2012 3:45 pm

    Ask Arizonans about their health care concerns and — overwhelmingly — they will say they are worried about how much their health insurance costs and whether they will continue to be able to afford it.

    2 image(s) 5 article(s)

  • article Brown/Karnas: The promise of health insurance rate review in Arizona

    Tuesday, April 17, 2012 11:02 am

    Ask Arizonans about their health care concerns and — overwhelmingly — they will say they are worried about how much their health insurance costs and whether they will continue to be able to afford it.

    1 image(s)

  • article Arizona health insurance rate requests to come under federal review

    Friday, August 5, 2011 8:26 pm

    WASHINGTON – The federal government will start reviewing proposed health-insurance rate increases in Arizona next month, after determining that the state has an “ineffective” rate-review plan.

    Arizona is one of 10 states where a proposed premium increase of 10 percent or more for individual or small-business coverage will be subject to review by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services beginning Sept. 1.

    The federal oversight is part of the health-care reform act that was signed into law in March 2010. It calls for Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to review rates above the “trigger” of 10 percent and for companies “to publicly disclose the proposed increases and the justification for them.”

    The department will not be able to halt any proposed rate hikes, it will only be able to require that the insurer provide additional justification. The goal is to make increases more transparent and easier for consumers to understand, said a department spokesman.

    But state officials and insurance executives in Arizona doubt that federal involvement will do anything except add a layer of bureaucracy.

    “Generally, when the government involves itself, it doesn’t end well,” said Matt Benson, a spokesman for Gov. Jan Brewer. He said the governor believes “it is better to leave matters of private insurance to private industry.”

    That is largely what the state does now.

    Currently, insurers are required to file any rate-increase requests with the Arizona Department of Insurance, giving reasons for the proposed higher rates. The department, like the feds, does not have the power to reject any proposed increases, no matter how high.

    Diane Brown of the Arizona Public Interest Research Group welcomed the federal intervention in Arizona, saying it will lead companies to “justify their increases” and “reduce inefficient and ineffective costs.”

    She believes federal oversight will let Arizona consumers see rate numbers disclosed for the first time and provide an “apples to apples” look at available coverage.

    “Consumers should be able to compare costs themselves, but when information is not readily available or in terms easy to understand, or when there aren’t direct comparisons, it makes it much more challenging for the average consumer to know what the best option would be,” Brown said.

    “If the state isn’t providing it, we appreciate that the federal government will,” she said.

    But John Rothstein, a broker who owns Arizona Benefits Advantage, is not confident that federal involvement will make any drastic changes for consumers. He does not believe that showing consumers why a company has chosen to increase its rates will change their minds.

    “I doubt consumers are going to feel any reassurance that that’s OK,” Rothstein said, referring to premiums that are justified in federal filings.

    Rothstein and Ruthann Laswick of Black Gould and Associates both see the benefit in government oversight, but would prefer state-level regulation.

    Laswick fears the federal government cannot have an accurate idea of what each individual state is dealing with and will not be able to determine how companies should set premiums.

    “They cannot possibly be experts in all 50 states,” she said. “We don’t know that they’re going to look at it at a state-by-state level.”

    Robert Zirkelbach, a spokesman for America’s Health Insurance Plans, believes federal oversight will not get to the root causes of health-care cost increases.

    He said rising medical costs are not enough of the health-care reform conversation and that rate review is just another way “to ignore the harder decision of rising medical costs.”

    Because the feds lack the local market knowledge that state governments provide, Zirkelbach said, reviews are “going to add more complexity and costs for consumers.”

    He said these review regulations need to be “an objective actuarial analysis” and not a “duplicative layer of rate review out of Washington."

    Maggie Pingolt is a reporter for Cronkite News Service.

  • article Agency hears testimony on insurance rates

    Tuesday, May 22, 2012 5:23 pm

    Last week, the Arizona Department of Insurance held public meetings on its proposed health insurance rate review rulemaking in Tucson, Phoenix and Flagstaff. Public health and consumer groups testified to the need for increased transparency and consumer involvement in the rate review process.

  • article Brown: A health insurance vote to pay attention to in October

    Monday, September 24, 2012 7:30 am

    While many Arizonans are determining how they will vote in November’s election, a vote will soon be taken in Arizona that can impact how we learn about health insurance rate increases.

    1 image(s)

  • article High court rejects quick review of health care law

    Monday, April 25, 2011 7:07 am

     

  • article A rate hike for the few — until it's you

    Sunday, February 14, 2010 5:34 pm

    To critics, a 39 percent hike in health insurance for some Californians foretells skyrocketing rates for the rest of us. Not so, says the company, arguing the increase only hits a relatively small number of people and the economy is to blame.

    2 image(s)

  • article Hurricane recovery confronts low literacy rate

    Tuesday, August 26, 2008 11:19 pm

    NEW ORLEANS - Marsha Williams had always hesitated when mail arrived from the government. After Hurricane Katrina, she began to fear the letters.

  • article Health care reform finally on horizon

    Saturday, July 25, 2009 3:07 pm

    When my neighbor, who operates a small business, had a stroke, the first thing that came to mind as paramedics wheeled him away was, "Does he have health insurance?"

  • article Diabetes rate doubles over 10 years, US says

    Thursday, October 30, 2008 12:05 pm

    ATLANTA - The rate of new diabetes cases nearly doubled in the United States in the last 10 years, with the highest levels in the South, the government said Thursday in its first state-by-state review of new diagnoses.

  • article Choice looms for Brewer on Obamacare health exchange

    Tuesday, November 13, 2012 2:55 pm

    Gov. Jan Brewer is being pulled one way by major business groups and another by fellow conservatives as she faces a fast-approaching deadline to decide whether to implement a key part of the federal health care law.

    1 image(s)

  • article Moderate Dems pivotal in health care vote

    Saturday, November 21, 2009 12:21 am

    WASHINGTON — Suitably opaque, Section 2006 takes up only a few dozen lines in a sweeping health care bill that runs to 2,074 pages and mentions neither Sen. Mary Landrieu nor her state of Louisiana.

    2 image(s)

  • article Despite health-care reform, AZ powerless to regulate premiums

    Monday, August 16, 2010 5:46 pm

    Arizona is getting $1 million from the federal government “to help crack down on unreasonable health insurance premium hikes.’’

  • article What will employers do when health reforms kick in?

    Sunday, June 26, 2011 11:00 am

    Several studies have snaked across the health policy landscape in recent weeks making assorted predictions about what employers will do after health reforms kick in come 2014.

    One early June report based on a consulting firm's survey of 1,300 firms found that 30 percent expected to stop sponsoring a health plan after the national system of health exchanges is begun.

    That phone survey was denounced by many reform supporters in and out of Congress, who noted it was based on a survey taken after questioners "educated" the respondents on details of the health plan.

    Other earlier surveys that relied on more detailed sampling have reported a much smaller response from employers, and the consulting firm later conceded its work was a survey of attitudes more than a predictive analysis of economic behavior.

    The reform law actually penalizes larger firms that drop health plans for their workers -- if their workers get subsidized coverage from the health exchanges. And the new law also offers some tax incentives for small firms to provide coverage.

    Several other reports issued in mid-June also looked at the employer coverage problem.

    One study from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation noted that only about 61 percent of non-elderly Americans got health care coverage through an employer in 2009, down from 69 percent in 2000, and suggested that many who lost workplace coverage either turned to public insurance programs or had no coverage as the country entered recession.

    And a study from the Urban Institute concluded that the health insurance changes would result in significant savings for firms with fewer than 60 workers, and would likely lead to about a 10 percent increase in the share of firms with 100 or fewer employees offering such coverage.

    But coverage numbers mask another problem with employer-sponsored plans that may not be resolved by the reform plan -- workers are paying a much bigger share of premium increases relative to the overall rise in health costs paid for employer-sponsored plants in the past decade.

    Data released by the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality showed that average annual premium shares for workers rose by as much as 121 percent between 2001 and 2009.

    The worker share of the average annual premium for an employee-plus-one plan rose 121 percent, from $1,070 to $2,363 over the 8 years, while the total cost for the plans rose by 66 percent, from $5,463 to $9,053.

    Workers' share for a family plan rose 100 percent, from $1,741 to $3,474, while the total cost went up 74 percent, from $7,509 to $13,027. And workers with single coverage saw their premium share go up 92 percent, from $498 to $957, while the total cost of the plan went up by 62 percent, from $2,889 to $4,669.

    It's not clear how much the health reform law will be able to do toward holding down costs in employer-sponsored plans. The law sets up a review process for any "unreasonable" annual premium increase - defined excessive, unjustified or unfairly discriminatory, or as more than 10 percent for now, with some lower thresholds allowed state-by-state.

    However, the law gives neither federal health regulators nor state insurance commissioners any specific powers to block any rate increase - only a pulpit that they can use to force insurers to publicly justify an increase.

    If the Centers for Medicaid and Medicaid Services, which is administering the reforms, decides a rate increase is unreasonable, the insurer can withdraw it, reduce it (subject to further review) or move ahead with the "unreasonable" increase while submitting a final justification to regulators. CMS would post the decision on its website.

    Some state insurance commissioners do have powers under state law to block rate increases, but employer-sponsored plans that are "self-insured" or self-funded, or that operate in multiple states under federal rules, may not be subject to this regulation.

  • article High court upholds key part of Obama health law

    Thursday, June 28, 2012 7:31 am

    WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Thursday upheld virtually all of President Barack Obama's historic health care overhaul, including the hotly debated core requirement that nearly every American have health insurance.

    2 image(s)

  • article High court upholds key part of Obama health law

    Thursday, June 28, 2012 7:31 am

    WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Thursday upheld virtually all of President Barack Obama's historic health care overhaul, including the hotly debated core requirement that nearly every American have health insurance.

    2 image(s)

  • article Cancer fighter loses coverage

    Monday, January 29, 2007 1:06 am

    After surgery to remove ovarian tumors and four rounds of chemotherapy, Tanya Serrano was looking toward a hysterectomy and, all things considered, feeling pretty lucky. But days after Health Net of Arizona approved the Chandler woman’s surgery, the insurance company canceled and rescinded her policy.

    2 image(s)

  • article Ambulance fees might get higher

    Friday, December 5, 2003 8:42 am

    Valley ambulance providers want the state to approve the first rate hike in more than a decade as part of a proposal to help offset financial losses in the industry.

  • article 6 things to ask before booking a summer vacation

    Friday, May 3, 2013 9:12 am

    It’s May. Memorial Day and the end of the school year are in sight. Suddenly, you’re thinking about a summer vacation. A little advance planning — and some insider tips — can save you a lot of money. Whether you’re booking airfare, a car rental or a hotel room, there are questions you should ask first.

    1 image(s)

  • article 6 things to ask before booking a summer vacation

    Saturday, May 11, 2013 6:00 am

    NEW YORK — It's May. Memorial Day and the end of the school year are in sight. Suddenly, you're thinking about a summer vacation. A little advance planning — and some insider tips — can save you a lot of money. Whether you're booking airfare, a car rental or a hotel room, there are questions you should ask first.

    2 image(s)

  • article Ruling backs partial workers' comp payments

    Saturday, October 2, 2010 7:00 am

    Private companies that treat patients with work-related injuries aren’t automatically entitled to get paid the amount they submit in bills, the Arizona Court of Appeals has ruled.

  • article New report: State Medicaid program pays $50M annually on care for ineligible patients

    Friday, June 8, 2012 6:30 am

    Arizona’s Medicaid program is paying out up to an extra $50 million a year to provide care for those who are ineligible, a new report says.

  • article Teachers at Arizona's religious schools could lose unemployment benefits

    Wednesday, April 10, 2013 5:21 pm

    Hundreds of teachers at religious schools around the state could soon be at risk of being laid off with no prospect of collecting jobless benefits.

  • article New report: State Medicaid program pays $50M annually on care for ineligible patients

    Friday, June 8, 2012 6:30 am

    Arizona’s Medicaid program is paying out up to an extra $50 million a year to provide care for those who are ineligible, a new report says.

  • article Options fewer as Arizona weighs Medicaid decision

    Sunday, December 16, 2012 10:46 am

    It's almost a case of starting over for Gov. Jan Brewer as she weighs whether to ask legislators to provide government-paid health coverage to hundreds of thousands of additional low-income Arizonans.

    1 image(s)

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