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“Bare-bones” employer health insurance plans coming thanks to #ObamaCare
Sister Toldjah Blog ^ | May 20, 2013

Posted on 05/22/2013 3:23:15 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

The Wall Street Journal reports on what National Review Online’s Veronique de Rugy calls one more in the law of ”unintended consequences” to the implementation of our President’s “signature law” – ObamaCare (via Memeorandum -bolded emphasis added by me):

"Employers are increasingly recognizing they may be able to avoid certain penalties under the federal health law by offering very limited plans that can lack key benefits such as hospital coverage.

Benefits advisers and insurance brokers—bucking a commonly held expectation that the law would broadly enrich benefits—are pitching these low-benefit plans around the country. They cover minimal requirements such as preventive services, but often little more. Some of the plans wouldn’t cover surgery, X-rays or prenatal care at all. Others will be paired with limited packages to cover additional services, for instance, $100 a day for a hospital visit.

Federal officials say this type of plan, in concept, would appear to qualify as acceptable minimum coverage under the law, and let most employers avoid an across-the-workforce $2,000-per-worker penalty for firms that offer nothing. Employers could still face other penalties they anticipate would be far less costly.

It is unclear how many employers will adopt the strategy, but a handful of companies have signed on and an industry is sprouting around the tactic. More than a dozen brokers and benefit-administrators in 10 states said they were discussing the strategy with their clients.

“There had to be a way out” of the penalty for employers with low-wage workers, said Todd Dorton, a consultant and broker for Gallagher Benefit Services Inc., a unit of Arthur J. Gallagher & Co., who has enrolled several employers in the limited plans.

Pan-American Life Insurance Group Inc. has promoted a package including bare-bones plans, according to brokers in California, Kansas and other states and company documents. Carlo Mulvenna, an executive at New Orleans-based Pan-American, confirmed the firm is developing these types of products, and said it would adjust them as regulators clarify the law.

The idea that such plans would be allowable under the law has emerged only recently. Some benefits advisers still feel they could face regulatory uncertainty. The law requires employers with 50 or more workers to offer coverage to their workers or pay a penalty. Many employers and benefits experts have understood the rules to require robust insurance, covering a list of “essential” benefits such as mental-health services and a high percentage of workers’ overall costs. Many employers, particularly in low-wage industries, worry about whether they—or their workers—can afford it.

But a close reading of the rules makes it clear that those mandates affect only plans sponsored by insurers that are sold to small businesses and individuals, federal officials confirm. That affects only about 30 million of the more than 160 million people with private insurance, including 19 million people covered by employers, according to a Citigroup Inc. report. Larger employers, generally with more than 50 workers, need cover only preventive services, without a lifetime or annual dollar-value limit, in order to avoid the across-the-workforce penalty."

What.a.surprise. Not. Hate to say “Toldjah So” but in this instance its well-worth reminding people. Heck, most of us “Toldjah So” with respect to this law long before it passed via lots of strong-arming and the backroom arm twisting and political promises that candidate Obama, when first running for the highest office in the land, told us he couldn’t stand – tactics he would seek to “change.” Riiiight.

All that glitters is not gold and, in fact, you didn’t even have to read the fine print in the “Affordable Care Act” to figure out what a monstrous, disastrous, unhealthy law this was for our nation and its people. Hours are being cut, full time employee status types are changing to part time, jobs are being lost, employer plan coverages all across the country are changing to either being unaffordable or worthless to the average workaday Jane and Joe, and no in many instances people have NOT been able to KEEP THEIR PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIANS as a result of the passage of this law – one of the biggest whoppers told about this bill early on by its proponents. Employer health plan offerings as we know them are changing – and not for the better. This is, of course, in keeping with our President and his party’s ultimate goal: single payer health care coverage.

You got what you asked for, 51%. Too bad the rest of us have to suffer long-term for your woefully ill-informed decision to not only vote our celebrity President in the first time, but also for being clueless enough to turn around and do it again.

Will they ever learn?


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Conspiracy; Government; Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS: insurance; medicine; obama; obamacare
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1 posted on 05/22/2013 3:23:15 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Yeah, it doesn’t cover any of that stuff, but we are forced to purchase contraception/abortifacient coverage that we don’t want, cannot use, and isn’t medical care.


2 posted on 05/22/2013 3:39:19 AM PDT by Dr. Sivana (There's no salvation in politics.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

This isn’t all bad. The sooner people start paying for their own health care the sooner prices and practice will become reasonable.


3 posted on 05/22/2013 3:46:02 AM PDT by freedomfiter2 (Brutal acts of commission and yawning acts of omission both strengthen the hand of the devil.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
There are small companies with less than 50 employees that are bursting at the seams, growing even in this economy. They're being held back by fear of untenable financial consequences of this healthcare fiasco. Small companies typically do not have as many benefits as larger one in general, and this extends to group medical insurance plans. I'm in just that situation. Smaller companies that do this are going to lose their best, most qualified, key employees if an already barebones major medical plan with high deductible is further reduced to some sort of glorified health maintenance plan with no hospitalization. Bad move. They'll rue the day.
4 posted on 05/22/2013 3:46:37 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: freedomfiter2

You must not yet be at the stage of life where a lengthy hospital stay becomes more of a possibility, and would bankrupt even individuals with decent assets and savings.


5 posted on 05/22/2013 3:49:06 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: freedomfiter2
The sooner people start paying for their own health care the sooner prices and practice will become reasonable.

Yeah, it's called a free market. You want medical treatment, pay out of pocket, or buy insurance if you think you won't be able to afford a big ticket item. Or die. In a free market you get to buy or not. In fascism you are threatened with fines and jail if you fail to pay the government-industry complex.

6 posted on 05/22/2013 3:55:56 AM PDT by Sirius Lee (All that is required for evil to advance is for government to do "something")
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Carlo Mulvenna, an executive at New Orleans-based Pan-American ..

Color me mucho skeptical

7 posted on 05/22/2013 4:04:54 AM PDT by tomkat
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To: Sirius Lee
Yeah, it's called a free market. You want medical treatment, pay out of pocket, or buy insurance if you think you won't be able to afford a big ticket item. Or die. In a free market you get to buy or not. In fascism you are threatened with fines and jail if you fail to pay the government-industry complex.

My guess is many Americans will end up paying for both Obamacare and out-of-pocket care. In order to get decent healthcare they will be forced to pay out of their own pockets. Meanwhile, they will be forced in to Obamacare where the money paid provides care to illegal immigrants, welfare Moms and shot up drug dealers.

8 posted on 05/22/2013 4:06:49 AM PDT by Senator_Blutarski
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To: RegulatorCountry

I’m almost there, but we can’t go on with medical costs going up %10 a year. The reason we’re in this mess is having too many people purchasing medical care with other people’s money. It has too stop somewhere and I’m willing to suffer to do that.


9 posted on 05/22/2013 4:13:21 AM PDT by freedomfiter2 (Brutal acts of commission and yawning acts of omission both strengthen the hand of the devil.)
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To: Senator_Blutarski
We're headed for 2 tier Health Care...No doubt about it!.....Government run “Free” butcher shops and “Private for pay” health organizations for those that want and can afford it....Ray Charles could see this coming
10 posted on 05/22/2013 4:22:15 AM PDT by M-cubed
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To: freedomfiter2

Paying for Health care that does not include hospital stays or surgery is not paying for health care. It’s giving gravy money to Insurance Company’s.

It’s like buying car insurance that only covers a scratch and wont replace a fender.


11 posted on 05/22/2013 4:28:35 AM PDT by Venturer
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To: freedomfiter2

“The sooner people start paying for their own health care the sooner prices and practice will become reasonable.”

You’re absolutely correct. medical infrastructure, much like higher education infrastructure, has been built around an endless supply of government money being available.

When the consumer must pay for it, they will go for best value to them and the system will necessarily collapse under the burden of it’s unsustainable weight.

It is, to be sure, a bit tough on the folks in need of the more advanced medical are in the interim, but over the long run, it’s the only way to get the best medical care for the most people for a reasonable cost.

The problem is the government promises that people have gotten used to hearing and believing.

Aligning services, facilities, and costs with peoples ability to pay for it themselves is the only way to assure a long-term medical capability. Somewhere in there some form of medical insurance factors in, but not the way people are used to it doing so now.


12 posted on 05/22/2013 4:39:30 AM PDT by RFEngineer
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To: Dr. Sivana

They want to promote death. That means fewer people they have to “insure.”

If my wife gets pregnant any time in the future, the chances are high that our child won’t get the same level of care we did when we were born over 30 years ago. To boot, the chance of my wife dying during delivery could be higher than the last 30 years, as evidenced by the increase of both infant mortality and perinatal complications in women over in the UK under their disgusting system.


13 posted on 05/22/2013 4:47:06 AM PDT by rarestia (It's time to water the Tree of Liberty.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Cut out all the coverage except catastrophic care, pay less for less coverage, and Obama and the Democrats will crow that they “brought down the cost of health care”.....very shrewd of them. Better start saving up for those tens of thousands of charges now if you have to go to the hospital for something extremely serious.

ObamaCare will put the nail in coffin of the fake economic recovery that Wall St. and ObamaBots have been touting since June 2009.


14 posted on 05/22/2013 4:58:01 AM PDT by txrefugee
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

“You got what you asked for, 51%. Too bad the rest of us have to suffer long-term for your woefully ill-informed decision to not only vote our celebrity President in the first time, but also for being clueless enough to turn around and do it again.”
I actually think the election was stolen the second time...that I am convinced of with the IRS scandal. The celebrity presidork will impose his hate on us, even if it means our complete demise.


15 posted on 05/22/2013 5:01:18 AM PDT by oust the louse (You need your parents signature to go on a school field trip but not to get an abortion.)
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To: freedomfiter2

Had a patient show up in the ER yesterday DEMANDING an MRI of her neck. Has a chronic condition, recently got a little worse, but nothing emergent. NO insurance, followed by an orthopedic surgeon. Told her to go to her ortho and have it arranged. “ I don’t have the money so I came here”. People thing everything we do in the ER is free, and an entitlement. I am sick of seeing people who are demanding, want care, free medicine, a meal, and a damn cab ride home, treat the staff like their servants and don’t pay us a fricking penny. The sick part is the idiot hospital caters to it, terrified it’s “patient satisfaction” numbers will suffer if we don’t provide it all. Thank God I am at the tail end of my career, and knock on wood I have an escape hatch for the next two years....


16 posted on 05/22/2013 5:19:13 AM PDT by Kozak (The Republic is dead. I do not owe what we have any loyalty, wealth or sympathy.)
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To: M-cubed

That same model already exists in Europe, India and other places with “socialized” medicine. The public facilities are abysmal. The private ones where you pay for care out of pocket rival American private hospitals.


17 posted on 05/22/2013 5:21:41 AM PDT by tbw2
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To: freedomfiter2
I’m almost there, but we can’t go on with medical costs going up %10 a year. The reason we’re in this mess is having too many people purchasing medical care with other people’s money. It has too stop somewhere and I’m willing to suffer to do that.

Let's look at this from a different perspective - one that I consider the right perspective, even though it is rarely articulated.

Accepting your number that medical costs are going up 10% per year, that is a VERY good thing if we are getting what we pay for. Look at the economy as a whole, and imagine it is growing at 2% per year real growth with medical costs 20% of the economy. What is the best place to spend that extra wealth?

Should we spend that extra money on more trinkets from China?

Should we spend that extra money on more restaurant meals with larger portions and double desserts?

Personally, I think the best possible place to spend that money, where I would choose to spend that money from my own wallet, is on improved medical care.

We are not spending a lot more for the same checkup on the sniffles. We are in most cases spending a lot more for medicines that treat conditions that used to require surgery. We are in most cases spending a lot more for surgeries that treat conditions that used to be crippling or fatal. We are in most cases spending a lot more for devices that allow my father to remain mobile despite his knee damage in Korea, and allow my mother to see despite a condition that would have blinded her just a decade ago. That is a VERY good use of our money. What ObamaCare will do is stifle that innovation, so that we will find few new treatments, just cheaper alternatives to existing treatments. I rather like the idea of curing conditions that are currently crippling or fatal, and I'm willing to pay more to get more.

There are areas where medical effort is being wasted and costs are non-productive, but they are mostly due to excessive government intrusion or perverse insurance incentives. If we can reform malpractice - get rid of the frivolous lawsuits - we can cut the wasteful medical spending. If we can reduce the frivolous record keeping requirements, we can cut wasteful spending. If we can return to insurance as coverage for major, unexpected expenses instead of comprehensive coverage of sniffles check ups, birth control for party girls, and any other service on demand, consumers will have an incentive to control costs. But the idea that more government involvement will improve quality and cut costs strikes me as optimistic to the point of absurdity.

18 posted on 05/22/2013 5:41:28 AM PDT by RogerD (Educaiton Profesionul)
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To: RegulatorCountry

> You must not yet be at the stage of life where a lengthy hospital stay becomes more of a possibility, and would bankrupt even individuals with decent assets and savings.

Definitely one of the scarier aspects of life when you start getting up in years and realize its not a matter of if but when. I have seen friends of mine have one heart attack eat up their savings up in one fell swoop even when they had healthcare coverage. To imagine that you spent all those years savings and then BAM gone. Your backup funds out the door. It’s very scary.


19 posted on 05/22/2013 5:54:49 AM PDT by jsanders2001
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To: jsanders2001
My simple solution? Diagnose everyone over 50 with Type II diabetes, and give them a copy of "Eat to Live" by Joel Fuhrman. Anecdotally speaking, it worked for me. I knew I was overweight and not eating right, with a fondness for Coke Classic.

When my doctor gave me the news last October, it was a "holy $hit" moment. It was the kick in the rear that I needed.

My next followup is in 2-3 weeks. My goal is to get the cholesterol down to where I no longer need medication (Crestor). I was on diabetes medication for 3 months, but that was no longer needed after I made significant changes in diet and exercise.

For my birthday two weeks ago, my daughter included a few pictures of me from Father's Day 2012, as well as a few more recent photos. The comparison was striking: I looked like the Pillsbury Doughboy before I changed. I'm not there yet, my goal is to get down to 180, about my weight when I was in my 20s.

20 posted on 05/22/2013 6:06:11 AM PDT by Night Hides Not (The Tea Party was the earthquake, and Chick Fil A the tsunami...100's of aftershocks to come.)
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