Health insurers warn of higher premiums without coronavirus funding

Health insurers warn of higher premiums without coronavirus funding

Health insurance companies and employers are lobbying Congress for financial help, warning that COVID-19 treatment and testing may lead to large premium increases next year.

Companies are asking Congress to fund a program in future coronavirus bills that would help insurers and other employers with the high cost of claims associated with the pandemic.

“Without a doubt, employers are facing significant unknowns with regards to the COVID-19 crisis, while at the same time they themselves are under financial stress,” said Ilyse Schuman, senior vice president for health policy at the American Benefits Council, which mostly represents large companies that “self-fund" their health plans instead of buying private insurance for their employees.

“They’ll be left with no option but to pass costs along to employees in the form of higher premiums next year,” she added. “That’s really why we’re asking Congress to step in and protect employer-sponsored coverage.”

The pandemic has injected uncertainty into the health care system as insurers begin thinking about what they will set premiums at for next year. It is not known how long the outbreak will last or how many people will need to be tested or hospitalized.

One analysis estimates insurers and employers could face $34 billion to $251 billion in costs related to COVID-19 testing, treatment and care.

The analysis, commissioned by Covered California, the state’s insurance marketplace, said premiums for private plans could increase as much as 40 percent next year from COVID-19 costs alone, depending on how many Americans need testing and treatment.

At greatest risk for premium increases are the 61 percent of workers who are insured through self-funded plans, in which employers — usually large companies — pay the health care costs of their workers instead of buying insurance for them.

Those plans aren’t subject to the same annual rate reviews by state regulators as other plans. High COVID-19 costs could also lead to pay cuts or stagnant wages as employers struggle not only with a slowing economy but high health care costs if their workers get sick.

Some 170 million people in the U.S. are privately insured, with coverage through either their jobs or markets where Affordable Care Act (ACA) plans are sold.

The American Benefits Council is asking Congress to fund reinsurance or risk corridor programs aimed at stabilizing premiums through payments from the federal government.

“This is an urgent need Congress needs to address,” Schuman said.

Talk of potential premium increases comes at a time when employer-sponsored insurance is becoming more costly for workers and businesses.

Out-of-pocket costs, including premiums and deductibles, have outpaced inflation and increases in wages for several years now.

An analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation found employer plans in 2018 paid an average of $20,292 for hospital admissions of patients with serious pneumonia, an illness with some similarities to coronavirus.

America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), the leading trade group for insurance companies, and Blue Cross Blue Shield Association urged congressional leaders in a letter last week to provide temporary “federal risk mitigation programs to support the financial stability of plans that incur extraordinary, unplanned costs in 2020 and 2021 due to COVID-19.”

However, some health experts argue insurers aren’t necessarily losing money due to COVID-19. While thousands of people are getting treated and tested for the virus, most states have postponed nonessential surgeries, like knee and hip replacements, to make room at hospitals for coronavirus patients.


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