Wednesday, May 31, 2023

The other side of compressed premium spreads

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Wide spreads have benefits and risks

As the ACA marketplace suffered steep premium increases and Republican political assault in 2017, one of the hardest-learned lessons for policymakers was that action to reduce baseline premiums (full retail cost before subsidy) would hurt more enrollees than it helped and reduce total enrollment.

That is, reducing retail premiums also reduces premium subsidies, and in particular, reduces price spreads between the benchmark (second cheapest) silver plan, which determines the size of subsidies, and plans cheaper than the benchmark, making those plans more expensive net of subsidy.

Wednesday, May 10, 2023

Can the risk adjustment gravy train for Medicare Advantage be slowed or stopped? A conversation with Richard Kronick

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This past March, as in many Marches previous, MedPAC’s annual report to Congress found that a) the federal government is paying Medicare Advantage plans more than it would pay to cover the same enrollees in traditional, fee-for-service Medicare; b) that excess payment is widening (from 104% in 2022 to 106% this year); c) almost all the excess payment (almost 5 percentage points) stems from a risk adjustment system that enables MA plans inflating their enrollees’ risk scores, and d) the risk score gap between MA enrollees and FFS enrollees is also widening.

Sum it all up, and risk adjustment stands out as the engine by which MA is swallowing FFS Medicare. 2023 is the first year in which more Medicare enrollees are enrolled in MA than in FFS. MedPAC raises the possibility that in some counties at least FFS may no longer serve as a reliable benchmark for CMS’s capitated payment rates to MA plans. Those benchmarks - -which, according to MedPAC, also require adjustment — are the tether that hold MA provider payment rates close to those set by FFS Medicare. That tether is basically the only effective control on provider payment rates.

A modest proposal: Revenue-neutral risk adjustment in MA

MA insurers’ inflation of their enrollees’ risk scores is so obvious and pervasive that CMS is statutorily required to shave a minimum of 5.9% off of MA risk scores. It’s not enough. MedPAC estimates that in 2022 MA risk scores exceeded the scores that MA enrollees would be ascribed in FFS Medicare by 10.8%. In November 2021, Richard Kronick, a former CMS official and current professor at UCSD, and F. Michael Chua, also of UCSD, pegged the MA coding excess at 20% — almost double the MedPAC estimate — and estimated that the resulting overpayments would total $600 billion from 2023 to 2031 if not adjusted.

Sunday, April 30, 2023

High auto re-enrollment rates in the SBMs, revisited

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Horn and Hardart
Sometimes, you can do worse

My last post flagged dramatically different rates of “active” health plan renewal and autorenewal in the 33 states using the federal ACA marketplace, Healthcare.gov, compared to the 18 states (including D.C.) that run their own marketplaces. This post take a second run at whether the high autorenewal rates in the state-based marketplaces (SBMs) are problematic.

In HealthCare.gov (the “FFM,” or federally facilitated marketplace), 72% of renewals in the Open Enrollment Period 2023 were active, meaning the enrollee logged into the marketplace, updated their personal information, and affirmatively chose either to remain in last year’s plan or choose a new one. In the SBMs, just 28% of renewals were active; 72% of returning consumers were auto re-enrolled.

Auto re-enrollment can be dangerous, because 1) enrollees’ personal circumstances that affect subsidies — their income and the family members seeking coverage in the exchange — may change; 2) an enrollee’s current plan’s premium may rise in the coming year; and 3) most unpredictably, the benchmark (second cheapest silver) plan against which subsidies are set can change. If the coming year’s benchmark plan has a lower premium than the current’ year’s, subsidies shrink, since enrollees pay a fixed percentage of income for the benchmark plan. If the enrollee’s premium rises and the benchmark falls, it’s a double whammy.

I therefore presented high auto re-enrollment rates as a troubling feature of the SBMs, and maybe in some cases they are. But there are also differences in SBM and FFM practice that may make auto re-enrollment more viable for more enrollees in the SBMs.

Enrollees get better information earlier in at least some SBMs

Most strikingly, independent health insurance broker Sheron Sidbury, who serves clients both in Maryland, which runs an SBM, and Virginia, which uses HealthCare.gov, explained in a lengthy Twitter exchange that in Maryland, plans and prices are posted on October 1, well in advance of the Nov. 1 kickoff of Open Enrollment. In Maryland, Sidbury explains:

Saturday, April 22, 2023

Do the ACA's state-based marketplaces have an auto re-enrollment problem?

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active enrollment
Enrollment should be active

It has been clear since plan offerings were posted for the ACA marketplace’s second Open Enrollment Period (OEP) in fall 2014 that “auto re-enrollment” can be dangerous for enrollees.

If marketplace enrollees take no action during OEP — declining to log on and update their income and other information relevant to subsidy eligibility and subsidy size, and review available plans — HealthCare.gov or the relevant state-based marketplace will auto-enroll them in their prior year plans, tapping the IRS and other data sources to update income and other personal information. If that plan is no longer offered, the marketplace will “crosswalk” the enrollee into the nearest equivalent, e.g., a plan by the same insurer in the same metal level. If the marketplace determines that the enrollee is no longer subsidy eligible, it will enroll her with no subsidy, exposing her to hundreds of dollars per month in premiums (one month, if she fails to pay any premium in the new plan year). Disenrollment occurs only if the person logs on and initiates it — or fails to pay the monthly premium when the new plan year begins.

Even when the enrollee’s income and family composition are essentially unchanged, remaining in last year’s plan (or a substitute into which one is crosswalked) without examining this year’s options can lead to major new expense. The plan’s premium may rise significantly. Worse, if another insurer (often a new entrant into the local market) undersells last year’s benchmark plan — the second cheapest plan, against which subsides are set — subsidies may shrink, hitting an enrollee who stays in a plan with a rising premium with a double whammy. The media was full of such stories in the fall of 2014. I told one myself, about a family of 3 in Philadelphia whose premium for a silver plan would have gone from $0 to $196 per month if a navigator hadn’t provided guidance.

The problem is not new, and it hasn’t gotten any better. In fact it’s gotten worse, as narrow-network HMO plans have become prevalent at the lowest price points, and cut-rate new entrants sometime render plans with more robust networks more expensive.. Another aspect of the problem is also not new, but when when it was brought to my attention this week it rather shocked me, and it may have major policy implications.

Saturday, April 15, 2023

ACA marketplace enrollment 2021-2023: Where the growth is and isn't

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The Open Enrollment Period for the ACA marketplace in 2023 was the second OEP in which the enhanced premium subsidies created by the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) in March 2021 were in effect. The table below shows enrollment patterns at different income levels and state groupings in what we can now call the post-ARPA era (extended through 2025 by the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022).

ARPA rendered benchmark silver coverage free at incomes up to 150% of the Federal Poverty Level; removed the previous 400% FPL income cap on subsidy eligibility, capping benchmark silver premiums at 8.5% of income above that threshold; and reduced the percentage of income required to buy a benchmark silver plan at income levels in between.

A data note before diving in: In the 18 state-based exchanges (SBEs), the data for enrollment at incomes above 400% FPL appears anomalous and probably erroneous, at least in 2022, as discussed at bottom. The far right column, which combines “income unknown” and reported incomes over 400% FPL (as well as income under 100% FPL, which was grouped with income above 400% FPL as “other” in CMS’s 2021 reporting) may give some idea of enrollment patterns at high incomes in the SBEs. Enrollment at income under 100% FPL, included by necessity, shouldn’t change much: it barely changed from 2022 to 2023, accounts for 1.4% of total enrollment and just shy of 10% of enrollment in the “<100%/>400% FPL/unknown category.”

Some takeaways from the data below:

Saturday, April 08, 2023

The "upper coverage gap" in nonexpansion states has shrunk dramatically

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coverage gap

It has been gratifying if frustrating to watch the number of states that have refused to enact the ACA Medicaid expansion (after the Supreme Court rendered the expansion optional to states in 2012) dwindle from 26 in 2014 (when the ACA’s core coverage programs launched) to 10 today.*

Those ten remaining nonexpansion states include Texas and Florida — two population behemoths that between them account for more than 60% of the 1.9 million uninsured people estimated by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) to be in the “coverage gap” — eligible neither for Medicaid (available in expansion states to adults with income up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level) nor for subsidized marketplace coverage (for which eligibility begins at a minimum income of 100% FPL in nonexpansion states). The arc of Medicaid expansion history may be bending toward justice, but for the poor uninsured it’s far too long.

The American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) included an enticement to nonexpansion states to enact the expansion — a temporary but lucrative increase in the federal share of Medicaid costs for nonexpansion enrollees in any state that enacts the expansion. So far, only North Carolina has (provisionally) taken advantage of that incentive.

The lingering coverage gap, in which nearly two million uninsured adults with income below the poverty line remain mired with no federal help toward health coverage, has led some advocates to resurface an old proposal: Allow states to expand Medicaid eligibility only to incomes up to 100% FPL, rather than the statutory 138% FPL threshold now in effect in 38 states (with two more states, South Dakota and North Carolina, slated to join within the year). Such an expansion would be cheaper for states, since the federal government funds 100% of marketplace premium subsidies, versus a mere 90% of costs for Medicaid expansion enrollees. 

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

CSR takeup drops in nonexpansion states

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Texas, our largest Medicaid desert

While the 2023 Open Enrollment Period for the ACA marketplace was a success in bringing more people into coverage (total enrollment increased 12.7% nationally), my last post focused on one way in which the marketplace degraded: A lower percentage of low-income enrollees selected silver plans than in 2022, thereby forgoing the Cost Sharing Reduction (CSR) subsidies that raise silver plan value to a roughly platinum level at incomes up to 200% of the Federal Poverty Level*. CSR is available only with silver plans. In HealthCare.gov states, silver plan selection was at its lowest level ever in 2023 at incomes up to 150% FPL, and at its second-lowest level ever at incomes in the 150-200% FPL range*.

Since enrollment at low incomes is heavily concentrated in the twelve states that had not enacted the ACA Medicaid expansion as of OEP for 2023 (Nov. 1 - Jan. 15), here I want to look at the drop in CSR takeup in those twelve states. In nonexpansion states, eligibility for marketplace subsidies begins at 100% FPL, as opposed to 138% FPL in expansion states, where Medicaid is available below that threshold. The need for coverage at low income levels in nonexpansion states is particularly desperate, as those who estimate income below 100% FPL get no help at all. Enrollment in the twelve current nonexpansion states in the lowest subsidy-eligible income cohort, 100-150% FPL, has surged from 2.8 million in 2021 to 4.8 million this year.

Friday, March 24, 2023

Too many low-income ACA marketplace enrollees are forgoing high-CSR silver

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Today is the ACA’s 13th birthday, and CMS released its final enrollment report and detailed enrollment data for the 2023 Open Enrollment Period (OEP) in a celebratory vein. The good news: Enrollment nationally overall is up 13% year-over year and 36% since 2021, after two years with premiums subsidies substantially boosted by the American Rescue Plan Act of March 2021. (As I noted here when OEP was mostly completed, enrollment growth is heavily concentrated in the twelve states that had not enacted the ACA Medicaid expansion as of OEP 2023.) New enrollment increased by 21%.

In OEP 2022 — the first OEP in which there was no income cap on subsidy eligibility — enrollment growth was highest at high incomes. In marked contrast, this year it’s concentrated at low incomes. In the 33 states that use HealthCare.gov (which include all of the twelve states that haven’t expanded Medicaid), enrollment at incomes between 100% and 150% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL) increased from 32% of all enrollment in 2022 to 37% this year, rising 20.4%, from 4,640,092 in OEP 2022 to 5,588,315 million in 2023.

Thursday, March 09, 2023

Why are certain U.S. healthcare system dysfunctions not endemic in other countries? Or are they?

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I’ve just finished reading the eminent healthcare economist Uwe Reinhardt’s last and posthumously published book: Priced Out: The Economic and Ethical Costs of American Health Care. Reinhardt passed away at age 80 in November 2017; the analysis in Priced Out of the Affordable Care Act and Republicans’ failed 2017 repeal/replace attempts continues to within months of his lamented death from sepsis.

The book, a characteristically caustic and ironic overview of the politics and economics of healthcare delivery in the United States, brings into sharp focus the core themes of Reinhardt’s scholarship and writing. Key takeaways:

  • Republicans want to ration healthcare by ability to pay, but they won’t say it. The U.S. is the only developed country in the world that does not explicitly commit to providing equal access to healthcare for all (with some allowance for concierge service on a pay-for basis for the wealthy, which Reinhardt regarded as tolerable).

  • The U.S. multi-payer system, in which each insurer negotiates its own prices, is insanely wasteful. Reinhardt pegged the cost of all the wrangling between providers and payers at close to $200 billion per year.

  • It’s the prices, stupid*: Prices for medical services and drugs that are more than double norms in peer countries are also attributable in large part to our divide-and-conquer multi-payer system.

  • No single-payer soup for you, U.S.: While Reinhardt helped design a well-regarded single payer system in Taiwan, and regarded single payer as one viable model for universal healthcare, he repeatedly asserted that the U.S. political system was too corrupt to manage it: industry would use its funding leverage to demand unsustainably high payment.

While these themes were familiar to me from Reinhardt’s prior writings (e.g., regular contributions to the New York Times’ old Economix blog) a few throwaway lines made me wonder why some U.S. dysfunctions that are not solely attributable to our failure to standardize prices are not shared by peer countries, or at least not to the same degree. 

Monday, March 06, 2023

Some archaic messaging on the ACA exchanges

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Selecting a health plan in the ACA marketplace is often a ridiculously complex task. Many markets now offer dozens of plans at each metal level, widely varying in deductible and out-of-pocket maximums. In those markets a single insurer may offer six or eight or twelve plans in a given metal level, salami-slicing not only deductibles and OOP maxes, but co-pays and coinsurance for each service, and with a wide variety of services not subject to the deductible (mostly in silver and gold plans, though bronze plans often exempt some or even all doctor visits and generic drugs from the deductible). Cross-cutting these varieties in payment design are wide differences in network adequacy

CMS and various state exchanges (e.g., Washington’s) are moving to rein in this metastasizing of “choice,” introducing standardized plans, and limiting the number of nonstandard plans insurers can offer. In the meantime, decision-support tools and messaging on the online exchanges can help, or fail to help, optimize choice.

That’s especially true for the single most consequential choice for more than half of enrollees: whether to select a silver plan and so avail themselves of the Cost Sharing Reduction (CSR) benefit that attaches to silver plans, and only silver plans, for low-income enrollees — those with income up to 250% of the Federal Poverty Level.