Kevin Drum has led me, indirectly, to an interesting fact about the ACA marketplace: the coverage in private plans sold there is not as skimpy as people tend to assume.
In a post published today, Kevin considers a Blue Cross Blue Shield analysis of their large ACA marketplace customer base. BCBS finds that marketplace enrollees on average are sicker and access more care than pre-ACA customers in the individual market, and also, to a lesser extent, than enrollees in employer-sponsored insurance (ESI).
Drum's response is basically hurrah -- people who were previously shut out of the individual market based on their medical history are now accessing the care they need (and insurers knew that they would be needier than existing customers in both markets; they just underestimated how much).
Drum notes that the health gap is much narrower between marketplace enrollees and those with ESI than between marketplace enrollees and those in the pre-ACA individual market. He then wonders:
In a post published today, Kevin considers a Blue Cross Blue Shield analysis of their large ACA marketplace customer base. BCBS finds that marketplace enrollees on average are sicker and access more care than pre-ACA customers in the individual market, and also, to a lesser extent, than enrollees in employer-sponsored insurance (ESI).
Drum's response is basically hurrah -- people who were previously shut out of the individual market based on their medical history are now accessing the care they need (and insurers knew that they would be needier than existing customers in both markets; they just underestimated how much).
Drum notes that the health gap is much narrower between marketplace enrollees and those with ESI than between marketplace enrollees and those in the pre-ACA individual market. He then wonders:
Oddly, the BCBS report concludes that Obamacare enrollees used more medical services and ran up higher bills compared to those in employer plans. That's a little hard to make sense of, since Obamacare enrollees are no sicker than average and generally have higher deductibles and copays than people in employer plans, which should motivate them to use fewer medical services. One possibility is that this is related to heart disease, the one area where Obamacare enrollees really do seem to be sicker than average. Another possibility is that this is a one-time thing: lots of people had been putting off medical care, and when Obamacare kicked in they spent the next year or two making up for it.Drum is not wrong in asserting that Obamacare enrollees on average "have higher deductibles and copays than people in employer plans" if you include those who buy ACA-compliant plans outside the marketplace, as the BCBS study does. Within the marketplace, however, it's only marginally true. And among the 83% of marketplace enrollees who receive subsidies, it's not true at all [updated 3/31 -- more below].