Thousands of people in the high-risk pool will get better coverage at lower prices, thanks to Obamacare.
At year’s end, Texas will shut down its high-risk insurance pool for some of the state’s sickest residents, pushing participants to find private coverage in the federal health insurance marketplace created under the federal Affordable Care Act. And patient advocates say those participants should focus on making the transition sooner rather than later to ensure that they don’t experience a lapse in coverage or lose access to current health care providers and services.
“Pool policyholders who are in the middle of treatment will especially need to be sure the network offered by their replacement health plan includes their treatment team,” Steven Browning, executive director of the Texas Health Insurance Pool, said in an email.
The high-risk pool is financed mainly by patient premiums and assessments paid by health insurance companies and HMOs, along with some funding from federal grant programs. Since 1998, it has provided high-priced coverage to Texans with pre-existing conditions who can’t find coverage elsewhere. The state has deemed the high-risk pool obsolete, as the Affordable Care Act prohibits insurance companies participating in the federal marketplace, which launched on Oct. 1, from denying coverage to Texans with pre-existing conditions. Gov. Rick Perry signed Senate Bill 1367 in June, scheduling the pool’s abolishment.
The pool will close Jan. 1, and the 23,000 people currently participating in the pool must sign up for coverage on the insurance exchange by Dec. 15 or find coverage elsewhere to avoid a lapse in care.
[…]
With many of the health plan options in the federal marketplace being cheaper than the high-risk pool and covering additional benefits, Stacey Pogue, a senior policy analyst for the left-leaning Center for Public Policy Priorities, said the situation presents an opportunity for Texans in the pool.
“I think that people are going to have many more options and many better options in the marketplace than they do in the health pool today,” Pogue said. “There is not going to be a person who will be better off financially outside the pool than they would be if the pool stayed open.”
As a condition of the pool, Texans generally pay twice the market rate for coverage, said Pogue. They’ll probably see their health care costs halved in the marketplace, she said, because insurers aren’t allowed to charge people with pre-existing conditions more than other consumers. The marketplace also offers tax credits to help purchase a health plan to everyone who makes 100 percent to 400 percent of the federal poverty line — $11,490 to $45,960 annual income for an individual or $22,550 to $94,200 for a family of four.
Pogue said health plans offered in the federal marketplace could also raise the level of care patients receive, as they must cover “essential health benefits,” some of which, such as maternity care, aren’t covered in the pool.
She doesn’t expect there to be major issues with people meeting the Dec. 15 deadline either, she said, because many high-risk pool policyholders have health conditions that require them to deal with their health insurance on a consistent basis and are more likely to interact with their health care provider.
Remember, if Ted Cruz had his way, all of these people would be worse off today. Note that since the high-risk pool has been shut down, they wouldn’t be able to get any coverage at all if the “defund Obamacare” hostage-taking had succeeded. Given that in the end, every Texas Republican voted against the debt ceiling/CR deal, you can plausibly state that every single Texas Republican in Congress voted to take health insurance away from each of these 23,000 people. Note to Wendy Davis, Battleground Texas, et al: You really need to make sure you reach out to each of these people and let them know that. ThinkProgress and Juanita have more.
I recently finished a blog that that took a look at all the lies that are being told about the AHCA and looked at the history of the Tea Party to explain why the are so vitriolic about the subject. I also included a segment on what not having the AHCA has cot the country, including 45,000 unnecessary deaths a year and a big party of the real estate collapse. Check it out at http://brianebaxter.com/