|
Affordable Care Act Helps Fight
Unreasonable Health Insurance Premium Increases
New
rules bring transparency, lower costs to consumers by requiring review
of large insurance rate hikes
Today, The Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) issued a final regulation to ensure
that large health insurance premium increases will be thoroughly
reviewed, and consumers will have access to clear information about
those increases. Combined with other important protections from the
Affordable Care Act, these new rules will help lower insurance costs by
moderating premium hikes and provide consumers with greater value for
their premium dollar. In 2011, this will mean rate increases of
10-percent or more must be reviewed by state or federal officials.
"Effective rate review works
– it does so by protecting consumers from unreasonable rate
increases and bringing needed transparency to the marketplace," said
HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. "During the past year we have worked
closely with states to strengthen their ability to review, revise or
reject unreasonable rate hikes. This final rule helps build on that
partnership to protect consumers."
Starting September 1, 2011,
the rule requires independent experts to scrutinize any proposed
increase of 10-percent for most individual and small group health
insurance plans. States will have the primary responsibility for
reviewing rate increases. While most states will take on this
responsibility, HHS will serve in a backup role in states that
don’t have the resources or authority to review rates. HHS
has awarded $44 million in Affordable Care Act grants to states to help
strengthen their oversight capabilities. An additional $200 million
will continue to be available to states under the Act.
Starting September 2012, the
10-percent threshold will be replaced by state-specific thresholds that
reflect the insurance and health care cost trends in each state. The
final rule clarifies that HHS will work with states in developing these
thresholds.
Publication of the final rule
comes as health insurance companies have reported some of their highest
profits in years. One cause for these profits is that actual medical
costs are growing more slowly than what insurance companies projected
when they set their 2011 rates last year. However, many of the rates
consumers and small employers pay today don’t reflect these
lower costs.
The rule requires insurance
companies to provide consumers with easy to understand information
about the reasons for unreasonable rate increases and post the
justification for those hikes on their website as well as on the HHS
Affordable Care Act website, www.healthcare.gov.
"Strong and transparent rate
review processes are necessary to help bring down costs for consumers,"
said Steve Larsen, director of the Center for Consumer Information and
Insurance Oversight. "Rate review will ensure that increases are based
on reasonable estimates and real-time data on medical cost trends and
health care utilization."
The regulation issued today
finalizes proposed rules issued in December 2010. The final rule has
several additions to the proposed rule, including a requirement that
states provide an opportunity for public input in the evaluation of
rate increases subject to review. This will strengthen the consumer
transparency aspects of the new rule. HHS is also requesting comment
from the public on applying the rule to individual and small group
coverage sold through associations, which is sometimes exempt from
state oversight.
For more information about
recent trends in health insurance rates and the final rule, visit: http://www.HealthCare.gov/news/factsheets/ratereview05192011a.html.
|