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Health Care Reform in States Not Working

Posted by ilhealthquotes on November 11, 2009

Before we consider a massive government managed health care system for the entire country maybe we should look at some of the states that have tried it.  Here is an article from the NY Times about the problems that the state of Maine has had trying to manage that states health insurance system.

Maine Finds a Health Care Fix Elusive

BAR HARBOR, Me. — When his car repair shop’s health insurance premiums doubled between 2000 and 2002, David White saw the problem as akin to a sputtering engine. So he got under the hood of the state’s health system and tried to fix it.

Seven years later, Mr. White is on seven health advocacy and improvement boards, has helped devise the state’s public insurance plan and has a library of health care books and research papers. He spent so much time on the issue that his business suffered. But he still has no health insurance for himself or his lone remaining mechanic, an experience that is emblematic of his state’s.

Maine is the Charlie Brown of health care. The state’s legislators have tried for decades to fix its system, but their efforts have always fallen short: health insurance premiums are still among the least affordable in the nation, health care spending per person is among the highest and hospital emergency rooms are among the most crowded. Indeed, many overhauls to the system have done little more than squeeze a balloon — solving one problem while worsening another.

But like the Peanuts character, the state keeps trying. Indeed, Senator Olympia J. Snowe, Maine’s senior United States senator and so far one of only two Republicans in Congress to vote for an overhaul, spent two years in the late 1970s as chairwoman of the State Legislature’s joint Health and Human Services Committee pushing small reform efforts. “That’s where I garnered an enormous deference to the issue of health care and its complexities,” Ms. Snowe said in an interview.

Maine’s history is a cautionary tale for national health reform. The state could never figure out how to slow the spiraling increase in medical costs, hobbling its efforts to offer more people insurance coverage. Many on Capitol Hill have criticized national reform legislation for similarly doing little to tame costs.

To Ms. Snowe, Maine’s past shows that change, while needed, should be incremental because mistakes are common. This is among the reasons she opposes an immediate public insurance option. “I mentioned to the president that people can’t digest everything at once,” she said in an interview.

To conservatives, Maine proves that government efforts to strictly regulate the nation’s health insurance market are doomed. Many of the reform proposals circulating on Capitol Hill have already been tried in Maine.

“These reforms are very well-intentioned, but in reality they have yet to produce the promised results or even be financially sustainable,” said Tarren R. Bragdon, chief executive of the Maine Heritage Policy Center, a conservative research organization in Portland.

To others, Maine’s failures show why some reforms can be tackled only on a national level. Maine has the nation’s oldest population, its poor are among the sickest, and its median income ranks low. It has a dominant for-profit insurance carrier, Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield in Maine, which has roughly doubled premiums in the last five years and recently appealed in court to get even higher rates. Solving such problems is simply beyond Maine’s means, these people say.

“We didn’t have the money and we tried it anyway, and now we’re the poster child for what a poor state can’t do,” said Peter Mills, a Republican state senator and candidate for governor who supports a national overhaul.

To be fair, Maine’s reform efforts have had benefits. The state’s Medicare beneficiaries get relatively high-quality and low-cost care, and the share of those who have no health insurance is lower than those of all but six other states.

But a state-sponsored insurance plan has been capped at fewer than 9,000 because of financing problems, and the most common choice of those buying new plans in the state requires them to spend at least $15,000 a year before the insurer pays anything — leading many to avoid important medical visits.

Russ Sargent, 50, the owner of Yes Books in downtown Portland, has a shock of frizzy hair and a $10,000 annual deductible. He pays doctors in cash and recently scheduled a colonoscopy for which he agreed to pay $900 up-front. He is not confident that his insurer would pay if he ever got truly sick.

“I have friends in the same situation as me, and we all go through life with our fingers crossed hoping we never get sick,” Mr. Sargent said. “If I got cancer or needed a kidney, I’d go bankrupt. We all would.”

To help people like Mr. Sargent, the state is one of 17 that limit how much insurers can charge people for being older, and it does not allow exclusions for previous illnesses — both policies that are part of national reform proposals.

But one result is that premiums for younger people are relatively high. Although national proposals would require that nearly everyone get coverage or pay a penalty, Maine’s Legislature rejected such a mandate so many young people do not or cannot buy insurance — further skewing the insured pool to sicker and older people and making premiums that much higher.

Tyler Stratton, 23, manages Otto Pizzeria in Portland and is a graduate student in public health at the University of New England. He has no health insurance and does not plan to buy any. When he gets sick or injured, his parents often pay the bill.

“It’s always been a joke in my family that I’m only allowed one hospital visit a year,” Mr. Stratton said. “The last good one was when I broke my back skiing.”

Another change Maine has tried is to expand its eligibility rules for Medicaid, the government program for the poor. Nearly a quarter of the state’s population participates in the poverty program. Proposals on Capitol Hill would require similar expansions across the country.

But Maine’s poor are among the sickest in the nation, and its Medicaid benefits are relatively generous. Only Alaska spends more per adult Medicaid beneficiary. Part of the reason may be that, because premiums in the private insurance market are so high, many go without insurance for years before qualifying for Medicaid.

Tony Moore, 46, of Scarborough, got Medicaid for the first time in October. The last time Mr. Moore had health insurance was when his wife divorced him, “about the time O.J. took that ride in the white Bronco,” or 1994. He has “a shopping list” of medical complaints. “My feet, knees, hips and back are all shot to hell,” he said. “I’m looking forward to getting them fixed.”

To compensate for such expensive care, the state pays doctors and hospitals relatively skimpy fees for treating Medicaid patients. As a result, doctors are closing solo practices and joining hospitals, which then have the market power to jack up rates to private insurers in a common problem called cost-shifting.

Clinics for the poor — some affiliated with hospital networks — are thriving because they are federally supported. Maine now has 19 such clinics serving 200,000 people — a fifth of the state’s population. The largest of them is Penobscot Community Health Care in Bangor, which has three cheerful, green-roofed buildings on its main campus, 126 medical providers and last year served 45,000 patients.

“We’ve been bringing in between 60 and 100 new patients a week,” said the Rev. Robert T. Carlson, Penobscot’s president. “The growth has been phenomenal.”

After years of studying and suffering from these trends, Mr. White, the mechanic from Bar Harbor, said he has concluded that Maine’s last best hope is a national health care overhaul. With a red Alfa Romeo, a silver 1959 Mercedes convertible and four other foreign cars in bays behind him, Mr. White clenched his grease-covered hands and his bright blue eyes filled with tears as he discussed his own inability to get health insurance for his mechanic and himself.

“We’re better than this,” he said. “This isn’t about government. It’s about who we are as a people.”

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Illinois Dental Plan – See the Dentist of Your Choice

Posted by ilhealthquotes on November 6, 2009

This Illinois Dental Plan offers the freedom to use any Dentist

 

Call 630-518-4979 for more information

Or Click Illinois Dental Plan to Apply

PrimeStar Dental LogoPrimeStar Dental BenefitsPrimeStar Vision Benefits

Illinois Zip Codes 600-605:  Area 2

Illinois Zip Codes 606-608:  Area 3

All Other Illinois Zip Codes:  Area 1

PrimeStar Rate Chart

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New Blue Cross Dental plan

Posted by ilhealthquotes on November 6, 2009

Something to Smile About…Blue Cross now has a great Dental Plan to go along with their Chicago health plans.

You’ll get dental coverage on day one – with no deductible required – for checkups, cleanings and other preventive services. Most important, costs are typically reduced when you receive care from any of our participating network dentists. However, you also have the option to see any dentist not in the network, but your out-of-pocket costs may be higher.

Find a participating Dentist

With BlueCare Dental PPO, you’ll get:

* one of the highest maximum annual benefit levels available – up to $1,500 per person per year
* Up to a 20% Discount, up to a maximum savings of $1,000 for orthodontic services at participating dentists

Eligibility requirements:

* You must enroll in a BCBSIL health plan in order to enroll in the dental plan (you have up to 31 days from the effective date of your policy to enroll).
* All members on that health plan must be enrolled in BlueCare Dental PPO.
* Once your dental plan is dropped for any reason, you cannot re-enroll unless you reapply for a new heatlh insurance plan.

Monthly premium for BlueCare Dental PPO

BC Dental Rates

 

BC Dental Benefits002

1 Your dental care benefits are highlighted in this chart. To fully understand all the terms, conditions, limitations and exclusions which apply to your benefits, please read the entire BlueCare Dental PPO Rider.
2 For services received from a non-participating dentist, the member will be responsible for any difference between the dentist’s charges and the maximum allowable charge. The maximum allowable charge is based on our network negotiated fees. Further information regarding the maximum allowable charge and network status of dentists is available by calling the toll free telephone number on the back of your dental identification card.
3 Benefit Waiting Period – You must be continuously covered under your rider for twelve (12) months before being eligible for the following covered services: (1) Major Restorative Services; (2) Prosthodontic Services; and (3) Miscellaneous Restorative and Prosthodontic Services.

To get a quote for a BlueCross health plan and dental plan click the link on the right side of the page or go to Chicago Health Insurance.

 

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How to Save Money on Healthcare

Posted by ilhealthquotes on October 30, 2009

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Posted by ilhealthquotes on October 26, 2009

Do you want to choose your Illinois health plan, or do you want the goverment to choose it for you?  Whatever your opinion is please contact your representative in Washington and let them know your opinion on this important issue.

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Health Insurance Company Profits

Posted by ilhealthquotes on October 26, 2009

WASHINGTON — In the health care debate, Democrats and their allies have gone after insurance companies as rapacious profiteers making “immoral” and “obscene” returns while “the bodies pile up.”

But in pillorying insurers over profits, the critics are on shaky ground. Ledgers tell a different reality.

Profits barely exceeded 2 percent of revenues in the latest annual measure. This partly explains why the credit ratings of some of the largest insurers were downgraded to negative from stable heading into this year, as investors were warned of a stagnant if not shrinking market for private plans.

Insurers are an expedient target for leaders who want a government-run plan in the marketplace. Such a public option would force private insurers to trim profits and restrain premiums to compete, the argument goes. This would “keep insurance companies honest,” says President Obama.

The debate is loaded with intimations that insurers are less than straight, when they are not flatly accused of malfeasance.  A look at some claims, and the numbers:

THE CLAIMS:

–”I’m very pleased that (Democratic leaders) will be talking, too, about the immoral profits being made by the insurance industry and how those profits have increased in the Bush years.” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who also welcomed the attention being drawn to insurers’ “obscene profits.”

–”Keeping the status quo may be what the insurance industry wants. Their premiums have more than doubled in the last decade and their profits have skyrocketed.” Maryland Rep. Chris Van Hollen, member of the Democratic leadership.

–”Health insurance companies are willing to let the bodies pile up as long as their profits are safe.” A MoveOn.org ad.

THE NUMBERS:

Health insurers posted a 2.2 percent profit margin last year, placing them 35th on the Fortune 500 list of top industries. As is typical, other health sectors did much better — drugs and medical products and services were both in the top 10.

The railroads brought in a 12.6 percent profit margin. Leading the list: network and other communications equipment, at 20.4 percent.

HealthSpring, the best performer in the health insurance industry, posted 5.4 percent. That’s a less profitable margin than was achieved by the makers of Tupperware, Clorox bleach and Molson and Coors beers.

The star among the health insurance companies did, however, nose out Jack in the Box restaurants, which only achieved a 4 percent margin.

UnitedHealth Group, reporting third quarter results last week, saw fortunes improve. It managed a 5 percent profit margin on an 8 percent growth in revenue.

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Health Insurance varies by Location

Posted by ilhealthquotes on October 24, 2009

BlueCross BlueSheild of Illinois heavily discounts health plan rates in the far suburbs.  If you are looking for health insurance in Sugar Grove, IL or health insurance in Oswego, IL, or health insurance in Batavia, IL you will get a much lower rate than someone seeking health insurance in Chicago or health insurance in Oak Park, IL.  Let’s compare the premiums for a popular BlueCross plan for a 45 year old husband and wife in Sugar Grove and the same couple in Chicago Zip Code 60622.

Sugar Grove

SG example

Chicago- 60622

60622

As you can see from the example above the $500 deductiblepremium in Sugar Grove is discounted about 20% from the premium for the same plan in Chicago.  The insurance company is basing this discount on the actual cost of paying claims in these these areas.  Apparently the cost are much lower in the far suburbs.

In the farther suburbs BlueCross is generally priced below the other insurance companies due to this heavy discounting.  We recommend BlueCross to about most of our clients accordingly.  For the higher deductible HSA plans Humana pricing is competitive with BlueCross in some of the suburban areas.

If you are looking for health insurance in Sugar Grovehealth insurance in Oswego, or health insurance in any other part of Illinois please give us a call at 630-518-4979 and we will help you find the right health insurance policy for your situation.

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Larry King and Ron Paul Debate Healthcare Reform

Posted by ilhealthquotes on October 21, 2009

Here is a good debate about health care reform on the 09/09 Larry King show:

Illinois Health Plans is a small family run agency specializing in health insurance in Illinois.  Give use a call at 1-630-518-5979 or visit our website for your FREE Illinois health insurance quote.

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Health Plan Pitfalls

Posted by ilhealthquotes on October 21, 2009

When choosing an Illinois health plan the details of the coverage matter.  Make sure you read all the fine print on any health plan brochure so you understand exactly what is covered and, more importantly, what is not covered.  Watch the following video which discusses some of these issues:

Insurance companies use many different techniques to limit there financial liability and increase yours:

(1) Percentage copays.  Many plans being sold in Illinois have percentage copays that never end,  even after you meet your deductible for the year.  Example: Let’s say you have a health plan that provides coverage for prescription drugs with a 35% copay for brand name drugs.  If you develop MS you will likely require a medication that cost $2,800 per month.  On this plan you would pay $980 per month out of pocket for drugs or $11,760 per year out of pocket. In this case it would be better to have a high deductible plan (say $5,000) that includes prescription drugs in the deductible. After the first two months of the year you will hit your deductible and the insurance company will pay 100% for your drugs for the remainder of the year.

(2) Higher Co-insurance.  Historically plans had a 20% co-insurance. Insurance companies have created plans with 30%, 40%, or even 50% co-insurance which can cost you tens of thousands of dollars.  You can find more affordable high deductible plans with no co-insurance that have lower annual out of pocket maximums.

(3) Unreasonable benefit limits on procedures.  For example one limited benefit plan sold in Illinois had a maximum benefit of $1,000 per chemotherapy treatment. This sounds reasonable until you find out each chemo sessions costs $10,000 to $15,000.  Limited deductible plans should be avoided unless you have a pre-existing condition and can not get a standard major medical policy.

(4) Unreasonable benefit limits on prescription drugs.  Look out for plans that have low dollar limits on prescription drug benefits.  There are some Illinois health plans that have an annual drug benefit limit of $2,000.  If you need a high cost prescription drug this type of plan could require you to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket for your drugs.

(5) Low plan maximum benefits.  Your plan should have at least a $2,000,000 lifetime maximum benefit. If not you are not truly protected against the cost of developing a major medical condition.

Illinois Health Plans is a small family run agency specializing in health insurance in Illinois.  Give use a call at 1-630-518-5979 or visit our website for your FREE Illinois health insurance quote.

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Health Insurance Reform Update

Posted by ilhealthquotes on October 21, 2009

We at Illinois Health Plans are staying on top of the progressive of health insurance reform in Washington in order to better advise our clients about health insurance in Illinois.   Here is the latest news:

The latest on Health Reform
October 21, 2009

Reform timetable tweaked as Senate begins merging bills
It’s still unclear when health reform legislation might reach the Senate floor, but it’s looking more and more like it might not happen until November.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., Finance Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., and Health, Education, Labor and Pensions member Chris Dodd, D-Conn., have been meeting to combine the health reform bills passed by each committee. In doing so, they’ll have to work to keep the support of Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine, thus far the only Republican to back any of the health reform bills.

They’re also wrestling with thorny issues like whether to include a public plan option to compete with private insurers. During a recent conference call with reporters, Baucus said he doubts a public option could win 60 votes. The Senate Finance bill would create nonprofit health care cooperatives in lieu of a public plan. Senators are also discussing ideas like a “trigger” that would create a public plan if cost-saving goals aren’t met or if a market doesn’t have sufficient competition, and Sen. Thomas Carper, D-Del., has advanced a proposal to let states decide whether to establish a public plan. White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said the president continues to support a public plan, but “it’s not the defining piece of health care.”

On the House side, the Ways and Means Committee kept alive the possibility that Democrats could use the budget reconciliation process to pass reform in the Senate with 51, not 60 votes. Ways and Means recently approved a measure that would clear the way for reconciliation to be used in the Senate, although Democrats are a long way from making any final decisions about whether to go the reconciliation route.

House leaders are also combining health reform bills from several committees. It remains to be seen whether House leaders will wait for the Senate to complete its floor debate before bringing health reform legislation to the House floor.

Insurance industry not backing down over cost predictions
A second report predicts that current health reform proposals will push premiums higher, not lower. The health insurance industry says the most recent report is consistent with its earlier study, which the industry’s trade association continues to defend in the face of attacks from congressional Democrats.

The latest analysis, prepared by consulting firm Oliver Wyman for the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, found that current health reform bills will cause health care costs to increase far faster and higher than they would under the current system. The report projects a 50 percent hike in individual market premiums and a 19 percent rise in small group premiums over a five-year period.

That dovetails with the findings of a PricewaterhouseCoopers report released last week by America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), which forecasts a 49 percent increase in individual premiums and a 28 percent jump in small group premiums over a 10-year timeframe.

Democrats have assailed the AHIP report as biased and questioned the industry’s motives in releasing it the day before the Senate Finance Committee voted on its reform package. But, Karen Ignagni, president and CEO of AHIP, warned senators on the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee that “potential hyper-inflation” will result if everyone is not required to participate by purchasing health insurance.

“This study confirms that the current legislation will make coverage less affordable for individuals, families and employers, and make it harder to get all Americans covered,” said Ignagni in prepared remarks. She added that AHIP only asked PricewaterhouseCoopers to study the legislation in late September, after Senate Finance reduced penalties for those who don’t buy health insurance.

AHIP also sent a letter to Senate leaders outlining recommendations for improving reform legislation and reaffirming the industry’s commitment to enacting bipartisan reform this year. The recommendations include:

  • Pairing market reforms with an effective and well-enforced requirement to obtain coverage;
  • Doing more to control costs, such as “moving away from a fee-for-service system that encourages volume rather than value”;
  • And, avoiding new taxes, like a $6.7 billion annual tax on insurers, “that add to the cost of coverage.” Read the full letter and an AHIP op-ed from the Washington Post.

Meantime, Democrats attacked the insurance industry, both for the recent reports and for running advertisements critical of current reform proposals. “This is when the insurance companies are really going to start gearing up,” President Barack Obama told an audience in New Orleans. “Don’t let them fool you.
We’re going to get this done. We’re going to fight for it.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said the insurance industry’s recent actions prove the need for a public plan option to compete with private plans. “Why would you throw (people) into the lion’s den of the insurance industry without the leverage (of a public option)?” Pelosi told CNN. She reportedly wants the House to include a public plan that would pay health care providers 5 percent more than Medicare rates.

And shortly after AHIP released its report, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., called for an amendment that would revoke the anti-trust exemption for health insurers that has been in place since 1945. “Providing an exemption for insurance companies to antitrust laws has been anticompetitive and damaging to the American economy,” added Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada.

New guidance from Medicare: Insurers free to speak out
Health insurers can communicate with Medicare members about pending legislation and other public policy issues, according to new guidance from the agency in charge of Medicare.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announced its decision late Friday, saying that insurers may lobby customers on political issues as long as long as members opt-in to receive such communications and as long as no federal dollars are used to fund those communications.

CMS also confirmed that it had closed its review of a letter Humana sent to some of its Medicare members about proposed cuts to Medicare Advantage funding. CMS did not impose any penalties on Humana, but did issue a “notice of noncompliance,” which the Associated Press described as “a mild reprimand.” Read the AP article, Wall Street Journal editorial and New York Times editorial.

Illinois Health Plans is a small family run agency specializing in health insurance in Illinois.  Give use a call at 1-630-518-5979 or visit our website for your FREE Illinois health insurance quote.

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