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The debate over selling insurance across state lines

By Phil Galewitz, KHN Staff Writer

Twenty-dollar-bill-in-pill-bottleA core feature of the health overhaul bill unveiled this week by House Republicans – and of GOP plans for years – would allow individual health insurance policies to be sold across state lines. Currently, consumers can buy policies only from insurers licensed by the states where they live.

Congressional Republicans have proposed the idea in the past and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., embraced it as part of his presidential campaign last year. Advocates say it would give the more than 17 million Americans who buy individual coverage a greater choice of plans and the possibility of lower prices.

The measure does not apply to the 159 million non-elderly Americans who obtain insurance through their employers. Some insurers support the GOP approach, as does the National Federation of Independent Business, which says it would help the self-employed and also hopes lawmakers would give small employers the opportunity to buy workers’ insurance this way.

Kaiser Logo BlackBut critics — including consumer watchdog groups and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners — say the provision would erode many state government consumer protections, leave policyholders people with inadequate coverage and could actually lead to higher premiums for some people.

The Republican health plan is expected to be voted on – and voted down — as early as Saturday when the the House is scheduled to vote on the Democrats’ overhaul bill. Advocates are expected to push for a similar provision when, and if, the full Senate takes up its health bill.

Here is a short primer on the issue.

Q. What currently restricts insurers from selling policies outside of their home states?

States have primary regulatory authority over insurance. As a result, insurers are allowed to sell policies only in states where they are licensed to do business. Most insurers obtain licenses in multiple states. States have different laws regulating benefits, consumer protections and financial and solvency requirements.

Q. What do advocates say are the main advantages to allowing insurers to sell across state lines?

The individual health insurance market is dominated in many states by just a handful of companies, so this provision would allow consumers to shop broadly for cheaper policies, supporters say. “You want to have greater competition in the insurance market and this does that,” said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute and top health advisor to McCain during his presidential campaign.

The Republican bill says consumers may be able to buy “less expensive” policies in other states because of variations in laws and regulations. While some states may require insurers to pay for a particular treatment of autism, for example, others don’t. Insurers bristle at many of these mandates, saying they drive up costs, but studies generally show their impact on rates is limited.

“This is absolutely a way to get around some of those state mandated benefit laws that are counterproductive and drive up insurance costs,” said Merrill Matthews Jr., executive director of the Council for Affordable Health Insurance, which represents companies selling individual health insurance.

Q. Why is there skepticism about the Republican measure?

“It always sounds appealing to offer more choice,” said Kenneth Thorpe, an Emory University health policy expert and a Health and Human Services official in the Clinton administration. “But if you do look at it more closely, it does raise issues of regulation.”

Regulation is important, critics of the GOP proposal say. In addition to requiring coverage of certain problems and treatments, some states require insurers to sell policies to all applicants and price them uniformly within the same geographic area regardless of individuals’ health status.

If insurers can sell beyond state lines, the concern is that consumers would be attracted to the least comprehensive policies because they’d be cheapest. “You get what you pay for in these policies (and) consumers won’t realize it until they are sick and it’s too late,” said Jerry Flanagan, health care policy analyst for Consumer Watchdog, a California consumer health group.

There are also fears that consumers dealing with out-of-state companies would have difficulties resolving disputes. While the bill would require, in large type, consumer disclosure statements spelling out, among things, that the policy is “not subject to all of the consumer protection laws or restrictions on rate changes” required in the buyer’s home state, “You should carefully review the policy and determine what health care services the policy covers and what benefits it provides, including any exclusions, limitations, or conditions for such services or benefits.”

Critics say insurers selling across state lines would market policies to younger, healthier individuals. Older and sicker individuals would face ever-rising rates – or face being turned down – because their insurers would have fewer healthy people to spread risk. And, since health costs vary geographically, insurance purchased in one state might not cover as much of the cost of care in a more expensive state.

Q. Do the Democratic bills allow some form of insurance selling across state lines?

Yes, but with much tighter restrictions than are in the Republicans’ plan. The House Democrats’ bill would allow states to form compacts enabling consumers to buy policies from insurers licensed in any of the states governed by the agreement. A consumer’s home state would retain authority to handle disputes. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners, which represents state regulators, would have primary authority to develop rules, but if it failed to do so, the job would fall to the HHS Secretary.

The Senate Finance Committee bill would enable insurers to create nationwide plans. Insurers would have to be licensed in each state where they sell these plans, but would have the authority to offer only those benefits mandated by the majority of states. Thus, benefits required by relatively few states would not have to be in the plans. States, however, could decline to make such plans available to their residents.

This article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.

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  1. [...] REFORM #1: Sell Insurance Across State Lines Here's the pros and cons on that proposal. Should you be able to buy health insurance across state lines? | Seattle/LocalHealthGuide Not quite the slam dunk some people would have you believe. – REFORM #2: Let individuals [...]

  2. [...] The HCR passed by the House and Senate (without your vote) does expand coverage “regardless of pre-existing conditions”—that was one of President Obama and the Democrats’ central aims. “Putting the patient in charge of their own health care” is a laudable aim as long as it doesn’t mean “you’re on your own,” which is where over 40 million without insurance, and millions more with insurance, have been for years and years, including nearly a decade when Republicans owned the Congress and the White House—if you’re so concerned, why didn’t you all act then? (Let’s talk about the Medicare expansion act of 2003 below.) And then, about buying insurance “across state lines,” this too sounds unobjectionable, but there are serious reasons for skepticism. Consumer watchdog groups and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners suspect “the provision would erode many state government consumer protections, leave policyholders people with inadequate coverage and could actually lead to higher premiums for some people,” according to Kaiser Health News. [...]