Friday, July 7, 2023

Consumer experiences with health insurers: Not always good

I have often written about the particular burdens that people with no health insurance have accessing adequate healthcare. However, these problems affect Americans with health insurance as well. To look more into the experience of insured Americans, the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) did an extensive poll on consumer experiences with health care insurance to understand

how health insurance works involves exploring how people feel about their health coverage, how affordable that coverage is, how they interact with their insurance provider, the problems they experience, and, critically, how insurance works for people when they get sick.

The findings often seem to be in conflict, but this is largely because different people are experiencing different things. For example, 81% of people surveyed (91% of those with Medicare) rated their insurance as “excellent” or “good”, but for those who described their own health as fair or poor, that satisfaction was down to 68% (still a large majority, but a lot lower). This is to be expected; insurance in general is something you hope to not use, and when things are going well and you don’t need it, it functions well (except for those premiums). When you have not had a fire in your house, or a car wreck, or a close relative die, your homeowner’s, automobile, or life insurance are working just fine. What matters is how they function when you have a need. And health insurance is different from other forms of insurance because, for a bunch of bizarre historical reasons, it is the common, routine and accepted method of paying for your health care, not something you buy hoping to never have to use like other insurances. And, yet, when you get sick, and need hospitalization, surgery, cancer treatment, etc., is when the rubber meets the road, and why sicker people are less satisfied.


Let’s spend a little more time with this. It doesn’t matter much if you are happy with your health insurance when you are well if it is not going to serve you when you need it.  While that could be never, it is unlikely; if you are young and healthy, you will get old – or get sick sooner. If you are middle-aged or older and are healthy, terrific – until you are not. You may ‘not have been sick a day in your life’, and that is good, but then one day, you find out you have cancer. Or are in a car wreck. Or a pretty-well-controlled chronic condition gets out of control. Being concerned about the minority of people and their health and insurance coverage is not just a matter of social responsibility (although that is important) because there is a great likelihood you will be too, one day. Maybe not soon. Or maybe soon.

 Remember also that, although this poll (and others) are one-time snapshots, the group of people who are sick is not static. Over time (say looking at it each year), some people who used to be in that group leave it – either through recovery or death. Others join it. This is how the magic of consultants work – hire us and the 1000 most costly people you had last year will cost you, as a group, less this year. Of course.

Going beyond this issue, the KFF poll found other seemingly contradictory information. Despite expressing a high degree of satisfaction with their health insurance, people also identified a lot of problems.

A majority of insured adults (58%) say they have experienced a problem using their health insurance in the past 12 months – such as denied claims, provider network problems, and pre-authorization problems.

Unsurprisingly, this rate was higher (about 2/3) among sick people, but was still well over half of those in good health. And, furthermore, only half of those who had problems with their insurance were able to resolve those problems to their satisfaction; a significant number of folks simply did not get the health care that they need. And these problems were even worse among some groups of people, such as those with mental health problems.

 

Trying to understand these seemingly contradictory findings can be hard, but clearly some horrible psychological factor is present which allows the American people to think something is “good” when it is not because their expectations have been so diminished. It is likely that some of this is “well, it’s not as bad as I was afraid it might be” or “it’s not as bad as what happened to my neighbor or cousin”. If you set the bar low enough, a lot of bad can pass over it. Note that the cycle of bad that affects Medicaid recipients even more than others – poverty makes illness greater, and makes it harder to get treatment and to recover, and illness increases poverty. To be “satisfied” with your health insurance should not require you to be without healthcare needs!

Good healthcare is something quite different. It is getting all the care you need (and none of the care you don’t need) promptly, efficiently, courteously, and affordably. It should not require long waits to get into see a clinician or to get into a hospital. There should be adequate staffing, both of medical professionals such as doctors and nurses and other staff necessary. There should be no out-of-pocket cost for medical services (or a very minimal one which can be waived for the poor). It should be paid for proactively by “social insurance” (such as traditional Medicare) and adequately funded for 100% of the cost (unlike, currently, traditional Medicare). This does not mean the wealthy should not pay more, but they should do so through higher taxes to support this health system, not when they are ill. The randomness of “you pay today because you got sick or injured, I don’t (until, maybe tomorrow, when I am)” should be abandoned.

Standards for approved drugs and procedures should be established by independent scientific panels whose members are forbidden from taking corporate dollars. Such standards may be more or less restrictive, but must be applied equitably to everyone regardless of where they live or their ability to pay. Inequity has no place in healthcare.

And, of course, all profit-making must be eliminated. This means from both for-profit and ostensibly non-profit hospitals and other healthcare facilities like long-term care, insurance companies, device and drug manufacturers, and other parasitic leeches. Indeed, we could keep private insurance companies, provided they are adequately regulated – i.e., they must provide all the same benefits and must charge the same amount and not be permitted to make a profit. This would require them to compete on the only legitimate factor, customer service. Let the ones who don’t do a good job go out of business. This is more or less the Swiss model. There are several potential models, but all must include financial and service equity for all.

They should not be about being happy with your insurance because you didn’t get sick, or because they screwed you less than you feared they might!


If you want a little laugh, read this by Kendra Allenby from the New Yorker. But somehow, if you have ever been in the hospital, I don’t think you’ll laugh too hard because it will be too familiar.

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