There is good news and bad news regarding health/medical insurance. Let’s start with the good:
In his Substack, “Health Care Uncovered” from August 8, 2024, Wendell Potter reports that “Wall St. is disenchanted with Medicare Advantage Plans”. This is good news in the sense that it is good when anyone is disenchanted with these plans, or any aspect of the for-profit health insurance industry. Potter notes that both CVS/Aetna and CIGNA disappointed Wall St. investors with inadequate (from their point of view) profits, compared to a year ago. I also am disenchanted, but for different reasons than Wall St. I am upset that these for-profit insurers continue to rake off such a huge amount of money that was intended, by the workers and employers who paid it, to be spend on actually delivering health care. Investors are upset that these health insurers are not raking in even more.
Potter notes that Aetna president Brian Kane resigned as a result, but appropriately writes:
I am much more concerned about the health and well-being of the 4.3 million people enrolled in CVS’s MA plans and the 6.2 million in Humana’s plans. Sadly, most will find they’re trapped in a circle of hell created by the insurance industry, unable to stay in their current Medicare Advantage plan but also unable to return to traditional Medicare because of what for them will be unaffordable Medicare supplemental policies (most of which are sold by the same big insurers that sell MA plans). Seniors have six months from the date they’re eligible for Medicare to buy a supplemental (Medigap) policy to cover out-of-pocket expenses. If they’ve been enrolled in an MA plan longer than six months, they’ll have to go through medical underwriting. That means that if they’re being treated for much of anything or, God forbid, have a “preexisting condition,” they’ll have to pay an arm and a leg for Medigap policy.
A similar piece of good news is not particularly about Medicare Advantage plans, but the overall health insurance industry/scam, in a story about data-analytics firm MultiPlan (‘Revenues Down and Stock Battered as Data Firm Faces Scrutiny’, NY Times, August 16, 2024). This one is a little harder to understand than the CVS/Aetna and CIGNA stories. They are about the fact that while they are making beaucoup bucks, it is not as much as investors would like. In the MultiPlan case, we have a company that worked for insurers to get reimbursements down (that is, to pay doctors and other healthcare providers less) and made money from it. For example, if a doctor billed $100 and MultiPlan told the insurer to only pay $50, that’s more money for the insurer (and MultiPlan), and the patient can be on the hook for the other $50. (Of course, it’s never only $100, or $50.) Since they do this mainly for “out of network” care the amount that you (the patient) can get stuck with having to pay can be – a great deal. (This can happen even when you choose an “in-network” doctor and hospital, since other doctors – like in the ER, or radiology, or even the “assistant surgeon” – can be out of network. And the ambulance almost always is).
This article was a follow-up to an earlier exposé in the NY Times ‘Insurers Reap Hidden Fees by Slashing Payments. You May Get the Bill.,’ April 24, 2024, in which the amount the patient could get stuck having to pay was as much as $100,000 – or more. The good result of this first article was a lot of opprobrium aimed at MultiPlan, resulting in some insurers being more reluctant to use them (because of the bad publicity, not because they save them money; apparently they can use other less-notorious data analytics firms to save them money), so MultiPlan is in trouble as the more recent NY Times article documents. Good. I love to see them in trouble.
The bad news is that it is likely to be you and other regular people who are screwed. There is already evidence that the pressure from investors to go back to making not just great but obscene profit margins is affecting CIGNA, CVS/Aetna, and other insurers, who are denying more claims, making it even harder to get the care that you need. Potter notes that
Humana said last week it planned to jettison “a few hundred thousand” of its Medicare Advantage enrollees that have become unprofitable. CVS says it will get rid of about 10% of its MA enrollment, which would be around 430,000 of America’s seniors and disabled people.
That’s a lot of seniors who will lose their medical coverage. I have often been critical of Medicare Advantage plans (sometimes called, more accurately, Medicare Dis-Advantage), which are NOT Medicare but are private insurance plans, usually HMOs or PPOs, paid for by Medicare funds. One of the major reasons for my criticism is that because they are private insurance, they can (and often do) deny coverage for care even when the care is approved by Medicare. Recent legislation has required these MA plans to cover Medicare-approved care, but in fact they still often deny claims. Indeed, it is often the modus operandi for these companies. They may approve the claim if you appeal, but the vast majority of clients do not appeal, and probably don’t even know that they can. If fined by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) it becomes a “cost of doing business.”
But the “jettisoning” of hundreds of thousands that Potter refers to illustrates another big problem with MA. As with all insurance – not just medical – companies make money by collecting premiums and paying as few claims as possible (although medical insurance companies seem to have taken this to the extreme). One effective way to do this for healthcare is to insure healthy people. They, or their (usually former, if they’re on Medicare) employer pay the premiums but they don’t cost much money in claims. And they love getting free eyeglasses and hearing aids and gym memberships, which cost the insurance companies very little. The problem is that sometimes previously healthy people get sick, and this becomes more and more common as they age. Remember that in any given year approximately 5% of the people account for about 50% of healthcare costs, but they are not necessarily the same people the next year. Some folks get better, some folks get worse, and some really sick people die. MA plans have long “encouraged” their sickest (= most costly) patients to consider switching to traditional Medicare. Now they will be more than encouraging; they’ll drop those high-cost “losers”. Maybe you.
The MultiPlan case got good (that is, bad) coverage from the original April NY Times investigation, which resulted in it losing business as reported by that newspaper in August. But the insurers will get another data analytics firm to try to screw doctors and other providers, and the patient, you, will still be caught on the hook for many of those dollars. The system is not set up to help or protect you, and it has relatively few sanctions against companies whose business model is to find any way to screw you that will make them more money, and to use that money to hire lawyers and others to find the loopholes and to pay the politicians to ensure that they are not closed too tightly.
It’s kind of like a sport where one team able and willing to bring in ringers, violate the rules, commit all sorts of fouls and infractions, and at worst get a slap on the wrist for it. Not a fair game, but heck, that team’s owners are paying off the referees and the league.
There’s another way to do it. Absolutely strict regulation to ensure the interests of patients are the ones that are protected, and protecting the profits of the insurers is given zero weight. Penalties that are strictly enforced, and draconian and include going out of business. Even better: prohibiting profit making in any healthcare endeavor. In some countries, like Switzerland, there are private insurers, but they all have to offer the same comprehensive product, charge the same rates, and be non-profit. So how do they compete? Customer service, can you imagine!?
I like that approach!