A check in the mail courtesy of Obamacare

My mailbox today contained an example that Obamacare is working for healthcare consumers.   In an envelope from my health insurance provider was a check for $124.08.   The cover letter from Humana explained it was a rebate of a portion of my premium, as required by the Affordable Care Act's (ACA) Medical Loss Ratio standard.

Under the law, health insurers are required to report to HHS's Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) how income from premium dollars are spent.  (The first year of reporting was 2011 with the previous year's spending data.)   For individual and small group plans, no more than about 20 percent of premiums can be spent on administrative costs, such as sales and advertising.  (The exact percent depends on whether a State makes the case to HHS that a higher percentage is needed in order to keep the insurance market stable.  Eighteen states made such requests.)   If an insurer's administrative costs exceed the Medical Loss Ratio for the year, they must refund the difference to the plan's enrollees by August 1.

My insurer wrote:

"In Texas, Humana Insurance Company did not meet the Medical Loss Ratio standard.   In 2012, Humana spent only 76.7 percent of a total of $149,433,285 in premium dollars on health care and activities to improve health care quality.  Since it missed the target in your state (Texas) by 3.3 percent of premiums it received, Humana must rebate 3.3 percent of your health insurance premium."

8.5 million U.S. health insurance consumers will be receiving $504 million this year in premium refunds.  A table prepared by CMS provides a breakdown of these refunds by States, stratified by individual, small group and large group markets.  The average rebate for all insurance consumers is about $100, but in some States the mean is quite a bit higher.   In Idaho, the average refund for a person with an individual insurance plan is $490.   For an Oregon resident who is part of a large group plan, the average refund is $1,256.

With all the moaning and groaning by Republicans on Capitol Hill about Obamacare, the refund check from my insurer is one example that the ACA is working.  Sixty seven of the law's 90 key provisions are already in effect.  These include requiring insurers to permit young adults to stay on their parent's insurance plan until age 26, and to cover the full cost of preventative health services, such as mammograms.  There have also been funds provided for scholarships and loan repayment to expand the number of physicians, nurses and physician's assistants in under-served parts of the country, for construction and expansion of community health centers, and tax credits for small businesses and small non-profits to help them purchase insurance for their employees.

No doubt it is a complex law----the U.S. healthcare systems is a tangled beast----but Americans are better off with Obamacare, than without it.

 

 

More like this

While we’re on vacation, we’re re-posting content from earlier in the year. This post was originally published on July 23, 2013. By Celeste Monforton My mailbox today contained an example that Obamacare is working for healthcare consumers.   In an envelope from my health insurance provider was a …
Friday will be the two-year anniversary of the signing of the Affordable Care Act, and there's plenty of discussion about the law's impacts and the upcoming Supreme Court oral arguments. While many of the law's provisions won't take effect until 2014, it's already having an impact on some aspects…
In early May, House Republicans rushed to pass an amended version of the American Health Care Act (HR 1628) without waiting for the Congressional Budget Office to give them an estimate of how it would affect health insurance coverage nationwide. Now, CBO has released a score that shows just how…
Many of us breathed sighs of relief on Friday when House Speaker Paul Ryan announced the withdrawal of legislation to roll back the Affordable Care Act. The bill, the American Health Care Act, would have resulted in 24 million people losing insurance and $880 billion less for Medicaid over the next…

Ha ha ha ha is this a joke! Obamacare s*cks!!!! Ask any small business. And your friends from the Unions do not care for it either. A total FUBAR!!!! The only good items is no denial for pre-existing condition and keeping your kids on until they are 26. Insurance pools are set by each State. In MD they raise the rates by 25%. Looks like Obama sold out to the Insurance companies and his buddies in Wall St. Another failure from this wonderful Administration.

Wonkblog's Sarah Kliff had a great post highlighting two very different headlines about Maryland's premium data: "Maryland issues insurance rates that are among lowest in US" (Washington Post) vs "Premiums to go up as much as 25 percent under health reform" (Baltimore Sun). The Maryland rate increases range widely, including a 25% increase for one Aetna plan and a 4% increase for Kaiser Permanente subscribers.

God bless America!! i hope Obama does not take away my freedom of expression. This is why I live in this country and understand that the US constitution is number one!!! Most Americans have no clue of what is really going on with this administration and the threat to their freedom. I have lived under dictators and understand and cherish what the US offers. America is great!!!!