BUSINESSSkyrocketing health premiums drawing scrutiny from statesAs criticism of insurers continues in Washington, D.C., states introduce new rules aimed at curbing rate increases.By Emily Berry, amednews staff. Posted March 15, 2010. States are working up their own responses to individual insurance rate hikes as a federal-level backlash continues against health plan premium increases. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius met with insurance executives March 4 at the White House to discuss those increases, after she publicly slammed plans' decisions to raise rates steeply in some states for 2010. President Obama, who also spoke out against large rate hikes -- particularly, a 39% jump by Anthem Blue Cross set to go into effect in California on May 1 -- stopped by for part of the meeting.
State commissioners were there, among them Kansas' Sandy Praeger, current occupant of Sebelius' former office. Praeger is chair of the Health Insurance and Managed Care committee of the National Assn. of Insurance Commissioners. Praeger said in an interview the day before the White House meeting that states should set their own rules, but with a federal minimum level of oversight as a "backstop." Currently commissioners' authority to approve, lower or deny rate increase requests varies widely, as does the application of that authority. She said the NAIC believes state regulators need the authority to oversee rates and to ensure that insurance companies remain solvent, and those two duties shouldn't be separated. Whether the attention on premium increases produces new state or federal laws remains to be seen, but for now, some action has taken place:
Waxman and Stupak questioned WellPoint President and CEO Angela Braly Feb. 24 about the company's reasons for raising premiums. She said rates reflected underlying costs of care and a deteriorating risk pool, with older, sicker patients electing to keep insurance and younger, healthier consumers opting out. In letters sent March 2, Waxman and Stupak asked Braly, along with the chief executives of Aetna, Humana and UnitedHealth Group, to appear at a March 23 hearing. The letter requested detailed information on the companies' treatment of members with preexisting conditions and policies about maternity coverage. Other members of Congress also joined the fray: Sen. Max Baucus (D, Montana) and Grassley wrote a joint letter to insurers WellPoint, Aetna, Health Net, Blue Shield of California, Kaiser Permanente and UnitedHealth Group Feb. 24 requesting more information about rate increases. They asked for a response by March 23. Sens. Russ Feingold and Herb Kohl, both Wisconsin Democrats, wrote to WellPoint March 3 to ask for an explanation for rising premiums in Wisconsin, which according to their letter are expected to increase by an average of 17.2%. "We cannot understand how these large increases in premiums are justified, and ask that you explain the rationale for placing such a heavy burden on policy holders," the letter said. The print version of this content appeared in the March 22, 2010 issue of American Medical News. Copyright 2010 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
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