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Appendix I
MEDICARE/OLDER AMERICANS
Under the Health Security Act, people who get Medicare will
receive all the benefits they do today and see little difference
in how, where or from whom they receive their care. In addition,
there will be an expansion of Medicare benefits to include the
cost of prescription drugs. A new program will also be
established to provide home and community-based long-term care.
The savings from reduced growth in Medicare spending will be
rechanneled into those new benefits.
Americans eligible for Medicare will automatically
qualify for prescription drug coverage when they enroll in the
Part B benefit, which covers physician visits and other
outpatient services. Monthly part B premiums will increase by
about $11 to cover the cost of this new benefit. However,
Medigap policies, the extra coverage many seniors buy to pick up
where Medicare leaves off, should decline by a proportionate
amount since those policies will no longer cover as much, if
any,of the cost of drugs.
With the new prescription drug coverage there is a $250
annual deductible for each person. Individuals on Medicare also
pay 20 percent of the cost of each prescription. The maximum
amount a person can pay however, is $1,000 over the course of a
year. The prescription drug benefit covers drugs and biological
products, including insulin, approved by the Food and Drug
Administration.
Today, all people covered by Medicare pay 25% of the actual
cost of coverage. Under the Health Security Act, higher-income
beneficiaries -- those individuals who earn more than $100,000
per year -- will be asked to pay 75% of the actual cost of
coverage.
As health care reform moves forward, Medicare recipients
will have more options -- with the opportunity to join fee-for-
service or other types of health plans, including health
maintenance organizations and preferred provider networks. As
Americans enrolled in health plans turn sixty-five, they can
choose between remaining in their health plan or getting
coverage through Medicare.
MEDICAID
The Health Security Act will integrate Medicaid
beneficiaries into the new system, relieving pressures on state
budgets and on those who need care but simply cannot afford it.
Under reform, state and federal governments will continue to pay
for people receiving cash assistance. Just as private sector
employers will make payments for their health coverage, state
and federal governments will pay to cover the costs of providing
benefits to cash assistance recipients.
Once the state where a person lives enters the new system,
people who get Medicaid will enroll in health plans like other
Americans, and be able to choose among plans. They will carry
the same Health Security card that other Americans carry,
providing guaranteeing the comprehensive package of benefits.
Medicaid will also offer the services it has now --Q such as
transportation, translation and interpretation, and child care
during clinic visits.
People now on Medicaid who do not receive cash assistance
will no longer rely on Medicaid. They will be covered like
everyone else. Families with incomes less than 150 percent of
poverty -- less than $22,200 for a two-parent family -- will be
eligible for discounts on the cost of insurance.
The Health Security Act will enable those people who now
stay on welfare to keep their Medicaid benefits to seek
employment.
THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Under the Health Security Act, the Department of Defense
maintains its commitment to military readiness as its first
priority while fulfilling its obligation to provide health care
to military personnel, their dependents and retirees.
The Secretary of Defense will develop a plan for
implementing health reform and may establish military health
plans centered around military hospitals and clinics in the
United States. People who are now eligible for CHAMPUS will have
the added choice of selected civilian health plans.
Military health plans will meet the same requirements and
standards that all health plans meet. They will provide the
comprehensive benefits package, and in addition, any other
services they currently provide.
In areas in which a military health plan is established,
active-duty personnel will automatically enroll. Family members
of active duty personnel and retirees who are under the age of
65 will have the opportunity to choose a military health plan or
a civilian plan.
Employers of individuals enrolled in military health
plans will pay the employer share of the premium, as they do in
civilian health plans.
VETERANS HEALTH CARE
Health care reform will honor the nation's commitment to
continue providing comprehensive health care to its veterans.
Reform will give veterans more choices about how and where they
receive care. It will also preserve veterans' benefits and
increase the flexibility of the VA health care system.
Under the Health Security Act, the Department of Veterans
Affairs will either organize its health centers and hospitals
into health plans or allow them to act as health providers and
contract with health plans to deliver services.
Health plans organized within the VA system must meet the
standards for all health plans. All veterans may choose
to join a VA health plan if one exists in their area. If the
health plan can serve only a limited number of people, veterans
with service-connected disabilities have first priority for
enrollment, followed by low-income veterans.
The Department of Veterans Affairs will continue to provide
services that have become its specialty -- for example,
treatment of spinal cord injuries and post-traumatic stress
syndrome, as well as long-term care for elderly and disabled
veterans.
THE FEDERAL EMPLOYEES HEALTH BENEFITS PROGRAM
The Health Security Act is based on a principle embodied in
today's FEHB program: broad consumer choice of plans. Under the
Health Security Act, federal employees and retirees will join
with other members of the communities where they live and choose
from among the health plans offered by the regional health
alliance.
Federal employees and retirees, like other Americans, will
be guaranteed the security of knowing that if they change jobs,
lose their job or move, they will still be covered. The
benefits package provided in the Health Security Act is based on
today's best plans, including several of the type now offered
through FEHBP.
Under reform, government contributions will increase for
federal workers to 80 percent of the average premium, up from
the maximum of 75 percent today. For current federal
retirees, including those eligible for Medicare, the Office of
Personnel Management (OPM) will administer a Medigap option to
continue the additional protection they currently receive.
INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE
Under the Health Security Act, the Indian Health Service
will operate outside the regional alliance system; tribal
governments will exercise their full autonomy to devise health
care delivery that works for them.
When health reform is implemented, American Indians and
Alaskan Natives will have the option to choose whether they want
to receive care through the Indian Health Service or through a
health plan in a regional alliance.
The Indian Health Service will expand public health and
prevention activities, and for the first time may provide some
service to non-Indian residents living near reservations. During
a five--year period, the Indian Health Service will renovate and
expand its clinics to provide all of the services guaranteed in
the comprehensive benefits package.
Appendix II -- Scenarios Under Reform
TODAY
Under today's system, insurance companies look at dozens of
different factors to determine how much they will charge you for
health care coverage. Your medical history, your family's
medical history, where you live, how old you are, whether you
are married, whether or not you are employed, what kind of job
you have, whether you are rich or poor, how soon you are likely
to have children -- these are some of the circumstances they
consider when making judgements about what you will pay.
Today's health care system motivates insurance companies to
weed out the sick and cover the healthy. Certain populations
can only obtain coverage at high prices or can't get coverage at
all.
Others pay artificially low prices only to find that their
insurer drops them when they need health care the most. If you
work for a small business or are self-employed, you may have
faced the worst of these problems. Insurers may quote you
different prices, and you never know what you might pay from one
year to the next.
If you have been sick or injured, you could pay a lot for a
"bare bones" benefits package. Or, if you are lucky, you may pay
a small amount for a good benefits package. You could pay a lot
because you have been labeled "high risk." Or, you could pay
nothing if your employer pays 100% of your premium. You might
not even know what you pay. And you can not be sure that what
you pay today will be what you'll pay tomorrow.
THE HEALTH SECURITY ACT
Under the Health Security Act, your premiums will be
predictable and easy to figure out. If you are a full-time
employee in a business, you and your employer will only need to
know whether you are buying a policy for a single person, a
married couple, a single-parent family, or a two-parent family.
Employers will all contribute for their workers, and their
combined payments will cover 80% of the average-priced plans in
that region. Individual contributions will make up the
difference -- if you choose an average-priced plan, you will pay
20%. If you choose a plan that provides the same comprehensive
benefits at a lower price, you will pay less. If your employer
pays the entire cost of the premium, as many do today, you will
pay nothing at all. If you choose a higher cost plan, you will
pay more.
The following scenarios are used to show how much people
will pay under reform. The individuals described are not real
people, but their situations are illustrative of the impact of
health reform. The national average premiums are used to
represent the premiums in each alliance, although these amounts
will vary by state and by region. These cases are based on
average-priced plans, although consumers will be able to choose
less expensive plans or more expensive plans.
National Family Share Family Share Policy Type
Premium* (Per Month) (Per Year) Two-Parent Family
$4,360 $73 $872 with Children
Single-Parent $3,893 $65 $779 Family
Couple $3,865 $64 $773
Single Person $1,932 $32 $386
* 1994 Preliminary Estimates
EMPLOYER SHARE
The employer share is a fixed amount. Employers only need
to know whether their employee is buying a single, couple, or
family policy to know what they will pay.
Policy Type Employer Share
Two-Parent Family with Children $2,479 Single
Parent $2,479 Couple
$2,125 Single Person $1,546
* 1994 Preliminary Estimates
For couples and families -- who often have two workers --
employers will pay the same amount per worker. This method will
be clear and simple for employers and will prevent them from
having to go through the complex process of coordinating
policies with a spouse's employer or having to suddenly change
contributions when there is a divorce or a spouse is laid off.
There will be one employer price for family policies, regardless
of whether both spouses work, or how many children they have.
This will make things simpler for employers -- they won't have
to coordinate with other companies where their employees'
spouses work, or suddenly change contributions in the event of a
spouse being laid-off or a couple divorcing. Alliances will
calculate the per worker contribution based on the average
number of workers in couples and families. For example, since
the average family has 1.4 workers, an individual employer's
contribution is less than 80% -- in fact only 57% of the family
premium. When employer contributions are totaled they will add
up to 80% of couples and family premiums in the alliance.
TWO-PARENT FAMILY
Today:
Mary Sampson manages a small law office in San Jose,
California. She makes $35,000 a year. Her husband, a minister,
earns $30,000 a year. Today, they get their coverage through
Mary's employer, who pays half their premium. They pay $2,940 a
year, 8% of her salary, for their health care premiums alone,
not including co-payments and deductibles.
Reform:
Assuming they choose an average-priced plan, the premium
for Mary Sampson and her husband will be around $872 a year, or
$73 a month. They could choose a higher cost plan, which would
cost them more, or a lower-cost plan, which would cost them
less.
The Sampsons The
Sampsons Policy Type Premium Pay (Per Year) Pay
(Per Month)
Today Two-Parent $5,880 $2,940 $245
Family Reform Two-Parent $4,360 $872
$73 Family COUPLE
Today:
Dennis and Barbara Rutherford, who live in Hannibal,
Missouri have a combined income of $21,200. Dennis was laid off
from his high paying job with a large manufacturing firm in late
1990. At that time, both Rutherfords lost their health care
coverage. They have been turned down for other coverage because
of pre-existing conditions -- Dennis' high blood pressure and
Barbara's history of breast cancer. Since then, they have been
unable to afford the $9,000 a year ($750 a month) premium
offered by the only plan that will accept them.
Reform: If Dennis and Barbara enrolled in an average
priced plan, they would pay 20% of the $3,865 annual premium for
a couple -- $773 a year, or $64 a month. Under reform, insurers
will no longer be allowed to use pre-existing conditions to bar
the Rutherfords from coverage.
The Rutherfords
Policy Type Premium Pay(Per Year) Pay(Per Month)
Today* Married Couple Uninsured Uninsured Uninsured
Reform Married Couple $3,865 $773 $64
* Barbara and Dennis were offered a plan costing $9,000
dollars, but were unable to afford it. Today they pay nothing
and are uninsured.
INDIVIDUAL
Today:
Sara Bender, a 28-year-old broadcast journalist, lives in
Columbus, Ohio, and makes $34,000 a year. Because she works for
a firm which gets a lower cost premium for its healthy workers,
she has been paying only $300 a year, or $25 a month for her
health care coverage.
Reform:
If Sara enrolled in an average cost plan she would pay 20%
of the $1,932 annual premium for a single policy -- $386 a year,
or $32 a month. Sara will pay more, but she will have the
security of knowing that her coverage will always be there, and
that her costs won't rise unexpectedly as she gets older.
Sara Pays
Policy Type Premium (Per Year) (Per Month)
Today Single Person $1,200 $300 $25
Reform Single Person $1,932 $386 $32
SELF-EMPLOYED CONSULTANT
Today: Susan Addington is a single parent living in
Virginia. She is self-employed with an income of $40,000 a
year. Because her son has a serious chronic illness, she paid
$3,000 in out-of-pocket costs and $5,000 in insurance premiums
in just one year. Because she is self-employed, she was only
able to deduct 25% of her $5,000 premium or $1,250 of these
costs.
Reform:
For the family share of her premium, for an average-priced
plan, Susan will pay 20% of the $3,893 annual premium for a
single parent family -- $779 a year. She will also pay the
employer share for a single parent -- $2,479, for a total of
$3,258-a-year or $272 a month. And she will be able to deduct
100% of the premium.
Family Employer Susan Pays
Policy Type Premium Share Share (Per Yr)(Per Mo)
Today Single Parent $5,000 NA NA $5,000 $417
Reform Single Parent $3,893 $779 $2,479 $3,258 $272
PROFESSIONAL COUPLE
Today:
Michael and Elizabeth Sands work and live in Memphis,
Tennessee, and together earn almost $90,000 a year. Elizabeth
is a graphic artist, making $40,000. Although Elizabeth's firm
offers her health insurance, the couple chooses to receive their
coverage through the architectural firm where Michael works,
because it provides a more generous, comprehensive benefits
package. Today, the Sands pay $720 a year, or $60 a month, for
this coverage. The total premium costs $4,400 a year, and the
architecture firm pays the rest.
Reform:
The Sands want to stay with their current plan. Under
reform, this plan will cost less than it does today because it
will no longer pay for the uncompensated care delivered to the
uninsured, saving 10% of the current premium cost.
The average cost of a couple premium in the Sands' alliance is
$3,865 but the Sands pick a plan that will cost $4,000. They
will pay the difference between 80% of the average cost plan,
which is $3092, and $4,000, or $908 a year, $75 a month.
Under reform, the Sands may pay their family share either by
having it subtracted from his paycheck or from hers. For
fifteen dollars more a month, the Sands will be getting the same
high quality, comprehensive benefit package they do today, but
with the assurance that they can never lose it.
The Sands Pay
Policy Type Premium (Per Year) (Per Month)
Today Married Couple $4,400 $720 $60
Reform Married Couple $4,000 $908 $75
LOW-INCOME FAMILY Today:
Lars and Brenda Gustafson recently had a new baby, and
Brenda resigned from her job shortly before the baby was born.
Lars works for a messenger service in Minneapolis, Minnesota and
takes home about $250 a week, or $13,000 a year. His employer
does not offer him health insurance. As a result, he and his
family have been uninsured for over two years and are struggling
to pay the hospital bill from the birth of the baby.
Reform:
Provided Lars and Brenda choose an average price plan, they
will pay 20% of $4,360 or $872 for a two-parent family policy.
However, because Lars is in a two-parent family with income less
than $14,781 a year, Lars is eligible for a discount, reducing
his premium to $384 a year.
The Gustafsons Pay
Policy Type Premium (Per Yr) Per Mo) Today
Two-Parent Family $0 $0 $0 Reform Two-
Parent Family $4,360 $384 $32
LOW-INCOME COUPLE
Today:
Linda Bradley, from Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, works in a local
print shop making $13,570 a year. Her husband Doug is a
freelance photographer but has been unable to find work in the
last year. Today, they pay $50 a month for a meager benefit
package they obtain through Linda's employer. Her employer, a
small business, contributes $600 a year, half the premium. The
policy has a high deductible and provides limited benefits.
Reform: Because Linda and Doug select an average-
priced plan and their combined income is below 150% of poverty,
they are eligible for a discounted premium of $503 a year, or
$42 a month, for comprehensive coverage.
The Bradleys Pay
Policy Type Premium (Per Year) (Per Month)
Today Married Couple $1,200 $600 $50
Reform Married Couple $3,865 $503 $42
PART-TIME WORKER WITH NO NON-WAGE INCOME
Part-time workers (defined as working more than 10 but less
than 30 hours a week), who have no non-wage income, will pay 20%
of the premium in their area for their policy type, assuming
they enroll in an average-priced plan. Their employers will pay
a pro-rated amount of the employer share based on the number of
hours worked.
Today:
Lee Harris, of Cleveland, Ohio, was laid off from her job
after a big downsizing at her former company. Lee was
unemployed for over a year and recently took a job delivering
pizzas 20 hours a week. Lee makes $10 an hour and has no non-
wage income. Lee can only afford a bare bones policy which
costs her $840 a year. Her employer contributes nothing towards
her coverage.
Reform:
Assuming Lee picks an average-priced plan, she will pay 20%
of the individual policy -- $386 a year, or $32 a month. Her
employer will only pay two-thirds of the employer share for a
single person -- $1,033 a year, or $86 a month. Since Lee has
no non-wage income, federally-funded discounts will pay for one
third of the employer premium.
Lee Pays
Policy Type Premium (Per Year) (Per Month)
Today Single Person $840 $840 $70
Reform Single Person $1,932 $386 $32
PART-TIME WORKER WITH NON-WAGE INCOME
Part-time workers with substantial non-wage income, for
example those with most of their income from rental property,
are liable for the remaining portion of the employer share.
If you work ... Your employer pays You pay ... 10
hours 1/3 of employer share 2/3 of employer share
15 hours 1/2 of employer share 1/2 of employer share
20 hours 2/3 of employer share 1/3 of employer share
Today:
Mary Wortheimer is a 45-year-old widow who receives $60,000
a year from her husband's estate. She works 10 hours a week at a
local boutique. She makes an extra $6,000 a year at the shop for
a total income of $66,000 a year. She buys a single policy for
herself at a cost of $1,800 a year.
Reform:
The boutique will pay one third of the employer premium --
$516 per year, or $43 per month. If she enrolls in an average-
priced plan, Mary will pay 20% of the individual policy premium
-- $386 a year or $86 a month in her area. Because Mary has
substantial non-wage income and works one third of the week,
Mary is also responsible for two thirds of $1,549, the employer
share for a single policy -- $1,033 per year, or $86 per month.
Mary's total health insurance premium will be approximately
$1,419 per year, or $118 a month.
Family Employer Mary Pays
Policy Type Premium Share Share (Per/Yr)(Per/Mo)
Today Single Person $1,800 NA NA $1,800 $150
Reform Single Person $1,932 $386 $1,033 $1,419 $118
SELF-EMPLOYED FARMER
Today:
James Huggins, a self-employed family farmer in Kansas,
makes $25,000 a year and has struggled to pay for health care
coverage for himself, his wife and his 10-year-old son. James,
like many rural residents, has had trouble getting and keeping
insurance. And unlike a business, he is only able to deduct one
fourth of the $4,000 he pays in premiums each year.
Reform:
If James enrolls in an average cost plan, he will pay 20%
of the $4,360 annual family premium or $872 a year. Like a
business, James will also pay the employer share of his premium,
which would normally be $2,479. However, that amount would
exceed 7.9% of James' $25,000 income, the limit on what
employers are required to pay. Instead James will pay 7.9% of
$25,000 or $1,975 for his employer share. James will pay a
total of $2,847 a year, or $237 a month. For the first time,
James Huggins will be also be able to deduct from taxable income
the full cost of his health care premiums.
Policy Type Premium Family Employer James Pays
share Share Per Yr)(Per Mo) Today Two-Parent
$4,000 NA NA $4,000 $333 Family Reform
Two-Parent $4,360 $872 $1,975* $2,847 $237
Family
*Capped at 7.9%
MEDICARE BENEFICIARY
Medicare beneficiaries will have the same guaranteed health
security they have today, plus a new prescription drug benefit
that will be integrated into Medicare Part B. Beneficiaries
will continue to pay their Part B premium just as they do today.
They will pay an additional $11-a-month for the new prescription
drug benefit.
Today:
Claude and Gertrude Anderson are retired farmers living on
a fixed income of about $40,000 a year in West Virginia. Today,
they receive Medicare coverage and pay $36.60 for their Part B
premium. They also buy a Medigap policy for $1,200 a year to
help cover their prescription drug costs, co-payments and
deductibles.
Reform:
Under reform, Claude and Gertrude will be covered by a new
prescription drug benefit through the Medicare program. They
will pay $11-a-month for this new benefit. It will provide them
with coverage for 80% of their monthly $300 prescription drug
costs after they meet a $250 deductible. And they will not pay
more than $1,000 a year in prescription drug costs.
The Andersons will continue to pay their Medicare Part B premium
just as they do today. The $100-a-month the Andersons pay for
their Medigap policy will either decline to account for the new
Medicare drug coverage, or cover additional services.In
addition, Medicare certified managed care plans, which
frequently have lower deductibles and co-payments, will be more
available as an option.
Part B Prescription The
Andersons Premium Drug Premium
Pay Policy Type (Per Month) (Per Month) (Per
Month)
Today Medicare $36.60 $0 $36.60
Beneficiary
Reform Medicare $36.60 $11 $47.60
Beneficiary
* 1993 Medicare Part B premium; 1994 projections have not
been released as of the writing of this book
WORKING MEDICARE BENEFICIARY
Working Medicare beneficiaries will join the alliances in
their areas. While they are working, their employers will pay
the employer share of their premium. Just like everyone else,
they will pay 20% of the premium for their policy type if they
enroll in an average-priced plan. Today:
Larry Watson is a 68-year-old Medicare beneficiary who
works in a law firm in Omaha, Nebraska. Today, he pays $36.60 a
month for his Part B premium. His employer pays nothing towards
his health care coverage.
Reform:
Under reform, Larry will be able to get his Medicare
coverage through his local health alliance and receive the
guaranteed comprehensive package of benefits. His employer will
pay the employer share of the single person premium, and Larry
will pay 20% of the average premium in his alliance assuming to
enrolls in an average- priced plan -- $386 a year, or $32 a
month.
Larry Pays
Policy Type Premium (Per Year) (Per Month)
Today Working Medicare NA $439 $36.60
Beneficiary
Reform Working Medicare $1,932 $386 $32
Beneficiary
* When Larry stops working, Medicare will pay for his benefits.
Larry will pay the Part B premium and the $11-a-month for
prescription drug coverage.
MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES (AFDC AND SSI)
The federal and state governments will continue to make
payments for health coverage for individuals eligible for Aid to
Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) and Supplemental
Security Income (SSI). However, instead of paying doctors and
hospitals directly, Medicaid will pay premiums to the alliance.
Today:
Pamela Johnson is a single, unemployed mother of two young
children. Because she has only $300 in savings and is earning
no income, she qualifies for cash assistance through the AFDC
program, and she and her children receive their health insurance
through the Medicaid program in their home state of Vermont.
She has encountered numerous doctors who refuse to treat her
because of low Medicaid reimbursement rates. In addition,
Pamela would like to get off welfare and return to work, but she
can't afford to lose her Medicaid coverage for herself and her
two children.
Reform:
Just like everyone else, Pamela and her children will be
able to enroll in a health plan through the regional alliance.
For the first time, Pamela will have a choice about which health
plan to enroll in. She will receive the same comprehensive
package of benefits as everyone else. Medicaid will cover the
cost of the average family premium in the alliance. If Pamela
chooses a plan with average or below-average costs, she will be
responsible only for her co-payments. If she chooses a more
expensive plan, she will pay the portion of her premium that is
above the average in her alliance. Pamela and her
children will continue to be eligible for supplemental services,
such as non-emergency transportation, currently offered by
Medicaid programs. If they join an HMO she will pay a $2-per-
visit rather than the standard $10-per-visit. For the first
time, Pamela will have the freedom of knowing that she will have
health care coverage, making it more feasible to go to work.
MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES WHO DO NOT RECEIVE AFDC OR SSI
Today:
Alexandra Warren is single, and works as a waitress at
George's Coffeehouse in rural California at minimum wage.
Although her annual income is 115% of poverty, she is eligible
for Medicaid because she has a chronic and costly illness which
requires frequent hospitalization and which, when the costs are
deducted from her income, makes her eligible for Medicaid in her
state.
Reform:
Under reform, Alexandra will no longer rely on Medicaid for
her health benefits. She will select a health plan through the
regional alliance, and share the costs of her coverage with her
employer. Since Alexandra earns only $8,256 a year -- less than
150% of poverty -- she will be eligible for a discounted
premium. Alexandra will pay $267 a year, or $22 a month if she
chooses an average-cost plan.
Alexandra Pays
Policy Type Premium (Per Year)(Per Month)
Today Single Person Medicaid Pays Reform
Single Person $1,932 $267 $22
CHILD WITH DISABILITIES
Today:
Alec Moore is a 10-year-old child with severe cerebral
palsy. He lives at home with his parents. Both of Alec's
parents work outside the home, but because of his condition they
cannot afford health insurance. Today, Alec receives Medicaid
coverage because his state provides Medicaid coverage to
"medically needy" individuals who, although they do not meet the
normal income criteria for Medicaid, have medical expenses that
are very hig.
Reform:
Under reform, Alec will continue to receive all of the
services he is eligible for today. His parents will obtain
health insurance through their employers, and their policies
will cover him for all services included in the comprehensive
benefits package. Both their employers and Alec's
family will gain from health reform: Alec will have the
guarantee of health security with no lifetime limits on
coverage. His parents will know that they will never confront a
situation in which they will be unable to obtain coverage
because of his condition. Their employees will not be faced
with the dilemma of unusually high premiums caused by having
someone with high medical costs in their health insurance group.
Assuming they choose an average cost plan, Alec's parents will
pay 20% of the premium for a family plan, $872 a year, or $73 a
month.
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT
Today:
Jason Loewith is a 19-year-old sophomore at Tulane
University in New Orleans. His parents, who claim Jason as a
dependent for tax purposes, live in Connecticut. He pays
nothing for his health insurance because he is covered under his
family's plan. Jason works for the University part-time, in the
admissions office. Reform:
Because he is a dependent student, Jason's family will
continue to pay for his coverage through their alliance in
Connecticut. That alliance will transfer a portion of the
family's premium to an alliance in Louisiana, which will provide
Jason's coverage. Neither Jason nor his employer, the
university, will contribute to his premium costs, because of his
status as a student and a dependent.
UNEMPLOYED INDIVIDUAL
Today:
Last year, Ann Tilson, a travel agent in a small company in
Vidalia, Georgia, was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. As a
result, her employer's insurance company raised their premiums
substantially. Ann later had to quit her job.
Today, Ann cannot get coverage from any other insurer for
her pre-existing condition, so she elected, under the COBRA law,
to remain insured by the same company that provided her coverage
when she worked for the travel agency. Although she has
insurance, she is responsible for paying the entire $625 monthly
premium herself. Ann's parents help her with the money.
Reform:
Because Ann is unemployed and has no non-wage income other
than unemployment insurance, Ann will not have to pay for her
health coverage until she finds a new job. Ann will receive the
guaranteed benefits package and will continue to be able to see
the same doctor she sees today. When Ann finds work,
her employer will be responsible for the employer contribution
and she will be responsible for the employee contribution but,
unlike today, those contributions will be both predictable and
affordable, and she will not pay extra for her health coverage
because she has multiple sclerosis.
FEDERAL EMPLOYEE
Today:
Corinne Quigley is a 38 year old employee of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. She and her husband and two children
live in Washington DC. Corrine obtains her health insurance
through the Federal Employees Health Benefits Plan (FEHBP),
which combines all federal employees in the area into a large
purchasing pool to offer a large number of insurance plans. All
federal employees, including Corinne, have a broad range of
plans to choose from, and the same premium applies to all
federal employees of a given family size, regardless of age or
health status. Corinne pays $1,000 a year or $83 a month.
Reform:
Under reform, federal employees like Corinne will join the
regional alliance with other residents in their area. Similar
to the FEHBP, an alliance will offer an array of health plans,
and the same premium will be charged, regardless of age or
health status. All members will have many plans to choose from,
and will be able to change plans once a year. Assuming the
Quigleys enroll in an average-priced plan, they will pay 20% of
the average family premium in their alliance -- $872 a year, or
$73 a month.
The Quigleys Pay
Policy Type Premium (Per Year) (Per Month)
Today Two-Parent Family $4,000 $1,000 $83
Reform Two-Parent Family $4,360 $872 $73
VETERANS
Veterans with service-connected disabilities and low-income
veterans will be eligible to receive the nationally guaranteed
comprehensive benefit package through the Department of Veteran
Affairs with no co-payments or deductibles. They will continue
to be eligible for supplemental services offered by VA, such as
treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder, and certain dental
services.
Today:
Al Green, a 52-year-old single veteran, lives in Ann Arbor,
Michigan and works in a neighborhood store. Al lost a leg in the
Vietnam War, and he receives his health care free-of-charge from
the VA.
Reform:
Al will have the opportunity to choose from among several
health plans offered through his alliance. If Al opts to receive
his health care through another health plan and chooses an
average-cost plan, he will pay 20% of the individual policy --
$386 a year, or $32 a month. The store where he works will pay
the employer share. If he chooses the VA plan, Al's
employer will pay the employer share of his premium, and the VA
will pay his 20% share of the premium to the alliance.
UNION WORKER
Today: Aleesha Maiuz is a factory worker in St. Louis,
Missouri, making $36,000 a year. As a union member, she
receives comprehensive benefits for which her employer pays the
full amount. Her husband works at a local grocery store which
does not offer health care coverage. He is covered under
Aleesha's plan.
Reform:
Under the Health Security Act, Aleesha's employer will
still be able to provide 100% of health benefits. Her employer's
contribution for a family premium will be sharply reduced
because the cost of families will be spread across all
employers, and her employer will no longer be indirectly paying
the unpaid medical bills of the uninsured. Lower costs for the
company may mean an increase in wages for Aleesha, and will mean
that Aleesha's benefits are more likely to be preserved in the
future.
TEACHER
Today:
Jonathan O'Hara teaches sixth grade in Des Moines, Iowa,
making $28,000 a year. Under his union contract, he receives
comprehensive benefits at no personal cost. His wife, Rebecca,
is a nurse, and is covered under Jonathan's plan.
Reform:
Under the Health Security Act, Jonathan and Rebecca will
continue to receive the comprehensive package of benefits they
receive today. They will stand a better chance for wage
increases over time because the local school district, like
other employers that have offered generous benefits, will see
its premium costs go down. Under reform, it will no longer be
indirectly paying for the unpaid medical bills of the uninsured.
In addition, the school district will see its costs go down
because the hospital where Rebecca works will begin contributing
to the cost of their family policy. Under reform, businesses
that employ two-earner couples will no longer bear the cost of
family coverage alone.
SMALL BUSINESS
Today:
Mr. and Mrs. Jones, who have two children, own a flower shop
which is incorporated. They have three employees -- Matt, Jane,
and Scott. Matt is a 16-year-old high school student who comes
to work part-time after school. Jane and Scott are both single
and work at the shop full-time. Their average payroll, which
includes the Jones's salary, is $17,000 per year per worker.
Last year, Mr. and Mrs. Jones could not afford to provide health
insurance for their employees. However, they did independently
purchase a policy to cover their family -- at a cost of $5,200.
Reform:
Without any discounts, the flower shop will pay the
employer share of $1,546 each for Scott and Jane for a single
person policy, and $2,479 each for Mr. and Mrs. Jones for a two-
parent policy -- a total of $8,050. As a result of
discounts offered to small business, the flower shop's
contribution for each employee will be limited to 5.3% of the
average payroll however. The flower shop will pay no more than
$901-per-year or $75-a-month for each worker. For all four
workers and their dependents, the cost will total no more than
$3,604 per year. Because Matt is covered under his
parent's policy, the flower shop will not contribute towards his
health insurance. In addition to what they pay as
owners of the shop, Mr. and Mrs. Jones will pay the employee
share of their family policy -- $872 per year if they enroll in
an average-priced plan. In total, Mr. and Mrs. Jones will have
family coverage for $2,674 per year -- saving $2,525 from what
they are currently paying. Another way of looking at
it is that for $4,476 -- $2,674 for the Jones' family coverage
and $901 each for Jane and Scott - - they will provide coverage
for themselves and their employees.