Health Law Fails to Keep Prices Low in Rural Areas - “There’s nothing in the structure of the Affordable Care Act which really deals with that problem.” This can be said about so much of the Act.
From The New York Times:
As technical failures bedevil the rollout of President Obama’s health care law, evidence is emerging that one of the program’s loftiest goals — to encourage competition among insurers in an effort to keep costs low — is falling short for many rural Americans.
As technical failures bedevil the rollout of President Obama’s health care law, evidence is emerging that one of the program’s loftiest goals — to encourage competition among insurers in an effort to keep costs low — is falling short for many rural Americans.
While competition is intense in many populous regions,
rural areas and small towns have far fewer carriers offering plans in the law’s
online exchanges. Those places, many of them poor, are being asked to choose
from some of the highest-priced plans in the 34 states where the federal
government is running the health insurance marketplaces, a review by The New
York Times has found.
Of the roughly 2,500 counties served by the federal
exchanges, more than half, or 58 percent, have plans offered by just one or two
insurance carriers, according to an analysis by The Times of county-level data
provided by the Department of Health and Human Services. In about 530 counties,
only a single insurer is participating.
The analysis suggests that the ambitions of the
Affordable Care Act to increase competition have unfolded unevenly, at least in
the early going, and have not addressed many of the factors that contribute to
high prices. Insurance companies are reluctant to enter challenging new markets,
experts say, because medical costs are high, dominant insurers are difficult to
unseat, and powerful hospital systems resist efforts to lower rates.
“There’s nothing in the structure of the Affordable
Care Act which really deals with that problem,” said John Holahan, a fellow at
the Urban Institute, who noted that many factors determine costs in a given
market. “I think that all else being equal, premiums will clearly be higher when
there’s not that competition.”
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