Feature

A health plan ‘down payment’ is one way states are retooling individual mandate


 


The Congressional Budget Office estimated that 13 million people nationwide would become uninsured without the individual mandate. Some will choose to go without insurance or will not be able to find an affordable plan. Insurers could opt to leave local markets because they could not make money covering only sick patients.

Feldman said insurers and health care experts testified before the commission that Maryland’s insurance exchange would collapse in 2019 if the state didn’t act.

“Because of uncertainty at the federal level, it’s going to be up to states in this arena to pick up the slack and to enact legislation that responds to that uncertainty,” he said.

The federal mandate imposed a tax penalty on people who could afford to but chose not to buy insurance, depositing the money in a general Treasury fund.

In Maryland, the penalty fee will effectively be used, according to advocates, as a “down payment” on an insurance policy.

Beginning in 2020, if someone indicates on their taxes that they’re uninsured, the state would use the fine, plus any tax credits from the federal government, to buy an insurance plan for them.

Maryland would match its residents only with plans that cost nothing more than the fine plus the federal subsidy. So, if such a plan isn’t available in a person’s area, the state will hold on to the money in an interest-bearing account until the next open enrollment season. Then, the person has another chance to buy insurance. If at this time they don’t purchase a plan, the state will deposit the money into an insurance stabilization fund.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Study finds AD accounts for hundreds of thousands of annual ED visits
MDedge Dermatology
Facing the world
MDedge Dermatology
Let There Be Light: Update on Coding for Photodynamic Therapy and Lasers
MDedge Dermatology
Digital Strategies For Dermatology Patient Education
MDedge Dermatology
Risking it all on the miracle of teamwork
MDedge Dermatology
CMS issues split decision on Arkansas Medicaid waiver
MDedge Dermatology
Preparing to respond to workplace violence
MDedge Dermatology
Payers part of the drug-pricing problem, says FDA commissioner
MDedge Dermatology
MDedge Daily News: High deductibles harm breast cancer care
MDedge Dermatology
MDedge Daily News: Time to raise the bar on diabetes blood sugar levels
MDedge Dermatology