Are short-term health care plans better than none at all?

Beware: alternative options are mainly designed for the healthy

Published December 11, 2017 3:59AM (EST)

 (Getty/vm)
(Getty/vm)

This article originally appeared on Kaiser Health News.

When one of Cindy Holtzman’s clients told the Woodstock, Ga., broker he was considering dropping his Affordable Care Act plan because next year’s cost approached $23,000 for his family of four, she suggested a new option: a back-to-back set of four, 90-day short-term plans, which would effectively give them a modicum of medical coverage for 2018.

An Obama administration rule limited short-term coverage to three months at a time because it was meant as a stopgap between more substantial policies. But several insurers, including big players Golden Rule and National General, now are sidestepping that rule by packaging three or four consecutive 90-day plans, with a one-time medical review upfront.

“I’m not pitching this to replace Obamacare, but when you’re telling me you’re going to get nothing,” Holtzman said, “I want to throw this into the arena.”

As premiums rise and some middle-class families feel they can’t bear the costs of a more secure Obamacare plan with its coverage guarantees, brokers and agencies have unveiled a slew of alternatives.

Interest has grown after the Trump administration stopped paying insurers subsidies they use to lower deductibles for lower-income ACA policyholders, which caused premiums to rise. The administration has also signaled it will soon loosen restrictions for alternative coverage, including ending the rule that limits short-term plans to 90 days.

But advocates warn shoppers to carefully read the fine print and understand what they’re buying. The plans might not cover what you think.

Most short-term coverage requires answering a string of medical questions, and insurers can reject applicants with preexisting medical problems, which ACA plans cannot do.

Because short-term plans fall short of ACA standards, policyholders are considered uninsured and face an IRS tax penalty, which could be hundreds of dollars for an individual or thousands for a family.

“If you absolutely cannot afford [an ACA-compliant plan] — and you are sure you are healthy — look at other plans. But they all come with the caveat that if you get sick, they won’t give you much coverage,” said Joel Ario, a former Pennsylvania insurance commissioner and now a managing director at Manatt Health Solutions, a consulting firm.

To keep premium costs low, the policies set annual and lifetime caps on benefits. Many don’t cover prescription drugs, and most exclude coverage for maternity care, preventive care, mental health services or substance abuse treatment.

Also not covered are preexisting conditions, defined as anything treated — or for which a “prudent person” should have sought treatment — during the previous 12 months to five years, depending on the insurer.

Insurers can also bar coverage for any condition a patient develops after their initial enrollment period, even if they want to sign up again for another term with the same insurer.

Broker Kelly Rector in O’Fallon, Mo., cautions consumers: “Even if they’re healthy enough to get on the plan now, but have a heart attack in a month, they won’t be able to reapply and will be out of coverage for the rest of the year,” until the next ACA open enrollment.

Sold by a wide range of insurers, the plans usually pay a percentage of the cost for medical care, after the policyholder pays a deductible, which can range from $1,000 to $10,000 or more per contract term.

Already, insurers have begun offering plans that seem to anticipate that the Trump administration will restore the ability to hold short-term plans for 364 days.

National General’s package, for example, guarantees “eligibility for three more consecutive plans.” However, on those packages and similar ones offered by other insurers, the deductible resets every 90 days, so the patient would be on the hook for that amount every three months. That means a $5,000 deductible could grow to $20,000 if the policy were kept for the full year.

Premiums vary by insurer and other factors, including age, the deductible and how much coverage the plan provides.

Holtzman says a National General plan for her 46-year-old client, his wife and two children in Georgia with a $2,500 deductible every 90 days would cost $1,348 a month.

That’s appealing when compared with his current ACA plan, Holtzman said, for which the premium would be about $1,900 a month next year, with a $3,000 annual deductible.

Still, if the family enrolled in a different ACA plan than his current coverage, the differences narrow.

The least expensive ACA plan in his area would cost his family $1,335 a month, according to government website healthcare.gov, which is about the same as the short-term plan by National. The ACA plan has a bigger annual deductible — $13,600 for his family — but the gap dwindles if someone falls ill and the family ends up meeting the deductible under the short-term plan in each of the four consecutive terms.

Consumer advocates say an ACA plan would cost the family more upfront but would include benefits for any preexisting conditions and would cover more, noting the short-term plan does not include coverage for prescription drugs and excludes benefits for chronic pain, congenital conditions and immunodeficiency disorders.

“People should be aware,” said Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at Georgetown University’s Health Policy Institute. “There’s a huge variety of plans out there — from true bottom feeders that are going to take your money and don’t provide any protection to legitimate products that are designed to meet a short-term need.”

Her advice: Find a reputable broker, read the fine print “and look for caps on amounts that they will pay per service, which can leave you holding the financial bag if you have to go to the hospital.”


By Julie Appleby

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