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October 30, 2018 • Page 11
Fixing Obamacare’s ‘Family Glitch’
Hinges On Outcome Of Midterms
BY SHEFALI LUTHRA
© 2018, Kaiser Health News
Last Christmas Eve, Justine Bradford-Trent slipped on
ice, slamming to the ground. Her elbow swelled. Was it
broken? She couldn’t tell.
Because Bradford-Trent was uninsured, she weighed
her options. She could go to the emergency room, the
immediate but more costly option. The urgent care
center cost less, but it was closed for the holiday. The
Idaho resident decided to wait and, once the swelling
subsided, she concluded it was just a bad bruise.
Bradford-Trent, 54, knows she was lucky this time.
But, because her family can’t afford health insurance,
she worries about the next time something happens.
“What if ... I end up with cancer or (something) like
that?” she said. “I don’t want to be faced with a decision
of having to make a choice: to live or die? Or do we go
into debt so deeply that it’s thousands and thousands of
dollars just to save me, and we’re stuck in debt for the
rest of our lives?”
Although the Affordable Care Act is credited with expanding health insurance to about 20 million Americans,
a small segment of the population — including BradfordTrent — has been left behind.
The problem is called the “family glitch.” It’s deeply
rooted in the health law’s weeds. And fixing it would cost
taxpayers a bundle.
In the current Republican-controlled Congress —
which has been more interested in dismantling the
health law than building on it — such a fix is unlikely.
Unlikely, that is, unless the Democrats, who have been
campaigning hard for the congressional elections on
health care issues, pick up enough seats to control the
legislative agenda.
Under the ACA, people who meet a particular income
threshold can get a federal subsidy to help buy insurance on the marketplace. One of the conditions of
eligibility is that the consumer doesn’t have access to
“affordable” coverage through work — that is, the employee’s share of the insurance would cost no more than
9.86 percent of the employee’s household income.
The sticky part: calculating affordability considers
only the cost of insuring one family member, even if the
person’s spouse and children also would be covered
through that health plan. So while the cost of individual
coverage might sound feasible, adding the rest of the
family would quickly cause financial strain.
For Bradford-Trent, it’s a real problem. Her husband,
who works in commercial construction, makes $66,000
per year and is the family’s primary breadwinner. She’s a
part-time notary public, earning “a few hundred dollars a
month — not enough to pay for insurance,” she said.
His employer-based coverage alone would be a doable $172 a month. That’s well within the 9.86 percent
“affordability” threshold. But to add their daughter to
the plan is another $270. To add Bradford-Trent as well
would add $718 more, she says — a total of $1,060.
“That’s 25 percent of his take-home pay — 25 percent,”
she said. “That’s astronomical.” And that doesn’t include
out-of-pocket costs for any medications or procedures.
For now, they’ve chosen to buy insurance for her
husband and daughter. She goes without and hopes to
stay healthy.
They’ve explored other health coverage options. She
is looking for a full-time job with benefits. She and her
husband have considered divorcing, or moving to another state, to see if she could qualify for health coverage.
They’ve even turned to the ACA marketplace in search
of an individual plan for her, but those generally have a
price tag north of $400 a month.
This year, Obamacare open enrollment runs from
Nov. 1 to Dec. 15. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services announced Oct. 11 that the cost of premiums
for plans available on the federal marketplace have, for
the first time, trended downward. In 2018, by contrast,
the national average rate of premium hikes ran well into
the double digits. (Idaho’s average 2019 increase is 5
percent, far below last year’s 27 percent hike.)
Policy analysts say there is no obvious solution to the
family glitch. It’s a widely recognized problem that has
gotten lost in the shuffle, as it affects a relatively small
number of Americans — up to about 1.8 percent of the
population, or 6 million people.
“Last year there was essentially one issue, and that
was all of the repeal-and-replace attempts,” said Matthew Buettgens, a senior research analyst at the Urban
Institute’s Health Policy Center, who has studied the
glitch. “Proposals to expand federal spending have not
been active in the public debate.”
Any fix, for instance, would likely involve changing
the eligibility calculation for marketplace subsidies
— pegging the affordability standard to the coverage
Mead Update
cost of the whole family rather than just an individual’s
coverage. Doing so would increase federal spending by
about $9 billion or $10 billion, according to estimates by
the RAND Corp., a nonprofit think tank, since many more
people would qualify for subsidies.
Such a change was proposed by Hillary Clinton during her presidential campaign and is now part of bills put
forth by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Rep. Frank
Pallone, D-N.J., though both bills have stalled on Capitol
Hill.
But the idea could gain traction if Democrats — who
are already campaigning on health care and slogans
like “Medicare-for-all” — take one or both chambers of
Congress.
“If you talk about what might be realistically possible
if the election produces strong shocks to the system,
then maybe you think, ‘Well, the Democrats have the majority in the House. Maybe Democrats and Republicans
could come together on some affordability reforms,”
said Jonathan Oberlander, a professor of social medicine
and health policy at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill. “This would be an enticing part of that
agenda.”
The White House says it’s taking steps to address
health care unaffordability — rolling out plans such as
“association health plans” and “short-term limited-duration plans” — skimpier, less regulated coverage that also
cost less. That could be an option for people priced out
of both employer and marketplace plans, some experts
say.
“If your alternative is less affordable coverage — or
none at all — they look more attractive,” said Thomas
Miller, a resident fellow at the conservative American
Enterprise Institute, a Washington think tank.
But other experts caution that those options leave patients vulnerable, since they can charge higher rates to
people with preexisting conditions, cover fewer benefits
and often have higher out-of-pocket costs. For BradfordTrent, such plans cover too little to merit the price, she
said.
For now, she feels forgotten. And hopes she won’t get
sick.
“There are choices you don’t want to have to make
for yourself in life because affordable health care is not
available,” Bradford-Trent said.
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