Ailing Uninsurables May Face Long Wait for Care

Associated Press Reform plan to cover the sickest who lack insurance calls for 6 month delay reidpelosiWASHINGTON - Youre afraid your cancer is back and a health insurance company just turned you down. Under the health care bills in Congress you could apply for coverage through a new high-risk pool that President Barack Obama promises would immediately start serving patients with pre-existing medical problems. Wait a second. Read the fine print. You may have to be uninsured for six months to qualify. If you are a cancer patient and have cancer now you cant wait six months to go into a plan because your condition can go from bad to death said Stephen Finan a policy expert with the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network. He called the waiting period in the Senate bill unacceptable. Advocates for people with serious health problems as well as some insurance experts are raising questions about one of the most important upfront benefits in the Democratic health care legislation: a high-risk pool for the medically uninsurable. Obama proposed the pool in his September health care speech to Congress. Intended to serve the most vulnerable as a temporary fail-safe it would stay in place until 2013. Thats when insurance companies would be banned from denying coverage because of medical problems. Government subsidies to make coverage more affordable for millions of uninsured would also start that year. Is $5 billion enough to cover those in need? Now concerns are being raised about the design of the high-risk pools. In addition to the six-month wait theres a more fundamental issue whether $5 billion set aside for the three-year program is enough. The money would be used to help people in poor health pay premiums. Obama credits his Republican presidential rival Sen. John McCain of Arizona for the risk-pools idea. But when the GOP candidate proposed it in 2008 the estimated cost was $7 billion to $10 billion a year. The six-month wait is in the health care bill the Senate Finance Committee approved last month. To qualify for the pool patients must be turned down for coverage because of a pre-existing condition and uninsured for at least six months. If you are somebody with cancer or a heart condition who needs immediate coverage and immediate treatment thats not very helpful said Karen Pollitz a Georgetown University health policy professor. Senate Finance staffers say the restriction is meant to prevent people switching from more expensive coverage to take advantage of government assistance. Pelosis plan doesnt have waiting period But the House health care bill unveiled last week by Speaker Nancy Pelosi D-Calif. doesnt include a waiting period. Instead it would require insurance plans who dump seriously ill patients to repay the federal pool. The House provision will provide immediate relief for people with high-risk conditions who have no alternative for coverage said Finan. It may be easier to fix the waiting period than the financing. Both the House and the Senate Finance bills set aside $5 billion for the pools. It doesnt seem like its near enough money said Douglas Holtz-Eakin who was a top domestic policy adviser for McCain. The McCain campaign ultimately concluded it could take as much as $20 billion a year to properly run risk pools he said. The White House says McCains proposal was more elaborate and not directly comparable to Obamas. If the Democrats risk pool starts running out of money the government may have to start a waiting list raise premiums or take other unpopular measures. Congress could be asked for a bailout. Several independent experts say concerns about the financing are valid. It would seem that ($5 billion) is going to be small relative to the need said Thomas Buchmueller a University of Michigan business professor. Some 30 states now have risk pools for those who cant get health insurance on the private market covering about 200000 people at a cost of around $1 billion a year. This is clearly not going to be enough money to cover everybody said Pollitz. Insurance expert John Bertko a visiting scholar at the Brookings Institution said it may be possible to stretch the $5 billion but theres a small margin for error. Bertko said his back of the envelope math suggests there are about 1 million uninsured Americans in poor health or five times the number currently covered by state high-risk pools. If all of them signed up for the new federal pool it would burn through the $5 billion in a year. However people eligible for government benefits often fail to sign up. And if only one-third were to enroll the budget could work. Thats cutting it close. No doubt about that said Bertko.
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