SAN FRANCISCO, Kalifornia (PNN) - July 29, 2013 - The Obamacare disaster continues to unfold, months before the entire law is even supposed to take effect, with everyone from insurance companies to firms and private individuals positioning themselves to best withstand the onslaught of job-killing, care-stealing bureaucracy.
One of the Affordable Care Act's most recent casualties is Anthem Blue Cross, which has announced it will shun Kalifornia's small-business health insurance market, which the Los Angeles Times describes as a "a potential setback in the state's rollout of the federal healthcare law." Actually, it's more like a "potential setback" for small businesses needing competitive insurance rates to remain afloat.
Anthem, a unit of WellPoint Inc., is Kalifornia's largest insurer for small employers. The company's surprising move raised concerns about the state's ability to offer competitive rates and attract businesses to its new Covered Kalifornia exchange that opens Jan. 1.
Remember when Obama promised over and over again that, "if you like your health insurance plan, you can keep it," and, "no one will take it away, no matter what"?
He also promised that "if you've got a doctor you like, you'll get to keep your doctor."
Not so fast. On that last promise, here's a little tidbit of info from the Amerikan Gestapo Department of Health and Human Services division website - a quiet little admission that you and your doctor may not have a permanent thing going on after all is said and done.
”Depending on the plan you choose in the Marketplace, you may be able to keep your current doctor. Different plans have different networks and providers. Most health insurance plans offered in the Marketplace have networks of hospitals, doctors, specialists, pharmacies, and other health care providers. Networks include health care providers that the plan contracts with to take care of the plan's members. Depending on the type of policy you buy, care may be covered only when you get it from a network provider. When comparing plans in the Marketplace, you will see a link to a list of providers in each plan's network. If staying with your current doctors is important to you, check to see if they are included before choosing a plan.”
Anthem became the first insurance company to opt out of Kalifornia's small-business insurance market. Other insurance biggies - UnitedHealth Group, Inc. and Aetna, Inc. - previously announced they would not offer individuals coverage in Kalifornia.
Anthem said it would continue selling to small businesses that remained outside of the government-run health exchanges established under Obamacare, but that alone tells you all you need to know: The company is afraid of the consequences of becoming mired in perhaps the largest federal bureaucracy ever devised; and given the government's poor record of managing anything, who can blame them?
"That's really surprising and not a good thing for (Kalifornia's) exchange," said Micah Weinberg, a senior policy advisor at the Bay Area Council, an employer-backed San Francisco group. "Anthem is a very major player in the small-group market and you want a broad range of insurers, particularly the most compelling brand names."
Those running Covered Kalifornia, the state's federally-operated exchange, are downplaying Anthem's decision.
"We don't think it will have a huge impact," said exchange spokesman Dana Howard. "There are other companies that are just as big. This will be a competitive market."
But Anthem is only doing what other insurers - especially the larger, more well known companies - will most likely do in the coming months.
One concern for health insurers selling in exchanges is that too many customers with big medical bills pick a certain company and it absorbs a higher share of the medical costs among that population.
"The reality is that risk is not spread equally in an exchange," said Bruce Jugan, an insurance agent in Montebello and president of Benefitscafe.com, which sells health insurance to individuals and businesses.
The closer we get to its full rollout, the more we learn just how bad of a "train wreck" Obamacare will be. Stay tuned; it's only going to get worse from here.