It's Our Healthcare

Not Just a Word, But a Challenge

By Anthony Wright
Executive Director
Health Access California

As health reform negotiations go on, I continue to be puzzled why the Governor has yet to publicly budge on having some--any--affordability standard for individuals in the context of a mandate. Any other politician, concerned about voter reaction, would not just include affordability in their plan, but lead with it. The presidential Democratic candidates, like Clinton, Obama, and Edwards, both provide assurances to voters than coverage will be affordable, both in terms of costs (tied to a percentage of their income), or in terms of benefits (for example, saying that people should have access to coverage as good as what Congress gets).

Some, like healthcare blogger Alan Katz, have criticized the notion of an affordability exemption--saying it undermines the point of a mandate. The Governor's team asks, "don't you want universal coverage?" Of course, but I think they misunderstand the point.

Our goal is not an exemption. Our goal is to get people covered. The affordability standard is a challenge, to insurers to keep costs down, and to policymakers to provide the subsidies needed to low- and moderate-income Californians.

If we have the cost containment and appropriate subsidies in place, then any mandate--even with an affordability standard--would be universally applied, and everybody would have affordable coverage. We've reached the goal. However, if the costs continue to rise or subsidies are not there, then let's not have an unlimited legal requirement placed solely on individual consumer's shoulders.

There is a conversation to be had about what is affordable, with regards to premiums, out-of-pocket costs, and benefits, but it amazing to me that we are still talking about whether an affordability standard should even exist in the first place.

Cross-posted at Health Access California

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Comments

For the record, I'm not opposed to an affordability standard. They key is how we define "affordability." Where I differ with Anthony and Health Access is on how they caculate affordability. The affordability standard, the mandate that carriers accept all applicants and the requirement that individuals have coverage are all interconnected. We need to find the right balance and we're not there yet.

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