Recent Premium Increases Imposed by Insurers Averaged 20% for People Who
Buy Their Own Health Insurance, Kaiser Survey Finds
Facing Such
Increases, Some Enrollees Switched To Lower-Cost Coverage
People
With Pre-Existing Conditions Much More Likely To Report Problems
MENLO
PARK, CA -- People who buy their own insurance report that their
insurers most recently requested premium increases averaging 20 percent,
according to a new Kaiser survey examining the experiences and views of
people who buy health coverage in the non-group or individual market.
Overall roughly three in four people (77 percent) with non-group
coverage report facing a premium increase with a current or previous
insurer. Most say they paid the increase, but 16 percent of all
policyholders say they switched plans, either buying a less expensive
policy from their current insurer or switching companies altogether.
After these so-called "buy downs" are taken into account, people who
faced a premium increase ended up paying 13 percent more than before.
Many of those facing a premium increase who switched to a cheaper
policy are now getting less comprehensive coverage than they were
before. The survey found that those who switched are more than four
times as likely to say their new plan offers worse benefits than their
previous plan (49 percent) as they are to say their new plan’s benefits
are better (11 percent).

"With people in the individual market
being hit with average increases of 20%, the survey shows that the steep
increases we have been reading about over the last several months are
not just extreme cases," Kaiser Family Foundation President and CEO Drew
Altman said.
While most people in the U.S. get health
insurance through their employer, about 14 million people under age 65
have coverage through the non-group or individual market, which has
faced scrutiny recently in news reports about some insurers’ steep rate
increases and in the market reforms in the new health reform law that
will take effect in 2014. Kaiser’s Survey of People Who Purchase Their
Own Insurance provides insight into the current state of the non-group
market. It is based on a nationally representative random sample of
1,038 people ages 18-64 who purchase their own health coverage and was
conducted between March 19 and April 2, during the final congressional
debate and enactment of health reform legislation.
Premiums
and deductibles
More than half (57 percent) of those with
non-group insurance say that they are the only ones covered by their
policy. This group reports average annual premiums of $3,606, less than
the average $4,824 premium reported in 2009 for employer-sponsored
coverage (which typically provides more comprehensive insurance). Among
those whose policies cover not only themselves but also other family
members, the average annual premiums are $7,102. With insurers
generally varying premiums by age in the non-group market, older people
report paying higher premiums than younger people, both for individual
policies and for family policies.
Many people report being in
plans with high deductibles, including one in four (26 percent) with an
annual deductible of $5,000 or more and 6 percent with a deductible of
$10,000 or more.
Overall, the average deductible reported for
single coverage is $2,498, almost four times the $634 deductible
reported on average for employer-sponsored PPO coverage. Those with
family coverage whose deductibles must be met on a per-person basis
report an average deductible of $2,959, while those with a family
deductible (the total spending required across the entire family before
coverage kicks in) report an average of $5,149.
Cost concerns
among policyholders
Those who purchase their own coverage are
much more likely to worry about being able to pay for health care than
those with employer coverage.
For example, 40 percent of those
who buy their own coverage say they are "not too confident" or "not at
all confident" that they will be able to pay their usual medical bills,
twice the share of those with employer coverage who said so in another
Kaiser survey. Only 17 percent say they are "very confident" they could
pay these usual bills, compared to 36 percent of those with employer
coverage.
A similar disparity exists when asked about their
ability to pay for a major illness or injury that requires
hospitalization. Half (51 percent) of those who purchase their own
coverage say they are "not confident" they could pay their bills in such
circumstances, compared with a quarter (26 percent) of those with
employer coverage.
This lack of confidence may reflect real
problems policyholders have experienced. More than one in five (22
percent) say over the past year they or a family member covered by their
plan did not get needed medical care because of the cost, and a similar
share (20 percent) say they skipped filling a prescription due to
cost. Those who report a pre-existing condition are twice as likely as
those without to report skipping needed medical care because of the cost
(31 percent vs. 15 percent) or not filling a prescription because of
the cost (28 percent vs. 14 percent).
Nearly four in ten
policyholders (38 percent) report at least one problem getting their
insurer to pay a bill, either because the plan paid less than they
expected (31 percent), the plan would not pay anything for a bill they
thought was covered (22 percent), or they reached the limit of what the
plan would pay for a specific illness or injury (7 percent).
Pre-existing
conditions
Nearly half (47 percent) of those in non-group plans
say that they or someone covered by their policy have what could be
considered a pre-existing condition. This group is more likely than
other policyholders to report difficulty in finding a plan that met
their needs (49 percent vs. 27 percent) and are more likely to worry
about losing that coverage if they become seriously ill (62 percent vs.
48 percent). These findings do not reflect the experiences of people
with pre-existing conditions who could not find affordable coverage on
their own at all -- as the survey only captures the experiences of
current policyholders.
Within this group, nearly half (49
percent) say they have had at least one problem getting their insurer to
pay bills and one in five (21 percent) of those in the pre-existing
group report that an insurance company denied them coverage in the past,
compared to just 3 percent of other policyholders. The group is also
more likely to say they are worried about the future stability of their
insurance coverage.
Who buys individual coverage?
The
survey finds that people who buy their own insurance on average are
somewhat older than those with employer-sponsored coverage, but with
similar incomes and health status.
When asked why they buy their
own health coverage, nearly half (45 percent) say it is because they are
self-employed and small business owners. One in four (25 percent) say
they or their spouse work for an employer, but the employer either does
not offer coverage or they are not eligible for, or cannot afford, the
employer coverage.
When purchasing their current policy, eight in
ten (79 percent) say they shopped around at different insurance
companies -- though fewer than half ended up applying to more than one
insurer: 13 percent say they applied to two insurers, 28 percent to
three or four, and 7 percent to 5 or more. Fifteen percent of those who
shopped around (accounting for 12 percent of all those who purchase
their own insurance) say that at least one insurance company refused to
offer them a policy.
The vast majority (74 percent) of those who
buy their own insurance say they’re likely to keep purchasing coverage
on their own one year from now. Just over half (54 percent) think it
would be difficult for them to switch plans if they wanted to. The most
common reasons people think it would be difficult to switch is that
they or someone else on their plan has a pre-existing condition (42
percent of those who say it would be difficult), they wouldn’t be able
to find a price as low as they have now (26 percent), and it would be
too complicated to look for a new plan (18 percent).
| Methodology The Survey of People Who Purchase Their Own Insurance was designed,
analyzed, and conducted by researchers at the Kaiser Family Foundation.
In order to identify people who purchase their own insurance, screening
interviews were completed with a nationally representative sample of
8,499 people ages 18-64. Respondents were drawn from the Knowledge
Networks Panel, a large-randomly drawn representative national panel of
households recruited by telephone and mail. A web-based survey among
the 1,038 randomly selected individuals was conducted between March 19
and April 2, 2010. The margin of sampling error for results based on
the full sample is plus or minus 4 percentage points. The full question
wording, results, charts and a brief on the poll can be viewed online. |
The Kaiser Family Foundation is a non-profit private operating
foundation, based in Menlo Park, California, dedicated to producing and
communicating the best possible analysis and information on health
issues.
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