What Do They Mean When They Talk About Pre-Existing Health Conditions?

One health care issue about which the presidential candidates acknowledge they have differences is how the health care system should treat people with pre-existing health conditions.

People who have a health condition (such as an illness or pregnancy) or who are at higher than average risk of needing health care are referred to as having a pre-existing health condition. The insurance reform provisions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), when they take effect in 2014, will provide for annual and special enrollment periods when health plans must accept all applicants regardless of their health and prohibit health plans from using health when setting premiums for individuals or small employers.1  Governor Romney has said that he would repeal the ACA and replace it with a plan that provides states with flexibility and resources to address affordability and other issues.  For people with pre-existing health conditions, Governor Romney proposes requiring insurance companies to accept applicants who have maintained continuous coverage and to provide flexibility to states to help the chronically ill, including high-risk pools, reinsurance, and risk adjustment. 2

Without more details about Governor Romney’s policy proposals, it is difficult to understand the practical differences for people with pre-existing health conditions between his approach and the provisions in the ACA. The issue is further complicated by the fact that the term “pre-existing health condition” is used as shorthand for several different challenges that people with health problems face when they try to get coverage, or when they try to keep or use the health insurance they already have. To provide some context for understanding potential differences between the candidates, we provide a brief description of the key barriers and problems that people with pre-existing health conditions face in the health insurance marketplace now, before the provisions in the ACA take effect.

Current Issues for People with Pre-existing Health Conditions

People who have a health problem or who are at higher than average risk of needing health care are referred to as having a pre-existing health condition.  Health plans have an interest in controlling access to coverage for people with pre-existing health conditions because, depending on their condition, they are more likely to use covered services than other enrollees in a health plan.  A variety of state and federal rules are already in effect which, to varying degrees, address some of the problems that people with pre-existing health conditions can face when they try to buy, keep, or use coverage under private  health plans:

What is evident is that people with pre-existing health conditions face potential barriers to coverage at multiple points in the health insurance system.  Current (pre-ACA) federal and state laws provide a patchwork of protections, but gaps remain, particularly for people trying to buy or keep nongroup health insurance.  This is not surprising because ensuring access to nongroup coverage in a voluntary health insurance market has been the hardest policy nut to crack.  These barriers exist to avoid adverse selection.  When coverage is voluntary and unsubsidized, the people who need it most are the most likely to enroll at any given price, and without screening, a health plan may end up with a pool of enrollees that is sicker and more costly than the average population.  This causes premiums to rise and makes coverage unattractive for the majority of potential applicants.  Providing broad access to coverage for people with pre-existing health conditions without charging them very high premiums is not realistic without significantly restructuring the market or creating new and heavily subsidized alternative insurance options for them.

The Candidates

This brings the focus back to the differences in how the candidates would address the issues of people with preexisting health conditions. The ACA, when it takes effect in 2014, restructures the nongroup health insurance marketplace to eliminate the use of health in determining eligibility and premiums for nongroup coverage. The ACA addresses the adverse selection issue by providing significant new tax subsidies to people purchasing nongroup coverage and by imposing tax penalties for people who can afford coverage but do not enroll. These policies together are intended to encourage enough healthy people to enroll to offset any additional costs that might occur from covering people with pre-existing health conditions.

Governor Romney has not provided a detailed proposal on health care.  He wants to repeal the ACA.  For people with pre-existing health conditions, he has proposed requiring health plans to provide coverage to people who have maintained continuous coverage, although he has not provided specifics about what would constitute continuous coverage or about the premiums that people may have to pay.  The Governor also recently suggested that people be provided with a one-time opportunity to enroll in coverage without regard to their health so that they can begin a period of continuous coverage, although he has not said what people would have pay for coverage or offered other details.  More generally, Governor Romney has said that he would leave it to states to design programs to help people who cannot afford coverage on their own. He also said he would provide states with the flexibility to help the chronically ill, including high-risk pools, reinsurance and risk adjustment. Information has not been provided on how these programs could be structured or how they would be financed.

Understanding how far Governor Romney’s approach would go in addressing insurance access issues for people with pre-existing conditions would require answers to a number of questions, such as:

The comprehensive insurance market protections provided by ACA and supported by President Obama are quite popular with the American public. Of course, the ACA’s “individual mandate,” which is used to mitigate against adverse election as a result of these policies, is not.

Governor Romney envisions working to a much greater extent within the current insurance market structure, which may mean less disruption, but also potentially less relief for people with pre-existing health conditions. How far his proposals would go in eliminating existing barriers to insurance for people with pre-existing health conditions, however, depends to a large extent on some unanswered questions.

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1. Section 1201 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-148), as amended by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-152).  The most relevant provisions are Sections 2701, 2702, and 2704 of the Public Health Services Act, as effective on January 1, 2014.
2. See: http://www.mittromney.com/issues/health-care; also see http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1012/82095.html
3. See http://www.kff.org/insurance/7766.cfm; http://statehealthfacts.org/comparetable.jsp?ind=355&cat=7; http://statehealthfacts.org/comparetable.jsp?ind=356&cat=7 .

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