You shouldn't be downvoted for normal and reasonable questions, or even for self doubt.
Aetna is terrible. The lobby against healthcare reform at every turn. They didn't want obamacare/ACA they didn't want to compete accross state lines, they want to be able to exempt people from pre-existing conditions, they want to give people the run-around.
They are not trustworthy and they are run by bad people. (don't beat up on their phone agents though, they are just trying to make ends meets).
Competing across state lines means all insurance will be regulated by the state with rules that most favor the insurer, it isn't all that likely to be good for consumers.
The banking renaissance in South Dakota is a result of a similar situation.
> Competing across state lines means all insurance will be regulated by the state with rules that most favor the insurer
Not really; states are still free to set additional requirements for insurance plans that cover members of that state.
To be honest, competing across state lines would not actually do much in the long run. It'd provide an extra degree of competition in the short-term, but ultimately then insurers would consolidate into multistate operations (which is already the case to a large degree).
(b) Exemptions From Covered Laws in a .—Except as provided in this section, a health insurance issuer with respect to its offer, sale, rating (including medical underwriting), renewal, and issuance of individual health insurance coverage in any secondary State is exempt from any covered laws of the secondary State (and any rules, regulations, agreements, or orders sought or issued by such State under or related to such covered laws) to the extent that such laws would—
Of course it spells out a bunch of situations where the secondary state would still have authority, but reducing the ability of states to regulate sure seems to be one of the goals there.
Many credit card companies are headquartered in Delaware because that state doesn't place any limits on interest rates for credit facilities, iirc. States don't always negotiate well and may opt to enrich themselves at the expense of consumers in other states. This is a problem with letting the market dictate solutions; more often than not, things will tend towards a lowest-common denominator, and the financial incentives for firms, consumers, and states are often perversely aligned.
It seems insurer's scream louder about the "insuring across state lines" bit then they did against Obamacare in my estimation. On that metric alone I estimate that it will be more effective.
Don't forget about pulling out of the ACA in some states to try to make it look like the merger they wanted to do wouldn't harm competition and then lying about it.
>(don't beat up on their phone agents though, they are just trying to make ends meets).
I've gotten very tired of this. Every time I'm on calls like this now I gently suggest to the phone agent that they know that what they are doing
contributes to a system that hurts people and that they should try to do something more with their lives.
Don't scream or bluster. Do it with gentleness and respect and get ready to be occasionally very surprised at the results.
I worked in a call center during high school. Everyone is there just for the paycheck. These call centers are usually in places with terrible economies and these centers are the only job option for many people.
I worked alongside many people in their 60s. Imagine doing that as a retirement plan.
I accept that it sounds intensely condescending and harsh. I present it as an alternative to either screaming profanity (which they hear non-stop, all day), or meekly accepting the "there's nothing that can be done" lie they are instructed to feed you to get you off the phone in minimum time.
Nine times out of ten, you'll get a dismissive hangup but every once in a while it shatters the script and you'll get a quick story of someone trapped in a bad situation and then a quick word of advice on how to proceed in a a way that will get results.
Its a rhetorical phone nuke. Use it carefully. I started using it about 5 years ago when I noticed that the "heartfelt plea" had utterly stopped working.
I also use it often when "Microsoft tech support" calls me to tell me that they have detected that my computer has a virus. Its a touch more appropriate in that situation.
That's intentionally built into the regulation though, if you can not carry a plan and then sign up for coverage whenever you need it, it isn't anything resembling insurance anymore.
People are still really critical of the current regulation, where you can sign up during the enrollment period without any penalty.
No, probably not, but in the current conditions in the United States it's not like you have any choice as to whether you want to participate in for-profit medicine.
Not internally, but at least in the US you see lots of attempts to cut budgets of government programs. Even a modest budget cut could have a big impact on the level and quality of service of a government health system.
Tons of government programs have wait lists because they don't have enough money. And other programs don't give people enough, because the program doesn't have enough to do so.
Any government run healthcare would be money constrained the same way, and they would have to do exactly the same as the insurance companies to try to save money in order to have enough to at least give the impression of being fair to everyone.
The issue here is not for-profit insurance companies, it's that there is no competition on the Doctor side of things, so costs just go up and up and up.
This is true, but I'd like to qualify this by saying that all of the for-profit insurers (and most of the non-profit ones) are terrible. Generating revenue is in direct conflict with providing patient care which is a fundamental flaw in the setup. It's a uniquely American problem.
> Generating revenue is in direct conflict with providing patient care
Without revenue, there's no money to use to actually provide care.
> It's a uniquely American problem.
It's not at all. Aside from the fact that most of the world uses at least some degree of privatization in providing or paying for healthcare, even the few that don't do so at the metaphorical "last mile" (such as England) still suffer from the unavoidable problem that money isn't infinite, and sometimes decisions have to be made to deny people care that otherwise still would have a material benefit to the patient.
In most developed nations outside America, a doctor's opinion carries more administrative weight. There may be an administrator, but if a doctor says a procedure is to be done, the payment can generally follow. A doctor is like an officer in that regard.
In America, the insurance company and their payment policies carry more weight than the doctor's decisions. This matters a great deal if you have a traumatic accident and require many surgeries, as happened to a friend of mine. In America, if you have a trauma, you are recommended to get a lawyer immediately to help your medical expenses be handled properly. Think about that... in America, if you get hurt, you need a lawyer almost a badly as you need a doctor. Not because you need to sue the cause, but because you need to encourage the insurance company. There's something fundamentally miserable about that.
> In most developed nations outside America, a doctor's opinion carries more administrative weight. In America, the insurance company and their payment policies carry more weight than the doctor's decisions.
No, in most developed nations other than the US, the doctor has approximately the same power that they do in the US.
The difference is that, under capitated systems or systems like the NHS (which is not actually capitated yet, but functions more or less like it is), the doctor factors the cost into their decision-making process. That might sound like a good thing for patients, but it's generally not - it means they have an incentive to avoid unnecessary care, but they also have a very direct incentive to bias on the side of avoiding necessary care as well, to avoid eating into their budget.
This is absolutely a problem with the NHS, although Hacker News readers tend not to be the demographics that suffer from it the most, so you don't hear about it as much here.
> in America, if you get hurt, you need a lawyer almost a badly as you need a doctor
I get that this is intended to be hyperbole, but even on that scale, it's absurd.
The difference is that those systems goes to great lengths to ensure that the decision is done based on clinical needs and objective measures of what achieves the most patient benefit for the available money.
As a result it is very transparent what is sacrificed - e.g. you can find NICE [1] documentation on evaluations of individual drugs and treatments and their benefits, and documentation of the decision making processes of the NHS trusts, so they can be debated and used as a basis for deciding funding, or you're free to sign on to additional private cover if the exemptions worry you.
What we don't get is debates like this where people need to exchange information about whether or not an insurer is likely to try do be excessively strict in denying claims etc., because those kinds of things are extremely marginal here, not something most people ever need to deal with.
> As a result it is very transparent what is sacrificed - e.g. you can find NICE [1] documentation on evaluations of individual drugs and treatments and their benefits, and documentation of the decision making processes of the NHS trusts, so they can be debated and used as a basis for deciding funding, or you're free to sign on to additional private cover if the exemptions worry you.
The decisions that NICE makes are not fundamentally different from the decisions that insurers make when deciding which medications and treatments are covered for various conditions, and in fact, you can find analogous documentation of these decisions from every major insurer.
> The difference is that those systems goes to great lengths to ensure that the decision is done based on clinical needs and objective measures of what achieves the most patient benefit for the available money.
Emphasis mine.
NICE is not operating in some magical world where "revenue" and "costs" are somehow not intrinsically linked with clinical decisions. They're doing the same thing that insurers do - make decisions about treatments based on objective measures of clinical outcomes, subject to a finite budget.
Ironically, this entire thread is about HIV, and HIV treatment and prevention are one area in which the NHS falls drastically short of what's available in the US both to people on private insurance and to people without insurance coverage whatsoever.
The point is not that NICE is perfect, but that these limitations are subject to democratic control - if people feel that the NHS treatments are inadequate based e.g. on the NHS being unable to fund treatments that are recommended by NICE, the government has a direct and immediate ability to control the funding. It happens quite regularly that public debate over NHS funding of specific treatments leads to concrete change in policy.
And, as pointed out, people additionally have the option of taking out additional coverage, which as it happens also provide us with a good idea of to what extent people feel the NHS is sufficient. Typically only around 10% take up private insurance, mostly as a perk offered by some employers.
The availability of that as a (quite cheap) "escape hatch" is quite interesting in that respect. Especially given that the average person in the UK pay far less towards the NHS than the average American pay for healthcare via taxes and health insurance - you can sign up for high end private insurance in the UK and still end up paying less.
> They're doing the same thing that insurers do - make decisions about treatments based on objective measures of clinical outcomes, subject to a finite budget.
NICE's recommendations are not subject to the NHS budget. They are independent for a reason. Cost efficiency of a treatment enters into their assessments, but they do not have final say on which treatments are offered. They make recommendations based on the clinical need and document efficacy, outcomes and costs. It's up to the NHS to then allocate funds accordingly.
> Ironically, this entire thread is about HIV, and HIV treatment and prevention are one area in which the NHS falls drastically short of what's available in the US
I don't know the details of this, but find it curious given that some quick searches indicate that the HIV/AIDS death rate in the US per 100,000 is a larger factor above the UK than the prevalence rate.
Of course that could be for other reasons than treatment.
I know there's been some debate over funding of preventative treatments (with the NHS finally deciding to fund trials), but that was over responsibility largely (preventative measures is in general a council responsibility), but if anything the fact that the NHS decided to start trials after public debate seems to me a pretty good demonstration of what I'm saying.
The system is not perfect, but it's open, transparent and subject to democratic control.
> And, as pointed out, people additionally have the option of taking out additional coverage,
That's like saying "people additionally have the option of paying out-of-pocket". Remember, by definition, the expected monetary value of insurance is negative, so unless the private insurance is being subsidized by taxpayer dollars (defeating the whole point), this is equivalent to saying that people are still free to pay for treatments themselves.
> NICE's recommendations are not subject to the NHS budget. They are independent for a reason. Cost efficiency of a treatment enters into their assessments, but they do not have final say on which treatments are offered. They make recommendations based on the clinical need and document efficacy, outcomes and costs. It's up to the NHS to then allocate funds accordingly.
You can't escape the fact that, at the end of the day, the process still amounts to the same thing. Given a finite budget, decisions are made on how to allocate that funding based on clinical data, resulting in some people not receiving treatment, even though they would otherwise benefit clinically from it. What the NHS does is not fundamentally different from what insurance companies do.
Saying that it's subject to "democratic control" doesn't really mean a whole lot, except that the process ends up being a lot slower, and it becomes a political battle. (Notice that PrEP has been available in the US for five years at zero cost to patients, and it's still not available in the UK. Or, notice that the cure for HCV is generally accessible on private insurance in the US, but almost nobody in the UK is able to receive it through the NHS.)
> That's like saying "people additionally have the option of paying out-of-pocket".
No, that's pointing out that in the UK, we have an insurance system that is so cheap that for the very few that feels it's insufficient, it is still cheaper if they buy supplementary insurance on top, and they do have the option of have both private and socialised insurance.
> What the NHS does is not fundamentally different from what insurance companies do.
It does result in fundamentally better coverage for far less money. Somehow that seems "fundamentally different" to me. We pay on average about half as much, and for that everyone gets covered, and those that aren't satisfied can pay - still less - to get far more extensive cover.
The pigheaded insistence on defending the US system is to me utterly bizarre given that it's more expensive even if you choose to go private on top of the socialised systems in most of Europe. Especially given the kind of stories in this thread - from a European perspective they're the kind of horror-stories that makes at least me want to never consider living in the US.
> Saying that it's subject to "democratic control" doesn't really mean a whole lot
It does mean a whole lot when there are a number of examples of how it results in actual change.
> (Notice that PrEP has been available in the US for five years at zero cost to patients, and it's still not available in the UK.
Firstly, you can not consider the UK as a whole as one entity, as the NHS is not a single system, and control of NHS Scotland is devolved. Scotland started NHS funding of PrEP in April 2016.
This is an issue of speed of approvals of new treatments, which frankly says little about the respective systems - the reverse is often true too; drugs coming out of Europe often take years to get approved for use in the US.
Secondly, PrEP has been available to people in the UK from online pharmacies since 2016. It's not available on the NHS outside of a trial, but the flexibility of UK drug import rules means that buying PrEP in the UK is possible for around $50/month.
Also while it may have been technically available for 5 years in the US, wide insurance cover does not appear to have been present nearly that long.
Saying it is zero cost to patients in the US also seems like cherry-picking. The pages I find all say that outside of various programs targeting specific groups you can expect to pay your normal insurance co-pay, which for many will be more than the full cost of buying these drugs for UK patients outside of insurance.
In any case this boils down to the usual process of approvals varying country by country irrespective of the system - in most of the world PrEP is not yet approved, irrespective of budgets.
If you want to a meaningful comparison of this you'd need to do a wide comparison of time to approvals. Otherwise you need to look at availability of drugs post-approval.
> Or, notice that the cure for HCV is generally accessible on private insurance in the US, but almost nobody in the UK is able to receive it through the NHS.)
I believe that's at least two years out of date - as far as I can see expanded funding was approved in 2015, and an example of how policy was changed within weeks after a charity made the public aware of it. Given that the drug in question was rolled out in 2013/14 that does not seem unreasonable to me.
Same issue as above in any case, where looking at the newest drugs says little about long term availability of care.
> The pigheaded insistence on defending the US system
While I could respond to the rest of your points - including a couple of the statements which are factually incorrect - if this is the way you're going to talk to someone who's having a conversation with you in good faith, there's not much point in me spending any more time on the matter here tonight.
For those in one of the covered regions[1], Kaiser Permanente is largely not-evil. You have to go through your GP to get referrals to specialists, but it's a series of mostly consistent "I have X problem" "Try Y" "Didn't work" "Try Z" "Didn't Work" "OK, let's get you to a specialist" events.
[1]: Coverage areas as divided by corporate entities:
Northern California
Southern California
Colorado
Georgia
Hawaii
Mid-Atlantic (vicinity of Washington, D.C., including Maryland and Virginia)
Northwest (Northwest Oregon and Southwest Washington)
Washington (except Southwest Washington)
Lots of people complain about Kaiser. I was a member when I was growing up, and have signed up again now that I have a job offering Kaiser coverage.
For me Kaiser is a couple things. First of all it is peace of mind. They won't screw you. Essentially everything they offer is covered at a reasonable rate. Example: I was sent to the emergency room once and was able to pay on the spot with the cash in my wallet. Secondly, if you go to one of their medical centers everything is in that building. When I am sick, I don't want to go to a few stops across town to get everything (doctors office, lab, pharmacy, etc).
Additionally they actively do things to keep people healthy. They host farmers markets at some of their centers, run advertisements focused on getting exercise and eating well. In general, they make you feel like they are on your side.
I have Kaiser too and I stayed an extra day (vs average) after my unplanned C-section because of pain management issues, and nobody bothered me about it despite the floor being full. Only $500 and that included a salmon and steak and apple cider in champagne flutes celebration dinner one night for me and my partner. Their prenatal and postpartum support is top notch too, including free lactation consultant visits and a hospital grade pump rental (would cost me $1k+ at this point in fees otherwise) to support breastfeeding for as long as I want.
Compare to one of my friends with a bog-standard vaginal birth, was pressured to leave as soon as possible, partner kept getting kicked out of the room, and she paid $7k and counting while still getting random claims. LC visits also not covered despite wanting to breastfeed desperately, and she gave up due to issues that could have been resolved.
It's not even just the baby stuff that is like this - my dad has their medicare advantage plan and he LOVES it and I love the integrated care since it's so easy for his specialists to talk to each other without me having to be the messenger.
Kaiser gets a bad rap a lot of times, sometimes for good reason, but in the average case, they must be doing something okay that they don't fight me like Anthem used to do ALL THE TIME (plus remember when maternity coverage cost like $500 extra _per month_ on the individual market?)
Right now I'm on the hook for 5 figures with BC/BS for my son's birth expenses, because HR screwed up his application. It's a Kafkaesque byzantine labyrinth of red tape and buck passing. I'm not sure they're evil, just bureaucratic.
The last time I had insurance in the states (before moving away) was with Blue Cross.
I didn't personally have any problems, and generally zero problems with mental health car (my ex needed it). I don't know if it makes a difference, but my employer (a major pharmacy chain) merely hired them to administer their health plans and funded it through the company. When they dealt with me, they weren't really using their funds.
Aetna is terrible. The lobby against healthcare reform at every turn. They didn't want obamacare/ACA they didn't want to compete accross state lines, they want to be able to exempt people from pre-existing conditions, they want to give people the run-around.
They are not trustworthy and they are run by bad people. (don't beat up on their phone agents though, they are just trying to make ends meets).