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Category: All > State IssuesUninsured Rates Rise Dramatically in States With Strictest Health Insurance RegulationsAugust 14, 1998
This is an executive summary. Please read the PDF version for the full text. (1,266k) Between 1990 and 1994, 16 states passed the most aggressive laws designed to increase access to health insurance for their uninsured citizens. They imposed mandates and regulations on health insurance for small employers and individual citizens, implementing at the state level many of the provisions contained in the failed Clinton health care bill. The results: In 1996, all 16 states experienced an average annual growth in their uninsured population eight times that of the other 34. In 1996, the one-year average growth rate in the uninsured population in the 16 regulatory states was 8.14 percent; in the other 34 states, however, it had fallen to only 1.02 percent. In 1990, before the blizzard of health care reform legislation, the two groups of states had been nearly equal at 4.6 percent and 3.9 percent, respectively. Although the primary intention of insurance reforms is to make insurance coverage more affordable and available, thereby increasing the number of people covered by private health insurance, the 16 states that implemented these more comprehensive reforms have had the exact opposite experience. The result:
Among the mandates passed by these 16 states were requirements that insurers sell policies to anyone who applies and agrees to pay the premium--even those who wait until they are already sick before buying insurance (guaranteed issue); prohibitions on such underwriting practices as excluding coverage for some medical conditions (pre-existing condition exclusions); and requirements that insurers charge the same price to everyone in a community, regardless of the differences in risk individual policyholders represent (community rating). The 16-state study included Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Utah, Vermont, and Washington State. These states were identified by the U.S. General Accounting Office as having passed aggressive regulations affecting both their small-employer and individual health insurance markets between 1990 and 1994. The health sector is the most heavily regulated in the American economy. In every other industry, Americans recognize that regulation drives up prices, restricts innovation, dries up competition, and forces businesses to cater to regulators instead of consumers. This is exactly what is happening in the health sector. These data show that Americans are paying a high price for the mistakes of well-intended but flawed legislation. The misguided efforts of lawmakers to over-regulate insurance markets have backfired, squeezing more and more people out of the system. HOW TO HELP THE UNINSURED Lawmakers should focus on policies that allow individuals to purchase health insurance that they own and control themselves in a free, competitive, and well-informed marketplace. Such policies would enable consumers themselves to transform the health sector into a market driven by competition, innovation, value, and choice. There are several actions that states can take to help reach this goal. Among them:
The results examined in this study show that regulation at the state and federal levels is counterproductive in responding to the challenge of increasing access to health insurance in the individual and private health insurance market. A far better approach would be to empower individuals and families to make health care choices that suit their own needs, restore the independence and integrity of the medical profession, and force insurance companies to compete for consumers' dollars. The health care delivery system at all levels should be accountable directly to the individuals and families being served. This is an executive summary. Please read the PDF version for the full text. (1,266k) Melinda L. Schriver is a Senior Research Associate with, and Grace-Marie Arnett is President of, the Galen Institute, Inc., an Alexandria, Virginia, not-for-profit institute specializing in health and tax policy research. The authors are grateful to Robert E. Moffit, Director of Domestic Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation, and Carrie J. Gavora, Health Care Policy Analyst at The Heritage Foundation, for their significant contributions to this study. Commentsanonymous at 06/06/2008 11:24:44东方网FLUKE频道提供团队FLUKE,自驾游,酒店预订等FLUKE旅行服务,上海FLUKE,浙江FLUKE,江苏FLUKE等FLUKE线路给网民选择FLUKE人物,FLUKE作品,FLUKE设备,FLUKE营销,FLUKE材料,平面FLUKE,FLUKE市场.综合性的FLUKE行业网站我们是Fluke万用表公司,主要生产Fluke万用表,拥有一流的Fluke万用表技朮人才和先进的Fluke万用表制造设备Fluke万用表。提供语言Flyer printing服务的Flyer printing公司,青岛Flyer printing公司,日照Flyer printing公司,山东Flyer printing公司,烟台Flyer printing公司,威海Flyer printing公司含云南flyers printing报价,云南flyers printing线路,昆明flyers printing、大理flyers printing、丽江flyers printing、西双版纳flyers printing、香格里拉flyers printing、怒江flyers printing、德宏flyers printing提供fuel injection pump test bench资讯交流,便宜机票比价,fuel injection pump test bench部落格,寻找旅伴,fuel injection pump test bench相簿,fuel injection pump test bench地图,fuel injection pump test bench旅行社与fuel injection pump test bench民宿评比等功能6787671@WOWGOLDS.COManonymous at 05/17/2008 12:19:56优客wow gold网,为wow gold主、wow gold公司、媒体公司及wow gold行业相关企业提供网上wow gold电子商务交流平台6787671@WOWGOLDS.COManonymous at 05/14/2008 21:13:01提供深圳google排名食住行游娱购各项资讯、各项google排名产品预订、google排名电子地图导游等功能。6787671@WOWGOLDS.COManonymous at 05/12/2008 12:34:34通栏wow gold按钮wow gold擎天柱wow gold弹出窗口wow gold浮动标示wow gold特形标识wow gold全屏收缩wow gold春联6787671@WOWGOLDS.COMAdd Comment |
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