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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsIt's Not Employer Coverage - It's Coverage By Big Insurance Companies.....
that just so happens to be contracted with by companies (employers) to be used as a so called benefit for their employees.
It costs the company money to offer this as a benefit and the trend has been that it has become a shared cost by the company and the employee to continue to maintain this benefit.
At one time - such health insurance cost was covered completely by the company - but due to rising pricing by the private insurance companies - such employer plans have gotten more expensive and the company has constantly had to re-negotiate the plan with lesser coverage to maintain it or have the employee share more in the cost for the plan for the same coverage.
Employers have to have someone(s) in their company to be the point person(s) to work with private insurance companies to continue to provide this benefit. This becomes a burden for the company - to analyze plans and their conditions. The private insurance companies are always modifying their plans with these employers.
The Private Insurance Companies want more money (increase the price) to offer the same plan or in order to maintain the same dollar outlay by the company they reduce the plan coverage to the employee to be able to allow the company to maintain its same cost for offering the benefit. For the employer/company - managing this benefit becomes a burden.
I sometimes wonder why employers even want to mess with this constant game played by the private insurance companies of rising prices and/or reduced plan coverage. It seems that they would save money by not having to deal with this constant game with private insurance companies. It frees up that money that these employers have to use on providing a health benefit and allows them to perhaps give a raise of pay of their employees or offer different and maybe better benefits to their employees (i.e., more vacation, etc).
Interesting thing is if an employee leaves the company - they lose their health insurance and are left to fend for themselves or hope they get another job that offers health insurance as an employee benefit.
Yeah - a Medicare For All plan is a plan managed by the government and not a private insurance company. It is not employer coverage - because every U.S. citizen would be covered by such a plan. Said citizen would not have to worry about health coverage if they leave their job. They would maintain their coverage leaving them the freedom to take a job anywhere and not becoming a prisoner to their present job because they have to have health insurance.
Instead of having money come from their paycheck to pay for such coverage - they would be covered because they are a taxpayer and the same dollar amount or less (a portion of their taxes) would be used to allow them to have this Medicare For All coverage. All taxpaying Americans would be paying into such system. The biggest pool possible. No need for penalties for not having coverage. It would be automatic.
Realize that the bad guys in all this are the Private Insurance Companies (Corporations). These are the same corporations that are 'for profit' and whose main concern is minimizing coverage; denying coverage and reducing plan benefits so that from year to year these companies can make even more profit.
The goal is to free us from the clutches of these For Profit Private Insurance Companies.
Certainly there is more to this than I was able to post here but I thought this would be a start for this conversation. ACA was a wonderful initial attempt to move in the direction of a 'medicare for all' plan. It was a compromise plan and a plan that the Repugs continually decimated in favor of the corporate private insurance industry.
I believe now we are in a position to move to the next step and the ultimate step - a medicare for all system.
Removing the duplicate administrations of the myriad of private insurance companies for one plan administrator will alone go a long way to pay for a medicare for all system. It will remove that 'for profit' motivation from such insurance - where every year these private insurance companies have to bank more money than the year before for their stockholders and upper echelon of company management.
jalan48
(13,797 posts)theaocp
(4,223 posts)Bloodsucking vampires can take up a new career learning to fuck themselves.
lostnfound
(16,138 posts)VMA131Marine
(4,123 posts)Most large companies actually self insure medical plan benefits. They just use insurance companies to administer the plans and maintain provider networks.
lostnfound
(16,138 posts)We suspect the desire to cut costs was a motivating factor. Hard to prove, though.
DENVERPOPS
(8,677 posts)It's not you get on Medicare and you are home free.
Just check the rates for "B", "C", and "D".
Medicare is next to nothing in coverage without all three supplementals. Note also, that none of those include eye, ear, or Dental care.
I support health care for all, much like other civilized countries, paid thru additional government taxes, but "Medicare For All" isn't the answer.......
Merlot
(9,696 posts)tell all their employees that they no longer offer insurance and go sign up for the public option?
global1
(25,166 posts)people will be upset losing their employee offered health insurance. Those politicians that spread that talk are usually well under the clutches of private/corporate insurance company campaign donations.
And I agree with you - most employers - in a shot - would abandon their company offered insurance plans for a public option. Like I said in my OP - it is a hassle for a company to manage that benefit almost on a year to year basis.
Even the companies that self-insure have to deal with the pool of employees they are dealt. If they have a older/sicker workforce - that increases the companies cost to be self-insured. That's why self-insured companies are usually larger companies with a lot of employees - to broaden out the pool. They hire younger (healthier) employees that don't require a large amount of health care.
Merlot
(9,696 posts)that makes them jump through hoops, is complicated, unstable, expensive, and still may not cover everything in an emergency or long term care situation? Why indeed.
global1
(25,166 posts)and it really upset me that some of the moderate Dems on the stage last night appeared to be spreading Repug talking points. You got to ask yourself why and maybe follow the money.
DBoon
(22,284 posts)Example: Doctor is in plan, procedure is covered, but facility isn't in plan = letter from insurance company saying coverage is denied immediately prior to procedure
Another example: Insurance company sends nondescript postal mail supposedly about an audit. Looks like junk mail, nothing to indicate urgency. The actual content of this forgettable letter is a statement that your spouse will be dropped from coverage due to having a different last name.
ProfessorPlum
(11,252 posts)we have to stop saying "you can keep your coverage" when that decision isn't up to the government, it's up to each individual company. And most of them, as you indicate, will breath a sigh of relief and slough their employees onto the public plan.
Hortensis
(58,785 posts)income taken in the form of health insurance that costs less than it would paid out of pocket. It used to be a great deal.
As costs soared, though, more and more employers want out from under it and more and more employees found they'd do better through the ACA. Or someday, another program. I went part-time specifically to qualify for the ACA, and I fully intended to sign up for its single-payer option as soon as it became available.
And let's also not be dishonest by pretending that MfA plans require molding everyone into Sanders-shape pegs to fit into a Sanders-shape hole. Some of our candidates are running on MfA plans that don't require that at all. Those relatively few employers who might want to offer better than the national program as an incentive for people to work there should always have that freedom, and employees of those companies should always have that option.
And I'll vote against any candidate who doesn't share that principle.
Hermit-The-Prog
(33,021 posts)Dyedinthewoolliberal
(15,485 posts)I work for a social service agency and we are organized. When contract talks come up, insurance is always on our agenda. We know, and the agency does too, that the real issue is the insurance industry. My union (SEIU) is huge nationally.
I have suggested to my local union staff that the SEIU ought consider providing insurance for its members. With the size of the pool, they would probably get a decent price. But then I remember one of Peter Drucker's questions he always asks management of any enterprise; 'what business are you in?'.
The union is not in the insurance business so they aren't going to go there. The answer is making insurance a right for every person living here. Take the best of what the other industrialized nations have done with this issue and make it fit the US. It can be done. Those that claim it can't either have a stake in the way things are, or don't truly understand what we are talking about...
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Poiuyt
(18,087 posts)It's not like buying the same kind of car or something like that. In fact, I'll bet most people don't even know what health insurance they have.
If you work for a company, you take the kind of insurance they offer. Remember, the company can change insurance companies, or if you switched jobs, you'd probably get a different plan. Nobody cares. You just want insurance.
I would gladly take a single payer health insurance over private (or corporate). It would be better and would cost less.
JCMach1
(27,544 posts)It's Texas. I am taking a new job with benefits. I will probably just be over the premium level for keeping my good ACA insurance.
Choice? Really?
What planet are Republicans living on?
customerserviceguy
(25,183 posts)We have a medical/insurance system that breaks people up into tiers.
At the top tier, you have people with Cadillac insurance, with modest premiums deducted from paychecks, low deductibles and co-pays, and high caps on benefits being provided, often by companies that don't do a lot of squeezing on healthcare providers (relatively).
The next tier consists of people with lower-quality insurance, they have higher deductibles and co-pays, and not as much of their needs (psychiatric, for instance) are covered. That's where probably most people are.
The next tier after that is the folks on Medicare or Medicaid, or some other such governmental system. They have to be able to find healthcare providers that will take the lower reimbursement payments offered, and those providers know they're not going to recover all of the co-pays, deductibles, etc., so they build that into the acceptance rate of those patients.
At the bottom are people with zero insurance, who get charged the full rip-off price for anything, because they're not "members" of some sacred group, and they often face the choice of doing without necessities to pay a bill, or filing for bankruptcy. They pretty much get emergency care only, and don't often bother to seek timely treatment from the healthcare industry.
When unions negotiate top-quality benefits for their members and the members' families, the employers see the value of putting these workers into that top tier. The employees have less financial stress, and can get in sooner to better quality providers, and be back on the job sooner.
Medicare-for-All lumps all of us into one tier, and that's threatening to people in the top two tiers.
patphil
(6,024 posts)It will bring us close to universal healthcare coverage. The insurance companies don't like it because the government would dictate the rules of coverage.
This could slow down or even stop the rapid rise in healthcare costs while making sure everyone could get good coverage at an affordable cost.
It's an idea whose time has come, but we need both Houses of Congress and the White House to do it.
Look how the Republicans torpedoed the ACA under Obama.
Ultimately, health insurance has to be non-profit, as does the entire medical industry.
Other countries have successfully done this, we should be able to do it here.
The health of our citizens is one of the best investments we can make for our country's future.
Patrick Phillips
slumcamper
(1,602 posts)Does it not occur to the DNC, DSCC, DCCC, or campaigns that we MUST penetrate thick skulls.
We are failing miserably, IMHO. Nothing of significance is getting through--and what does becomes fodder for ridicule or worse.
(from a town of 1500 people in rural Iowa, where most people have a mediocre high school education, have limited interest in or exposure to cultural opportunities, and very limited experience interacting with people other than WASP types).
IronLionZion
(45,250 posts)it would be easier for them to pay the tax than to have their HR departments work with insurance companies to develop plans and benefits and premium/deductible pricing. Smaller employers would likely benefit more since they have less bargaining power with insurance companies.
stewrat
(50 posts)is it may shift the financial burden from employers to taxpayers. Would Fortune 500 Employers that are self insured and or purchase insurance be taxed to offset what they are currently paying out? Or does the price get shifted to the consumer? Employers would love to be free from paying health benefits.
SouthernProgressive
(1,810 posts)yonder
(9,631 posts)Change the descriptor from the much cozier "private or employer" to the cold, clanky and ever-greedy "corporate".