| I stand corrected. Thank you. I think my larger point, that jacking up premiums increases revenue, thus increasing the opex/profit pool (regardless of the percentages) is a perverse incentive to jack up premiums as much as possible As in a 3-5 year (which is about what I've seen with ACA premiums) doubling of premiums, thus doubling the potential profit pool without increasing opex in any way. In fact, the use of third parties to provide "pre-approval" for an increasing number of drugs, tests and procedures reduces opex, leaving more of that 20% for profits. In fact, my insurer has consistently raised premiums while squeezing providers who are now charging separate fees (meaning additional co-pays for me) for stuff that was once included in a single fee (one example is charging an "outpatient facilities fee" in addition to the copay for seeing a doctor. Increasing my costs, while the insurance company can just shrug and say, "that's not covered, suck it up!" Meanwhile, doctors (especially GPs) are over-scheduled (my GP is scheduled to see every patient in 20 minutes or less), allowing the practices to charge for seeing more patients -- increasing their profits -- at the expense of patient health. And heaven forfend having multiple related issues which require more than one specialty -- you're just shunted from specialist to specialist without much (if any) communication and a shrug if something unrelated to the specialist's area comes up. The point is that the whole industry is fraught with perverse incentives that drive up costs, reduce the quality of care and a laser focus on the wrong stuff (i.e., services provided vs. holistic health outcomes). It's disgusting and harms people. You'd think that by now we'd have decent healthcare. But the perverse incentives pushing toward financialization of, well, pretty much everything medically related, are actually impacting the average lifespans of Americans. And more's the pity. |
One could point out though, it kind of incentivizes them to no longer negotiate prices as hard. This makes benefits more expensive, growing the total size of their 20%.
But on the other hand, pointing out the idea of holistic health outcomes, increasing benefit payouts to those kind of processes is something incentivized by this rule. Adding a lot of these more "fringe" holistic health benefits, like telehealth nutritionists gym membership subsidies and what not, also grows the benefit payout side and then lets them take more total profit. But there's no free lunch here, those benefits are largely coming from the premiums being collected.
Also, a lot of these insurers don't even end up getting any of that 20% some years. The first few years after the ACA pretty much every insurance company had some big losses. It has been a while since I looked at the industry, but they're not always making massive money margin-wise.
Don't take my comment as me endorsing the current system. Its dumb and broken and I hate it.