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by SketchySeaBeast
559 days ago
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> The insurers should be utilizing their market position to incentivize both employers and employees to adopt practices that reduce healthcare needs. They have no need to when they can simply deny claims or coverage. It seems strange to me that we should have private corporations shaming the public by acting as the arbiters of health. I agree that people have unhealthy habits, but some of these coverage items have nothing to do with personal choices. There are conditions people are born with or develop without being able to control them. The elderly need more care, and that's not fault of their own outside of simply living long enough. |
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You can't deny claims to an obese person for a joint replacement. If it was part of the policy, you can't deny the treatment simply because someone had a condition they could have avoided if they had adopted different practices.
> I agree that people have unhealthy habits, but some of these coverage items have nothing to do with personal choices. There are conditions people are born with or develop without being able to control them. The elderly need more care, and that's not fault of their own outside of simply living long enough.
This is an area I do agree with to some extent: we should be much more discerning what we consider "preexisting" conditions; congenital heart defects from birth should be covered, but eating deep fried oreos every day for and washing it down with a handle of vodka shouldn't. This is generally not controversial to most laymen, however states such as CA (see: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billVersionsCompare...) outright limit the ability of insurers to impact consumer behavior. There needs to be a much more clear-eyed view of mutable vs. immutable characteristics and how we permit insurers to underwrite risk, and how we as a society perceive things such as genetic defects verus excess alcohol consumption.
(to put it in perspective, insurers made 25B in profit in '23 (see: https://content.naic.org/sites/default/files/industry-analys...). Alcoholism cost 249B (see https://www.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/brochures-and-fact-sh....), obesity cost 426B (see https://hrp.net/hrp-insights/report-obesity-cost-employers-a....))
> The elderly need more care, and that's not fault of their own outside of simply living long enough.
In my view, one of the big problems with the risk pool is young (myself included) buy catastrophic instead of health because of the 3x max charge on elderly. This is a nice to say, but the costs don't pencil out and this needs to be handled out-of-band for standard healthcare. Elder care is a problem, but it is one that can't be solved by risk pooling and is a contributing factor to typical healthcare premium increases.
source for this: I work in the industry owning two (small) businesses in this area, and was looking to expand into insurance directly, and am running into the fact you can only do so much to limit costs on obesity and other things. It's a real problem that insurers can't actually reflect risk accurately.