Last week’s ruling by a U.S. District Court in Washington D.C. has, among other issues, endangered the operation of regionally defined association health plans (AHPs) under the Department of Labor’s June 2018 regulations.
NASHVILLE, Tenn., April 1, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Last week’s ruling by a U.S. District Court in Washington D.C. has, among other issues, endangered the operation of regionally defined association health plans (AHPs) under the Department of Labor’s June 2018 regulations. The leading force behind these regional AHPs are chambers of commerce. At the time of this report’s writing, chambers are the single most common organization sponsoring new regional AHPs, and their health plans illuminate important contrasts between reality of this emerging insurance category and some of the criticisms levied against it. “The new study on chamber of commerce association health plans painfully illustrates the insurance gains that will be lost to small businesses if the recent court ruling is not overturned,” said Kev Coleman, president and founder of AssociationHealthPlans.com. “Should the ruling stand, we will return to the prior unfair system where large companies will pay less than small companies for the same health benefits.” A new analysis of chamber-sponsored AHPs observed among its findings:
Through the new Department of Labor regulation, the same large company insurance model that already covers roughly 95 million Americans was made available to small businesses through associations. This change has been a matter of market access. The definition and rules related to large company health insurance have not changed. Instead, the playing field between small companies and large companies was leveled with respect to health insurance costs. The preservation of this leveling is likely dependent on a successful appeal of Judge Bates’ ruling unless Congress decides to act. With the ACA markets also endangered by a recent court ruling, it is a possible scenario that both the ACA and AHP markets will be impaired leaving chaos in markets for private insurance. It is conceivable that a bipartisan bill could be sponsored between the two major parties in Congress that implements a nominal individual mandate fine (and thus maintaining the ACA’s constitutionality as a tax instrument) in exchange for a formalization of the new AHPs rules within law rather than regulation. The full findings of the chamber of commerce AHP analysis and its methodology can be found at “Study: Chamber of Commerce Association Health Plans Building Political Bridges While Refuting Opposition.” Kev Coleman is founder and president of AssociationHealthPlans.com, the leading online resource supporting the emerging association health plans market. AssociationHealthPlans.com is headquartered outside Nashville, Tennessee. CONTACT: Amy Fletcher Faircloth
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