Oct 23, 2014 | Tricia
Neuman
As the November open enrollment
period approaches, consumers in the federal and state marketplaces will soon
have the opportunity to renew or change health plans for 2015. Health
insurance plans often change from one year to the next, and some of these changes
could have a real impact on costs and coverage, including changes in premiums,
cost-sharing, benefits, formularies and choice of doctors and hospitals.
Consumers are advised to review their options carefully before deciding
whether to renew their current plan or enroll in a new one. But will
they?
This question will sound familiar to
those who have been tracking the Medicare Part D and Medicare Advantage
markets, and based on this experience, the advice to review plan options makes
good sense. Medicare Advantage plans in a given market vary in terms of
benefits, cost-sharing and provider networks, and plans often make adjustments
from one year to the next. Our analysis of the Medicare Part D market since its
inception in 2006 has documented wide variability across plans, and
not-insignificant changes in plan costs and benefit design features from year
to year.
Yet, even with wide variation across
plans and the potential to lower costs by switching plans, our research confirms a high degree of “stickiness”
among Part D enrollees, with just over ten percent voluntarily switching plans
during a recent open enrollment period. Our focus groups of Medicare beneficiaries help
explain why. Seniors told us that they are generally aware of the open
enrollment period, in part because they are inundated with marketing materials
during the fall of each year. But, they also said that they have little
appetite for what they consider the drudgery of comparing plans – even though
they recognized it might be a good idea to do so.
The low rate of plan switching among
Medicare Part D enrollees should not come as a total surprise. Similar
results have been reported in studies of younger adults in health insurance
marketplaces, including federal workers in the Federal Employees Health
Benefits Program (FEHB) and among enrollees in Commonwealth Care in Massachusetts that was
established prior to the ACA – suggesting a very high degree of satisfaction or
a strong preference for the status quo, or both, in all three health insurance
marketplaces (Exhibit 1).1
This brings us back to the upcoming
November enrollment period for consumers in the federal and state
marketplaces. While the health insurance marketplaces are clearly still
in start-up mode, with enrollees still very much on a learning curve, the hope
is that marketplace enrollees will carefully review the health plan options
available in 2015, and switch plans when it is in their interest to do
so. As my Kaiser Family Foundation colleagues explained in a recent analysis of 2015 marketplace premiums, consumers
who chose low premium plans in 2014 may find their plan is no longer a low-cost
option in 2015, and could wind up paying substantially more for their coverage
unless they switch plans. And, maybe they will.
On the one hand, adults in the
Marketplace may be more motivated than Medicare Part D enrollees to switch
plans if the premium changes they face are appreciably larger than those for
Part D plans; and it would not be a surprise if Marketplace premium increases
and decreases are larger in dollar terms because they apply to a full range of
medical services, not just prescription drugs, and could be subject to changes
that result from a system that ties government premium contributions to the
second least cost silver plan. Our Part D analysis found that enrollees with
bigger premium increases were more likely than others to switch drug
plans. Younger adults are also more likely than seniors to shop
online and less likely to have health and cognitive impairments that make these
tasks somewhat challenging. And, this year, they can change plans anytime
between November 15 and February 15 — more than the six weeks allotted for
Medicare beneficiaries.
On the other hand, online plan
comparison tools for marketplace enrollees are still evolving, and consumers
may have trouble getting all the information they need to compare plans.
And, Marketplace enrollees may be less likely than older Part D enrollees to
switch plans because they are less likely than seniors to have health problems,
and therefore less likely to experience problems with their plan.
This year, the focus during the 2015
open enrollment period may be more on helping people maintain or gain access to
coverage, much as it was when the Part D program began. But over time,
there is likely to be interest in understanding whether marketplace consumers
are “sticky” like their parents and grandparents on Medicare, or if the apple
actually does fall far from the tree. The lack of consumer engagement
during the open enrollment period is a concern if it means consumers get the
short end of the “stick.”
Footnotes
Commonwealth
Care was established in Massachusetts prior to the implementation of the
Affordable Care Act to provide coverage to the uninsured. As the
ACA is implemented, Commonwealth Care will be replaced with ConnectorCare.
http://kff.org/health-reform/perspective/open-enrollment-insights-from-medicare-for-health-insurance-marketplaces/?utm_campaign=KFF%3A+General&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=14609880&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9KrhlKvJ0ugLmkdp41qYbNyAiTsQsd5Rm6tkH55h
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