AHIP and the Effort to Kill Reform

I suppose that the October release of a flawed and biased study suggesting that healthcare reform would cause insurance premiums to soar (see prior post) was proof enough that America’s Health Insurance Plans had shifted gears and was now actively trying to kill reform.  I, however, clung to the belief that the association — long recognizing the writing on the wall — was still in favor of “reform” but was seeking concessions:

Why kill something that gives you most of what you want, i.e., no public option and no serious consideration of single-payer healthcare.  I do think the industry is still lobbying for a stronger insurance coverage mandate to address the likelihood that the young and healthy will simply pay a small fine rather than buy health insurance. 

After all, AHIP still supported guaranteed issue and some form of community rating….Right?

Then there was the report of an industry rift — with Blue Cross Blue Shield plans stepping up the anti-reform rhetoric, according to The Wall Street Journal, even as other big players like Aetna were seeking to mend fences after the October fallout.  O.K., but this could still be just another example of fighting for “the right kind of reform.”  After all, didn’t Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina end up killing those planned Harry & Louise-esque commercials it had on the drawing board (see prior post)….Right?

Comes now a report that since September AHIP has been quietly soliciting funds from its members — some $10 million to $20 million from six major health plans — and funneling the money to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to help subsidize “third-party television ads aimed at killing or significantly modifying the major health reform bills moving through Congress.”  The six plans named in the article are Aetna, Cigna, Humana, Kaiser, UnitedHealth Group and WellPoint.

Below are two examples of the types of commercials the Chamber has run through the Campaign for Responsible Health Reform and Employers for a Healthy Economy.  Let’s see, how can this be spun by someone like me who actually believed AHIP had seen the light — well to some extent at least?  I’ve got it!  As Matthew Holt noted in The Health Care Blog, insurers are the “poor suckers” in reform because the industry signed on for guaranteed issue and community rating but didn’t get a strong mandate to avoid adverse selection — a valid point.  So I guess you could argue that all AHIP is doing is fighting for justice…Right?….All of a sudden I’m not feeling so well.

 

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