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deleted4401
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So, I was reading recently that the tobacco companies and the American Cancer Society (as well as other anti-cancer groups) have become strange bedfellows.
Turns out with the ACA, the only factors you are allowed to use to develop premium prices in the insurance exchanges are age, # of people in family, and smoking. If you smoke cigarettes there is an additional fee that is added it on, that is NOT covered by the subsidies for the exchanges
So, for example ... if for a young couple without children that makes $35,000 a year that do not get coverage at work looks for coverage, they may find that the premiums for an average plan are $4000. Their subsidy may be 80%, so they would have to pay $800. However, if one of them smokes, the premiums would go up $2500, so they would have to pay $3300, because that 80% only covers the main part of the premium.
So, basically the tobacco companies are saying this is discrimination and the ACS is saying that the very people that will need insurance down the road are the people that may say, screw it, this is way too much.
At first, I was like of course smokers should pay higher premiums. And so should the obese and heavy drinkers and people with those barbed wire tattooes on their arm. But, then, if we stop doing community rates and start individually assessing everyone, we'll basically price everyone out of insurance except the healthy people, who don't really need health insurance to begin with.
But, mainly I just thought it was hilarious with the head of Altria and the head of ACS joining arms in a cause. I don't really want this to lead to a debate about the ACA.
S
Turns out with the ACA, the only factors you are allowed to use to develop premium prices in the insurance exchanges are age, # of people in family, and smoking. If you smoke cigarettes there is an additional fee that is added it on, that is NOT covered by the subsidies for the exchanges
So, for example ... if for a young couple without children that makes $35,000 a year that do not get coverage at work looks for coverage, they may find that the premiums for an average plan are $4000. Their subsidy may be 80%, so they would have to pay $800. However, if one of them smokes, the premiums would go up $2500, so they would have to pay $3300, because that 80% only covers the main part of the premium.
So, basically the tobacco companies are saying this is discrimination and the ACS is saying that the very people that will need insurance down the road are the people that may say, screw it, this is way too much.
At first, I was like of course smokers should pay higher premiums. And so should the obese and heavy drinkers and people with those barbed wire tattooes on their arm. But, then, if we stop doing community rates and start individually assessing everyone, we'll basically price everyone out of insurance except the healthy people, who don't really need health insurance to begin with.
But, mainly I just thought it was hilarious with the head of Altria and the head of ACS joining arms in a cause. I don't really want this to lead to a debate about the ACA.
S