Saturday, January 05, 2008

Health Insurance Reform and the Candidates

Also from the Jan. 2008 Consumer Reports:

Insurance reform proposals by most of the major presidential candidates count on the private individual market to expand coverage. Several candidates propose tax incentives for people to buy individual insurance. Consumers Union, the nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports, opposes that approach to insurance reform because it does nothing to fix underlying problems, such as medical underwriting, and the tax breaks wouldn’t be enough to make insurance affordable for people with lower incomes.

Other candidates propose to expand coverage by bringing more people into the risk pool. Techniques include requiring everyone to have health insurance, allowing individuals to buy into large public or private risk pools, requiring insurers to cover everyone regardless of health history, and subsidizing premiums for lower-income consumers. Consumers Union believes that those are more promising approaches to insurance reform, so long as they are coupled with vigorous efforts to control costs, eliminate waste, and encourage better coordination of care for chronic conditions.

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