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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
NAIC HAILS REFORM EFFORT; STRONGLY OBJECTS TO
UNNECESSARY FEDERAL PREEMPTION OF STATE AUTHORITY
While Applauding Reform, States Say Federal
Preemption Not Effective; Role of New Health Czar Is Excessive
WASHINGTON, D.C. (July 15, 2009) - While hailing
reform efforts, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners
(NAIC) today called on lawmakers drafting landmark health reform
legislation to preserve the flexibility that states need to ensure
that laws and regulations meet the needs of the individual states
where consumers purchase coverage and receive medical care.
In a letter to the chairs of three panels in the U.S. House
working on the bill introduced yesterday, state insurance regulators
told the trio that the creation of a Health Choices Commissioner and
Health Choices Administration would add more regulation and cost
"without enhancing consumer protection."
Referring to "egregious failures" at the federal level to protect
consumers, insurance regulators reminded the chairmen of the dangers
of overriding state standards, citing the recent debacle in the
Medicare Advantage program, where federal marketing guidelines, like
those the Health Choices Administrator is tasked with creating under
the bill, left "millions of seniors exposed to deceptive, fraudulent
and abusive sales tactics that would have been prevented had the
states been allowed to act."
"A single federal blueprint is unlikely to be effective in every
state since health care delivery systems, demographics, rural and
urban mix, economies and labor markets are distinctive and
regulations that fail to take those distinctions into account will
damage markets and consumers," said Sandy Praeger, Kansas Insurance
Commissioner and Chair of the NAIC Health Insurance and Managed Care
Committee.
Another pitfall cited by the states is that the proposed federal
commissioner is given no guidance in the legislation as to the
content of standards, making it probable that these standards would
change dramatically with each new administration.
State officials also warned that healthy consumers may opt to pay
the modest annual penalty in lieu of purchasing health insurance at
a much higher premium, causing adverse selection that increases the
cost of coverage for all and defeating the purpose of the
requirement that all Americans obtain coverage.
"States remain at the forefront in developing innovative
solutions to the most pressing problems facing our health care
system," Praeger continued, citing the 2006 Massachusetts law which
is the template for the bill being drafted by the three House
panels. "Together the federal government and the states can help
provide greater access to health insurance at more affordable
premiums for the American people. State regulators hope to work with
Congress in the spirit of cooperation to improve this legislation
and to enact comprehensive health reform this year."
Though presenting their objections to the legislation, the NAIC
applauded the chairs for seeking to "expand access to coverage,
improve the quality of care and restrain the rapid growth of health
care spending," along with other "long-overdue reforms" to help
consumers.
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to view full text of letter to Congress |