Think Democrats are through with health care for the year? Think again:
This should come as no surprise as Massachusetts, the model for ObamaCare, also requires insurance premium increases to be granted the government's imprimatur. Speaking of Massachusetts, health care's ghost of Christmas future, check out the latest developments from the Bay State:
Fearing that health insurance premiums may shoot up in the next few years, Senate Democrats laid a foundation on Tuesday for federal regulation of rates, four weeks after President Obama signed a law intended to rein in soaring health costs.Welcome to the United States, where permission must be sought from government bureaucrats and politicians for companies to set their prices. Which side won the Cold War again?
After a hearing on the issue, the chairman of the Senate health committee, Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa, said he intended to move this year on legislation that would “provide an important check on unjustified premiums.”
Mr. Harkin praised a bill introduced by Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, that would give the secretary of health and human services the power to review premiums and block “any rate increase found to be unreasonable.” Under the bill, the federal government could regulate rates in states where state officials did not have “sufficient authority and capability” to do so.
The White House offered a similar proposal in the weeks leading up to approval of the health care legislation last month. But it was omitted from the final measure, in part for procedural reasons.
Reviving the proposal on Tuesday, Mr. Harkin said: “Rate review authority is needed to protect consumers from insurance companies’ jacking up premiums simply because they can. Protections must be in place to ensure that companies do not take advantage of current market conditions before health reform fundamentally changes the way they do business in 2014.”
This should come as no surprise as Massachusetts, the model for ObamaCare, also requires insurance premium increases to be granted the government's imprimatur. Speaking of Massachusetts, health care's ghost of Christmas future, check out the latest developments from the Bay State:
Health insurers are starting to sell policies that largely bar consumers from receiving medical care at popular but expensive hospitals such as Massachusetts General and Brigham and Women’s — a once radical idea that is gaining traction as a way to control soaring health care costs.At least they are starting to figure out that even supposed universal coverage doesn't eliminate the need for trade-offs between cost and quality of care.
Governor Deval Patrick and Senate President Therese Murray have included such restricted provider networks in their recent legislative proposals to control rising insurance rates. And the state this month began offering limited-network plans to 300,000 state employees, retirees, and their families, promising 20 percent discounts on premiums if they are willing to give up access to some of the Boston area’s most renowned hospitals.
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