January 13th, 2010
Reports the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:
Some uninsured Pennsylvanians looking for a chance to enroll in the state’s adultBasic health insurance program are learning the wait’s about to get more expensive.
Beginning March 1, those who choose to pay an at-cost monthly premium for coverage while waiting for a spot to open for them in the much cheaper program will see their monthly premium go from an average of $330 to $600.
The rate hike affects about 3,000 people.
The 41,000 or so people who are in the adultBasic program will only see their monthly premiums go from $35 to $36. But their copayments will double and benefits that previously were offered at no charge, such as diabetic supplies, chemotherapy and home health care, will now carry a 10 percent coinsurance fee, up to $1,000 a year.
Melissa Fox, spokeswoman for the Pennsylvania Insurance Department, said funding for the program is fixed, with no increases budgeted, while use of the benefits has increased.
“That obviously affects the funds,” she said. “In order to keep folks in the program, the benefit package was reduced and the premiums needed to increase — those hit the hardest are the folks paying for coverage on the wait list.”
The adultBasic program offers unlimited hospitalization, access to primary care physicians and specialists, emergency care, diagnostic tests such as X-rays and mammograms, maternity care and rehabilitation and skilled care.
About 369,000 people are on the wait list, up from about 200,000 in March.
Read more: http://www.postgazette.com/pg/10013/1027721-28.stm#ixzz0cVHTxblX
Leave a Comment