Path to Partnership: More States Opt for HHS’ Hybrid Exchanges

Path to Partnership: More States Opt for HHS’ Hybrid Exchanges

"Road to Reform" examines why HHS created the partnership insurance exchange model -- and which states are eyeing the hybrid model ahead of this Friday's deadline for participation.

New Hampshire: We’re in.

North Carolina: We’re not.

The two states on Tuesday were the latest to announce their intentions on the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance exchanges. States have until Feb. 15 to tell HHS whether they’ll retain even some control over the exchanges, or let the Obama administration run the exchanges for them.

And while New Hampshire made clear that it wants to partner with the federal government to launch an insurance exchange, North Carolina backed out of a previous plan to do exactly that.

By Friday, we’ll know where half a dozen other states stand, too.

Background on Partnership Model

The Affordable Care Act didn’t originally spell out the partnership model; under the law, states faced a binary choice of running their own insurance exchanges or punting the responsibility to the government.

But HHS officials realized they needed to tweak the ACA’s approach, as more than 30 states — increasingly led by Republicans, who took over 11 statehouses in the 2010 election — announced they planned to opt out of the exchanges altogether. This would leave HHS officials with “an awesome task in establishing and operating exchanges in [so many] different states and coordinating those operations with state Medicaid programs and insurance departments,” before open enrollment begins in October 2013, Paul Starr writes in The American Prospect.

As a result, the agency in 2011 introduced the partnership model in hopes of shifting some of the responsibility for running exchanges back to the states.

Under the hybrid approach, the federal government takes on setting up the exchange’s website and other back-end responsibilities, while states keep functions such as approving health plans and setting up consumer assistance programs. HHS also hopes that the partnership model will be a path for states that weren’t ready to run their own exchanges to take them over eventually.

“The best case for the government is a state setting up [its own] exchange and operating it well,” Avalere Health President and CEO Dan Mendelson tells California Healthline. But “the worst case … is that a state tries to run it, and run it badly.”

“A partnership is somewhere in between.”

As of press time on Wednesday, seven states — including New Hampshire — have signaled that they will participate in partnership exchanges, and Avalere anticipates that five more states will do so by Friday. Those states are Ohio, New Jersey, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia.

Politics Matter

Where states stand on the insurance exchanges has emerged as an important battleground over implementing the health reform law, albeit less publicized than states’ decisions to opt into the ACA’s Medicaid expansion. About 27 million Americans are expected to gain health coverage through the new marketplaces.

In general, “Democratic governors moved aggressively” to set up the exchanges, Mendelson says, with most of those leaders choosing to run their own marketplaces.

But GOP leaders tended to dawdle on announcing their plans, in hopes that the health reform law would be overturned by the Supreme Court or repealed after last year’s election.

Friday’s deadline represents a final chance for undecided states to take part in an exchange, but also represents a difficult decision. Many conservative governors who traditionally support states’ rights are weighing whether to hand over more responsibility to the federal government, or retain some control over implementing a law that they’ve opposed. Seven of the states that Avalere has identified as likely participants in partnership exchanges are led by Republicans.

Meanwhile, local politics in Arkansas — which has a Democratic governor who favors the ACA, but a GOP-controlled Legislature that refused to approve legislation for a state-based exchange — played a role in that state’s decision to pursue the partnership model, an official told American Medical News.

Size Matters, Too

But for Delaware, the decision to go with a partnership exchange wasn’t politics. It was dollars and sense.

Specifically, the decision to pursue a partnership model meant Delaware would benefit from “economy of scale,” Rita Landgraf, the state’s health secretary, told HealthLeaders last month.

Delaware’s small population — with fewer than 100,000 residents likely to enroll in an insurance exchange — meant that a state-based exchange would be “cost-prohibitive.” As Governing‘s Dylan Scott reported, Delaware officials estimated that it would cost about $87 per member per month to run their own health insurance, or roughly six times as much as if the federal government ran the exchange.

“If we couldn’t spread costs over [a] larger population, which includes both individuals who are healthy as well as those who have medical challenges,” premium costs for insurance participants would rise, Landgraf told Scott.

And while Delaware officials did approach neighboring states like Maryland to ask about folding its pool into those states’ exchanges, “officials in those states weren’t interested, particularly because insurance regulation — traditionally a state government’s responsibility — gets messy when you start crossing state borders,” Scott writes.

Here’s a look at what else is happening around the nation.

Administration Actions

Inside the Industry

In the States

On the Hill

Rolling Out Reform

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