What Will Happen to HSAs Under Reform?

What Will Happen to HSAs Under Reform?

More than one million Californians now are covered by health savings account-eligible health plans. However, the six-year-old HSA model may be threatened by the health care overhaul.

More than 10 million U.S. residents — and one million Californians — are covered by health savings account-eligible health plans, according to a census of insurance firms that America’s Health Insurance Plans released last week. The plans allow individuals to contribute thousands of pre-tax dollars to HSAs, which participants may spend on health care needs or “roll over” indefinitely.

The figures reflect continued interest in HSAs, which were unveiled in December 2003 as part of the George W. Bush administration’s push for consumer-driven health care. Nationwide, enrollment in HSA-eligible plans grew by 25% between January 2009 and January 2010 and has more than doubled since January 2007. In California, enrollment rose by 19% in the past year. While the plans were initially favored by consumers who might otherwise go without insurance because of its cost or their good health, the recent rise has been fueled by more companies and their employees opting for the plans, which shift risk onto the patient but carry less-expensive premiums than traditional coverage.

Despite growing numbers of consumers with HSAs, participation remains low compared with ambitious growth projections. Previous forecasts estimated that as many as 30 million U.S. residents would now be covered by HSA-eligible plans. Meanwhile, 40% of those who are eligible have historically failed to open HSA accounts.

The level of penetration in California requires some context. While the state has more residents in HSA-eligible plans than any other, just 4.5% of California’s privately insured residents are in HSA-eligible health plans, a rate that lags the national average of 4.8% and is far behind Vermont, where 13.2% of privately insured residents participate in the plans. California employers that offer the plans also are “reeling” from significant rate increases this year, as the state’s insurers suggested they historically underpriced the product.

Looking Forward on HSAs

Despite the slow-but-steady growth, analysts still question the long-term viability of the six-year-old HSA model, which President Bush conceived as a tactic to promote medical price transparency and ultimately reduce health costs. Edwin Park of the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities says that HSAs disproportionately attract healthier and high-income consumers who have fewer medical needs and can afford to pay out of pocket, forcing other plans to manage higher-risk patients and raise their premiums.

Moreover, the last president’s signature health reform appears to be threatened by the current president’s sweeping overhaul.

Although the new health law contains relatively few HSA-specific provisions — most notably, the accounts will no longer cover over-the-counter medications as of 2011 — the law “opens the door to death [of HSAs] by regulation,” according to John Goodman, president of the National Center for Policy Analysis and an advocate of the HSA model. Goodman notes that the overhaul requires the HHS secretary to review and determine required benefits under all health plans each year, which could lead to changes that essentially prevent individuals from adding new money to their HSAs.

Paul Ginsburg, president of the Center for Studying Health System Change, also sees a threat to HSAs, although from an opposing perspective. He contends that the accounts eventually will become “redundant” under reform. According to Ginsburg, the so-called Cadillac tax on high-cost health plans will accomplish HSAs’ purpose of lowering premiums by forcing employers to craft new benefit designs that encourage lower utilization and have higher deductibles.

In the short-term, Paul Fronstin of the Employee Benefit Research Institute expects that HSA-eligible health plans will be included in the health insurance exchanges called for under the overhaul. According to Fronstin, employers continue to deal with significant cost increases and will be pushed to hike deductibles, and “it can easily be argued that [consumer-driven health plans] will continue to play an important role” in addressing these concerns.

Rules and Regulations

Benefit and Burden

Political Battles

Public Perspectives

 

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