Gold plans in the ACA are higher actuarial value plans than non-CSR silver and all bronze plans. The benefit design should be better for people with high costs. The trade-off is that these plans have higher premiums. More protection for higher monthly premiums is a standard trade-off. But this is not always true.
- Gold can have the same maximum out of pocket limit as bronze and catastrophic plans
- Difference is the speed of hitting the out of pocket max
- Speed of claims matter
As part of a series of productively procrastinating steps I had taken when I should have been writing a grant this week, I was thinking about risk adjustment under silverloading. That led me to wonder how many gold plans have a maximum out of pocket limit equal to the maximum allowable limit? I used Healthcare.gov public use files for 2019 to estimate the percentage of 14 digit Plan IDs at each metal level had a maximum out of pocket limit equal to the 2019 maximum allowed out of pocket costs of $7,900 for a single individual. In order to get a quick and dirty sense of scope, the unit of analysis is county/plan ID combination for both the denominator and numerator. If I was publishing this in a peer review space, I would have done some type of weighting scheme.
Roughly a third of gold plans/county combinations have an out of pocket maximum for a single individual of $7,900. Three fifths of bronze plans have the same out of pocket maximum and all catastrophic plans have the same maximum allowable out of pocket maximum.
There are a couple of things going on here. The big thing is a combination of distance (total claims spend) and speed of reaching the out of pocket max varies by metal tier.
Catastrophic plans and bronze plans that entirely deductible are low actuarial value plans. Catastrophic plans allow three PCP visits before deductible while High Deductible Health Plans with Health Savings Accounts (HDHP/HSA) bronze plans put the first several thousand dollars worth of claims straight to the deductible. After the deductible is met the rest of the out of pocket expenses are met by any new claims interacting with co-insurance and co-pays.
Catastrophic and Bronze plans quickly hit the maximum allowable limit over a short distance of claims. Catastrophic plans can cap out after only $7,900 in allowed claims or the first half an hour of a moderately complex surgery.
Gold plans aren’t going for speed but they are going the distance, all alone in a time of need. Let’s take Wyoming Blue plan # 11269WY0070013 to illustrate what is happening.
It has a $1,000 deductible and a $7,900 out of pocket limit. So for the first thousand dollars, the Gold plan acts the same as a Catastrophic plan. However after that it kinks. Most of the cost sharing is a simple 20% coinsurance for the next $34,500 in claims. At that point, the plan is capped out. There is some wiggle room in these numbers are there are straight co-pays for some drugs and a copay plus coinsurance design for PCP so the cap-out claim distance is likely to be a little less than $35,500 under the simplest scenario. In this plan, someone does not hit the out of pocket maximum until they have done two things in the same claim year: had a knee replacement and given birth without any complications at average cost facilities.
Why does this matter?
Gold premiums are always higher than bronze and catastrophic premiums when we control for insurer and network. Gold premiums are about the same as silver with local variation due to the quirks of silverloading and induced demand factors. Gold can be attractive to folks who anticipate medium medical needs over the course of a year. People who know that they are going to hit the out of pocket maximum without having to look at a benefit design probably should not be in gold, but that is a small percentage of buyers. Gold has a margin of superiority over plans with the same out of pocket maximum that is a function of how fast people get to a certain level of claims and how far that level of claims is from zero.
Jeffro
Love the Cake reference!
Leto
David, please tell me you’re not alone in your time of need?
JCJ
@Leto:
I worry about the bowel-shaking earthquakes of doubt and remorse
Omnes Omnibus
FWIW, I really can’t stand that song, and I now have it as an earworm. #BringBackMayhew
Damien
@Omnes Omnibus: you know what you need?
A girl in a short skirt and a loooooooong jacket.
daveNYC
OOP maximum of a Gold plan is $7900, the median savings account balance across American households is $4,830.
What would it take to get that OOP down so that $19k in medical services doesn’t burn through someone’s entire liquid savings?
Omnes Omnibus
@Damien: You are not helping.
Gravenstone
Doug J’s pernicious influence is felt…
Mart
@Damien: My wife loves her some Cake.
I wish my ACA silver plan did not discount what doctors charged so heavily, and my copay was a bit higher; so Dr’s offices did not sneer at me with a no when I ask if they take our insurance plan. Premium is over $23K for this 60 something couple a few years away from 65. Out of pocket is next to nothing. We had to change all Drs, and need to drive across town for urgent care doc in a box. Overall care has been very good to excellent.