Rosenbaum Sara, Lopez Nancy, Mehta Devi, Dorley Mark, Burke Taylor, Widge Alicia
Issue Brief (Commonw Fund). 2013 Dec;33:1-12.
Part of states' roles in administering the new health insurance marketplaces is to certify the health plans available for purchase. This analysis focuses on how state-based and state partnership marketplaces are using their flexibility in setting certification standards to shape plan design in the individual market. It focuses on three aspects of certification: provider networks; inclusion of essential community providers; and benefit substitution, which allows plans to offer benefits that differ from a state's benchmark plan. A review of documents collected from 18 states and the District of Columbia finds that 13 states go beyond the minimum federal requirements with respect to provider network standards, four states specify additional standards for including essential community providers, and five states and Washington, D.C., bar benefit substitution. These interstate variations in plan design reflect the challenges policymakers face in balancing health care affordability, benefit coverage, and access to care through the marketplace plans.
各州在管理新的医疗保险市场方面的部分职责是认证可供购买的健康保险计划。本分析重点关注基于州的市场和州合作市场如何利用其在设定认证标准方面的灵活性来塑造个人市场中的保险计划设计。它聚焦于认证的三个方面:供应商网络;基本社区供应商的纳入;以及福利替代,即允许保险计划提供与该州基准计划不同的福利。对从18个州和哥伦比亚特区收集的文件进行审查后发现,13个州在供应商网络标准方面超出了联邦最低要求,4个州为纳入基本社区供应商规定了额外标准,5个州以及华盛顿特区禁止福利替代。这些保险计划设计方面的州际差异反映出政策制定者在平衡医疗保健可负担性、福利覆盖范围以及通过市场计划获得医疗服务方面所面临的挑战。