Blue Cross 39% premium hike despite soaring record profits

JEEP

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
This news from MoveOn.org regarding outrageous premium hike by Blue Cross:

Dear MoveOn member,

Blue Cross has just announced that it's immediately raising premiums charged to hundreds of thousands of individual customers by as much as 39%—even though their parent company's profits soared to a record $4.7 billion last year.1

Even worse, the insurer has so far refused to explain why they're increasing their rates, and warned that they might do so again this year without warning.

The Obama administration is demanding answers from Anthem Blue Cross, and Congress has opened an investigation.2 But Blue Cross is only going to respond if this story becomes a major public-relations problem for them.

So it's time to turn up the heat. Let's join the growing call for an explanation and send a powerful public message that these abuses by Big Insurance are unacceptable.

_http://pol.moveon.org/bluecross/o.pl?id=18911-534444-lx0_43x&t=3

The petition says: "Anthem Blue Cross must provide a detailed explanation for their exorbitant rate increases, or else roll them back immediately."

These latest rate increases in California—reportedly the largest ever by Blue Cross for individual policyholders in the state—are yet another powerful example of how badly broken our health care system is and how desperately we need to hold Big Insurance accountable for exploiting their customers.

Anthem Blue Cross's parent company made record profits last year despite losing 1.4 million customers—increasing their profit margins by cherrypicking the healthiest people to insure.3

Then they can turn around and dramatically increase the rates they charge to the customers they've kept, because there's almost no rules governing rate increases. In fact, the company doesn't even have to publicly reveal how many customers' rates they've increased, or by how much.

The good news is that Kathleen Sebelius, President Obama's Secretary of Health and Human Services, is already publicly demanding answers from the company. And the House Energy and Commerce Committee has announced plans to hold hearings to investigate.

But to get Anthem to clean up their act—and show politicians and the media that we can't afford any more abuses by Big Insurance—we all need to lend our voices. Clicking here will your name to the petition:

_http://pol.moveon.org/bluecross/o.pl?id=18911-534444-lx0_43x&t=4

Thanks for all you do.

–Kat, Michael, Carrie, Stephen, and the rest of the team

Sources:

1. "Anthem Blue Cross dramatically raising rates for Californians with individual health policies," The Los Angeles Times, February 4, 2010
_http://www.moveon.org/r?r=86432&id=18911-534444-lx0_43x&t=5

"WellPoint sees profit grow eightfold in fourth quarter," The Los Angeles Times, January 28, 2010
_http://www.moveon.org/r?r=86433&id=18911-534444-lx0_43x&t=6

2. "Sebelius Calls on Anthem Blue Cross to Publicly Justify 39 Percent Premium Increase," U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, February 8, 2010
http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2010pres/02/20100208c.html

"Congress opens probe into Anthem Blue Cross rate increases," The Los Angeles Times, February 10, 2010
_http://www.moveon.org/r?r=86434&id=18911-534444-lx0_43x&t=7

3. "Waxman and Stupak to WellPoint: We Request Your Testimony," Office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, February 9, 2010
http://www.speaker.gov/blog/?p=2149

Want to support our work? We're entirely funded by our 5 million members—no corporate contributions, no big checks from CEOs. And our tiny staff ensures that small contributions go a long way. Chip in here.

Whether signing a petition will do much is questionable, but it may be better than doing nothing. I forwarded this to my pertinent contacts to help raise awareness. Others may want to put this on their blogs, facebook, and other outlets. Perhaps Sott can give this issue some exposure, too. Maybe with enough virtual shouting, some of the sheeple might actually hear!

One dark thought - are they anticipating enormous claims from a coming manufactured flu pandemic? Hopefully, it's just the usual oppression and greed.
 
Just looked at the front page of the Columbus Dispatch to see this story:

_http://www.dispatchpolitics.com/live/content/national_world/stories/2010/02/12/copy/health_insurers_profits.ART_ART_02-12-10_A1_EGGIOJF.html?adsec=politics&sid=101 said:
Health-care insurers netted 56% more in '09

Top 5 companies prospered amid drop in enrollees, group reports
Friday, February 12, 2010 3:04 AM
By Noam N. Levey
McCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS

WASHINGTON -- As the nation struggled last year with rising health-care costs and a recession, the five largest health-insurance companies racked up combined profits of $12.2 billion -- up 56 percent over 2008, according to a new report by liberal health-care activists.

Based on company financial reports for 2009 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the report said insurers WellPoint Inc., UnitedHealth Group, Cigna Corp., Aetna and Humana Inc. covered 2.7 million fewer people than they did the year before.

Yesterday's report also said three of the five insurers cut the proportion of premiums they spent on their customers' medical care, committing relatively more to salaries, administrative expenses and profits.

Prepared by Heath Care for America Now, a coalition of liberal advocacy groups and labor unions, the report was aimed at bolstering the drive by Democrats to complete work on a health-care overhaul, which insurers have vigorously opposed.

Industry representatives criticized the report's approach yesterday, pointing out that 2008 was a bad year financially across many industries, skewing the 2009 comparison.

"It is disingenuous to look at the profits at one company today compared to where it was in the depth of a recession," said Robert Zirkelbach, a spokesman for America's Health Insurance Plans, the industry's Washington-based lobbying arm.

The companies' 2009 profits are nonetheless intensifying pressure on an industry under attack for raising premiums and denying coverage to millions of Americans.

"That's why we need health-insurance reform today in this country, and why we are going to continue in the Congress to work on this until we see it through," said Rep. Rosa L. DeLauro, D-Conn., a leading advocate of the Democrats' health legislation.

In California, Anthem Blue Cross, a subsidiary of WellPoint, is facing growing scrutiny over its decision to raise premiums for individual health-insurance policies by as much as 39 percent this year for some consumers.

Yesterday, WellPoint defended the rate increase in a letter to U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, saying that it reflects soaring medical costs and will average closer to 20 percent for most customers.

WellPoint also said Anthem's individual business in California lost money in 2009, as the weak economy prompted many customers to switch to lower-cost options. The company did not say how much Anthem lost.

Indianapolis-based WellPoint posted a profit of more than $4.7 billion in 2009, thanks in part to the sale of its NextRx pharmacy benefit-management business, which accounted for roughly half the company's profit.

That put WellPoint's profit margin at 7.3 percent, the highest of the five big insurers. Margins at the four others ranged from 3.4 percent for Humana, based in Louisville, Ky., to 7.1 percent for Cigna of Philadelphia.

Other sectors of the health-care industry, including pharmaceutical companies and device-makers, typically are more profitable.

But the industry's improving financial fortunes is drawing more criticism because all but one of the companies achieved the better results as they lost customers.

WellPoint shed nearly 1.4 million customers, a 3.9 percent drop over 2008, according to its filings. And Cigna lost 5.5 percent of its customers, or 639,000 people.

Only Aetna, which also was the only company whose profit decreased from 2008, gained new customers, picking up an additional 1.2 million, an increase of 6.9 percent.

The shrinking customer base, which reflects increasing unemployment and the growing number of companies that are dropping coverage, was offset slightly by growth in the companies' public-sector business.

Many increased the number of people they insure through Medicare and Medicaid. The government programs for the elderly and the poor increasingly rely on private health plans to administer benefits.

Industry analyst Sheryl Skolnick, a senior vice president at CRT Capital Group, said many of the insurance companies likely would benefit from more customers, but they are driven to increase prices to satisfy investors.

"It is a terrible thing to run your business for Wall Street," Skolnick said. "It creates very bad incentives, and it ultimately prevents you from doing the thing that is in the best long-term interest of your business. ... There is no way that as long as these businesses are publicly traded, they can have the best interest of their customers at heart."

USA! WE'RE #40! WE'RE #40! USA! YEAAAA!!!!
(in health care world ranking; have a little capitalism with your health care - it makes for a very healthy bottom line)
 
The State of Pennsylvania offered a low cost health insurance for adults called "Adult Basic". There are currently 40,000 adults on this plan and the cost is about $36 a month. There is a waiting list to get Adult Basic. If you wanted to stay on the waiting list you had to pay the monthly premium of about $233. They raised the monthly premium for those on the waiting to $600. Needless to say many adults will be dropping off the waiting list soon.
I am going to have to check on Unisoms profits.
 
Latest update from MoveOn.org:

Since Friday, nearly 200,000 MoveOn members like you have signed a petition demanding a public explanation from Blue Cross of their plan to jack up rates by as much as 39% for some customers.

The pressure is working. Blue Cross has just announced they'll delay the increase by two months—a big signal that the outcry is making them uncomfortable.1

But a short delay isn't enough—and the company is still providing no explanation for this ridiculous rate hike. They're hoping this small concession will appease the public, so we've got to show them that they're wrong.

Can you share this message with your friends, and ask them to join you in signing the petition? Just forward the message below.

The bigger the public response, the stronger the message we can send to Big Insurance that customers won't stand for abusive practices like this.

Thanks for all you do.

FWIW.
 
I will do what I will do.
You will do what you will do.

And ?they? will continue to screw the masses if they can.

~sigh~
 
JEEP said:
USA! WE'RE #40! WE'RE #40! USA! YEAAAA!!!!
(in health care world ranking; have a little capitalism with your health care - it makes for a very healthy bottom line)

Yeah, this is a very disgusting system that the U.S. has. But it does reflect just how the government really thinks about it's citizens, especially the elderly and disabled. Capitalism, where psychopaths rule.

Sott carried a video that nicely shows where the U.S. stands.

http://www.sott.net/articles/show/199287-America-is-number-thirty-seven
 
I remember a time not too long ago when Blue Cross was practically a public trust. For years those questing to create HMOs, etc. saw the cash rich position of Blue Cross / Blue Shield with jealousy. Some saw BC/BS as the number one obstacle to their greedy plans. It mostly was a product of post WWII revenues. BC/BS resisted several raiders before sucuumbing to Anthem. It was a shameful takeover and plunder by those claiming they would make things "better". Well, I guess this is it.
 
MoveOn.org's next "move":

Dear MoveOn member,

Imagine if every single phone line, fax machine, email inbox, and social network page of every senator was flooded with a simple message simultaneously: It's time to stop stalling and get real health care reform done now.

Well, that's exactly what's going to happen next week. On February 24th, together with allies from labor unions, progressive blogs, Health Care for America Now, and others, we're organizing a massive day of action: the Virtual March for Real Health Care Reform.

We're aiming to send one million messages (!!) to Congress that day. We'll call, fax, email, tweet, blog, Facebook—everything we can think of—to make sure Congress knows voters want health reform this year.

It's going to be huge—and fun. But to make the biggest impact and hit our one million goal, we need as many people involved as possible from coast to coast. Can you sign up today to join the Virtual March? It's simple to sign up—and when you do, we'll automatically send a fax in your name to Sens. Brown and Voinovich. Click the link below—it'll sign you up and send a fax in your name to your senators.

_http://pol.moveon.org/virtualmarch10/?id=19022-534444-Fq0Jo3x&t=3

As our messages are flooding Congress, hundreds of folks will also be marching through Washington, D.C. to Capitol Hill in honor of Melanie Shouse, a MoveOn Council leader in St. Louis who recently passed away from breast cancer—while still fighting her insurance company for coverage, and organizing tirelessly to pass real health care reform.1 Together, we'll send an unmistakable message to Congress.

These marches couldn't come at a more important moment. With President Obama's big health care summit approaching, next week could be a major turning point for health care reform. But it's not yet clear which direction Congress and the White House will head after the summit—continued debate and delay, or working to finish real reform quickly.

That's why we've got to make our voices heard in a big way, right away. This could be our last chance to make a major impact on the health care fight. And to do that in a big way, we need as many people as possible to sign up for the Virtual March in advance, and then to call their senators on the day of the March.
[...]

Once upon a time, I thought action like this suggested above could make a difference. Now, I'm extremely doubtful and think it's more an exercise in futility. Mostly because this just perpetuates the myth that our elected representatives can and will do our bidding if we just band together and become vocal enough! I think seasoned readers of this forum know better than that! The only thing that has a chance of working is to break the American public out of the spell of the Matrix -- they must somehow become capable of seeing the real TRUTH and stop believing in the web of lies, including that our political system is 1) a democracy, 2) a representative republic actually representing its ordinary citizens, and 3) no need for #3 because the Rapture is going to take care of everything anyway! What, me worry?!! :zzz:
 
I think this is as good a place as any to post what I was hearing from a friend who lives in Florida as a school teacher. She is being asked to go for a blood test in order for her to obtain health insurance. They are testing for aliments, disease, tobacco addiction etc. If you come up with anything other than perfect health their insurance premiums will increase directly in relation to whatever it is that deems you not in perfect health. Is this apart of the OBama health plan?
 
Catori said:
I think this is as good a place as any to post what I was hearing from a friend who lives in Florida as a school teacher. She is being asked to go for a blood test in order for her to obtain health insurance. They are testing for aliments, disease, tobacco addiction etc. If you come up with anything other than perfect health their insurance premiums will increase directly in relation to whatever it is that deems you not in perfect health. Is this apart of the OBama health plan?

I'm self employed (rental cabins) and I recently tried to get health insurance. I have NO pre-existing conditions, never get sick....and I was quoted a monthly premium of $580.00 for MINIMUM coverage. It would have been about $120.00 cheaper if I wasn't a smoker.

Needless to say...I don't have health insurance. :mad:
 
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