One of the health law's key protections was putting a cap on how much people can be required to pay out of pocket for medical care each year. Now some employers say the administration is unfairly changing the rules that determine how those limits are applied and that the changes will be costly.
In addition, the employers and some Republicans on Capitol Hill are questioning whether federal officials have the authority to modify those rules.
Under the health law, the maximum that a consumer with individual coverage can be required to pay in deductibles, copayments and coinsurance for in-network care is $6,600. People with family plans
max out at $13,200
Next year, the spending limits increase to $6,850 and $13,700, respectively.
In a
rule published in February
So under the provision for next year, even if a family plan has a $13,700 maximum out-of-pocket limit, no one in the family can be on the hook for more than $6,850 before the employer or insurer starts covering that person's medical bills at 100 percent.
As an example, consider the situation where a mother, father and child will be covered by a family plan with a $13,700 out-of-pocket spending limit. If the mother gets sick and has $10,000 in out-of-pocket spending, the health plan would have to start covering her care after she spent $6,850, even if the total family medical spending hadn't yet hit the plan's $13,700 out-of-pocket maximum.
Some family health plans already have per-person spending limits. But 68 percent of workers with a maximum out-of-pocket limit were in plans with a single, aggregate limit, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation's
2014 employer health benefits survey
"The new cost-sharing limit shifts medical costs to employers for individuals who have not reached, and might never reach, the umbrella limit,"
according to a letter
The group wants the administration to withdraw its ruling.
In
an August letter
"We have become increasingly concerned about agencies' actions to implement the law that appear to exceed the authority delegated to them by Congress," the Republican chairmen said in the letter.
The Department of Health and Human Services declined to comment on whether it is reconsidering its position on the issue.
Whether the administration will do so remains uncertain, but the effect on consumers is clear.
"This is an incredibly important protection for people who have significant health care costs," says
JoAnn Volk
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