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Health Insurance Reform

 

What's New

After months of hard work by Emily Miller, Illinois PIRG's health care advocate, on Wednesday, April 16, the House of Representatives passed the Premium and Loss Data Reporting Act, HB 5865. (Click here for Illinois PIRG's fact sheet) The measure is a critical tool needed to protect consumers and expose insurance industry spending.

The bill, which passed in the face of strong opposition from the insurance industry, protects consumers by requiring health insurance companies to report how much of each premium dollar goes toward actual care, versus profit and administrative cost. Read our full release.

How You Can Help

Tell lawmakers they should protect our health care—not insurance industry profit.



Overview

With the costs of health care skyrocketing, and 1.4 million Illinoisans currently going without health insurance, major reform is needed to improve public health and protect consumers.

Insurance companies need to change the way they do business.

Health insurance costs are soaring, and millions are going without any insurance or enough insurance to cover their families.  Even worse, many people are refused coverage even if they can afford it.

At the same time, Illinois’ largest health insurance companies increased their profits an average of $675 million in the second quarter of 2007.  

The problem is that insurance companies operate virtually unchecked in Illinois, and are making record-breaking profit.  Health insurance companies can deny claims as they see fit, and no independent external review process exists for consumers.  They are also free to use our money for profit and administrative costs instead of our health care. Finally, insurance companies are not subject to any government oversight before they raise our premiums.

Illinois PIRG is working to:


• Establish an Office of Patient Protection that will review denied claims, consumer complaints, and unfair cancellation or denial of insurance policies.
• Ensure that insurance companies spend our money on health care, rather than administrative overhead or profits, by requiring them to spend at least 85 percent of premium dollars on patients’ health.
• Require the government to actively review all proposed insurance rate increases to make sure they are fair to consumers.

We need to dramatically reduce or eliminate the number of uninsured.

Uninsured residents have or are at risk of significant financial hardship when they encounter health problems. The uninsured also drive up the cost of health care for everyone, because the uninsured have less access to preventative health care and they are more likely to go to the emergency room—the most expensive place to get treated—when they do have health problems.  

While hospitals are required to treat everyone who needs medical attention, many uninsured do not have the money to cover this costly treatment.  This is a big problem for some hospitals and doctors who treat the uninsured, but are never reimbursed for their services.

Health reforms under consideration would provide health insurance to most or all of the uninsured.



1.4 million Illinoisans are currently going without health insurance.