The Numbers Aren’t Adding Up: A High-Risk Pool for North Carolina

By Dr. Sven Larson

House Bill 265, sponsored by Representatives Verla Insko (D-Orange), Hugh Holliman (D-Davidson), Bob England (D-Rutherford) and Alice Underhill (D-Craven), would create a state-sponsored high-risk pool (HRP) for people with serious health conditions that make it difficult to purchase health insurance on the open market. In order to be eligible for the pool a person must not only have a health condition that is difficult to insure, but also be unable to purchase a plan that is below 175 percent of the prevailing market cost. While 34 other states have high-risk pools, the legislation currently being considered differs from many of these plans and could prove very costly to North Carolina taxpayers, as well as the people who enroll in the HRP.

1. A Tax Increase of $180 Million

2. Costs Are Too High

3. Premium Costs on the Private Market Would Not See a Significant Drop

A High-risk Pool Could Hurt High-risk Patients

5. A High-risk Pool May Increase the Rate of Uninsured

6. Another Step Toward Offering Government Benefits to Illegal Immigrants?

7. The Numbers Don’t Add Up

Medicaid is already under cost containment restrictions.

8. A High-risk Pool is the Next Step Toward Universal Health Care

Representative Holliman is open about the fact that he thinks this bill is a major step toward universal health care.During the February 27 hearing on HB265 before the House Health Committee Holliman told fellow legislators: “We still have 1.4 million uninsured people in this state and the first step to having any kind of comprehensive program to insuring our people is this bill.”

Likewise, as reported by Mark Binker of the Greensboro News & Record: “Holliman says that the high risk pool is a first step toward universal coverage in the state. There are lots of schemes that could be used to make sure all 8 million-plus North Carolinians have some sort of health insurance. But the first step, according to Holliman, is dealing with this uninsurable group.”

Needless to say, Representative Insko is also an outspoken advocate of universal health care. Insko has spoken openly about the need to use a piecemeal approach to impose a universal health care system on the state. She has similarly gone on record supporting the “creation of a high-risk insurance pool as a first step toward universal health care for North Carolinians.”

9. Alternatives to a High-risk Pool

Related Issues: Healthcare
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