When copay assistance backfires on patients

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Julie Appleby | (TNS) KFF Health News

In early 2019, Jennifer Hepworth and her husband were stunned by a large bill they unexpectedly received for their daughter’s prescription cystic fibrosis medication. Their payment had risen to $3,500 from the usual $30 for a month’s supply.

That must be a mistake, she told the pharmacy. But it wasn’t. It turned out that the health insurance plan through her husband’s job had a new program in which it stopped applying any financial assistance they received from drugmakers to the family’s annual deductible.

Insurers or employers can tap into funds provided to patients by drugmakers through copay assistance programs, which were designed by the companies to help patients afford increasingly expensive medications. But, because those payments are no longer counted toward the deductible, patients must pay an amount out-of-pocket, too, often for the same drugs. Those deductibles or other out-of-pocket costs can easily run into thousands of dollars.

Here’s what that meant for Hepworth, who lives in Utah. Before the change, the drugmaker’s copay assistance would almost immediately meet her family’s deductible for the year, because both Hepworth and her daughter need expensive medications. As a result, the family was responsible for copays of only 20% of their medical costs instead of the 100% required by their plan until they met their deductible. By the middle of the year, the family would have reached the plan’s out-of-pocket maximum of nearly $10,000 and would no longer owe any copays.

Hepworth ended up paying the $3,500 to the pharmacy, equivalent to the family’s annual deductible, because she didn’t want to stop giving her daughter a treatment that could extend her life. “We were struggling and everything went on credit cards.”

Why did the insurer do this?

Employers or the health insurance plans they hire are saving 10% to 15% of the cost of prescription plan claims by using these copay accumulator programs, said Edward Kaplan, a senior vice president at Segal, a benefits consulting firm. Even so, Kaplan doesn’t recommend that his clients, who include public and private employers, take advantage of the program because of the increasing pushback from lawmakers and advocacy groups. However, the majority of insured people are in plans governed by these types of programs, according to Avalere, a consulting firm.

Nineteen states now limit copay accumulator programs for some insurance plans. And patient advocacy groups have won a favorable court ruling against the programs. States’ limits on the practice, however, do not apply to larger, self-insured job-based plans, through which many Americans have coverage.

Bipartisan legislation has been introduced in both chambers of Congress that would require financial assistance to count toward deductibles and other out-of-pocket costs. Called the Help Ensure Lower Patient Copays Act, it would govern plans that are exempt from state rules.

Change is unlikely to come soon.

Insurers and employers have long complained that copay assistance programs are mainly a marketing ploy by the drug industry that encourages patients to stay on costly drugs when lower-cost alternatives might be available. Insurers say capturing more of that money themselves can help slow the rising price of premiums.

In a recent letter to regulators, the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association called the practice “a vital tool in keeping health insurance affordable.”

Patient advocacy groups, including the HIV+Hepatitis Policy Institute and two diabetes groups, disagreed and took a case against copay accumulator programs to U.S. District Court last fall.

And “we won,” said Carl Schmid, executive director of the institute. The groups argued the practice can cause some patients to skip their medications because of the unexpected costs they must now shoulder.

Some critics say it’s a form of double dipping because even though the patient hasn’t personally paid out-of-pocket, “that payment was made, and it was made on your behalf. I think that should get counted,” said Rachel Klein, deputy executive director with the AIDS Institute, an advocacy group.

The court decision, Schmid said, essentially overturns a 2021 provision in Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services rules that allowed insurers to expand the practice to cover almost any drug. Previous rules from 2020 would now be in effect, said Schmid, and those rules say copay assistance should count toward the deductible for all drugs for which there is no medically appropriate generic alternative available.

Even so, billing changes for many insured patients may take a while.

While the Biden administration dropped an appeal of the court decision, it has filed motions noting “it does not intend to take any enforcement action against issuers or plans” until regulators draw up new rules, said Ellen Montz, deputy administrator and director of the Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight at CMS, in a written statement to KFF Health News.

A version of these programs being used by insurers, sometimes called a “maximizer,” works a bit differently.

Under a maximizer program, insurers partner with outside firms such as PrudentRX and SaveOnSP. The programs declare certain drugs or classes of drugs “nonessential,” thus allowing them to circumvent some Affordable Care Act rules that limit patient cost sharing. That lets the insurer collect the maximum amount from a drugmaker’s assistance program, even if that is more than the patient would owe through deductibles or out-of-pocket maximums had the drugs remained essential benefits. These partner companies also work with large pharmacy benefit managers that oversee prescription services for employers.

Those maximizer payments do not count toward a patient’s deductible. Many insurers don’t charge patients an additional copay for the drugs deemed nonessential as a way of enticing them to sign up for the programs. If patients choose not to enroll, they could face a copayment far higher than usual because of the “nonessential” designation.

“This is a loophole in the ACA that they are exploiting,” said Schmid of the HIV+Hepatitis Policy Institute, referring to the Affordable Care Act. Johnson & Johnson filed a lawsuit in federal court in New Jersey in 2022 against such a maximizer program, saying it coerced patients into participating because if they didn’t they faced higher copays. The drugmaker warned it might reduce the amount of overall assistance available to patients because of the increasingly common practice.

Now, though, a provision in the proposed 2025 federal rules governing health insurers says plans must consider any covered drug an “essential benefit.” If finalized, the provision would hamper insurers’ ability to collect the maximum amount of drugmaker assistance.

Employers are watching for the outcome of the lawsuit and the proposed federal rules and don’t yet have clarity on how rulings or regulations will affect their programs, said James Gelfand, president and chief executive of the ERISA Industry Committee, which advocates for large, self-insured employers.

___

(KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs of KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling and journalism.)

©2024 KFF Health News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Selling your home could boost your nest egg — but is it worth it?

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By Kate Ashford | NerdWallet

A 2023 report from investment firm Vanguard estimates that about a quarter of Americans age 60 and over could move to a cheaper housing market and use the equity in their homes to upsize their retirement savings — making retirement more secure and enjoyable.

Those with home prices near the national median could have cleared about $99,000 in equity, on average, in 2019 (the year the data was gathered). Homeowners in top-priced markets could have cleared an impressive $346,000, on average.

“We’re at a peak of where housing prices have been, ever, in history,” says Matthew Gottshall, a certified financial planner in Westlake, Ohio. “It’s been more and more common for people to weigh the option of, ‘Do I downsize? Do I take the equity that’s grown in my house?’”

Here are the steps to take as you consider the option.

Assess the market

Selling (and potentially downsizing) your home and pocketing the equity is a good strategy in a market where you can make it work. This is easier in pricier housing areas, when you may be able to trade your high-value home for a smaller place in a more affordable market. Vanguard’s analysis noted that relocators in California, for instance, were more successful at clearing equity in their homes than those in lower-priced markets like New Mexico and Texas.

Selling property also isn’t a slam-dunk task. “Just because you want $800,000 for your home, the market may not care,” says Andrew Herzog, a CFP in Plano, Texas. “You may be in the mood to move, but if nobody wants to buy your place in the first place, you’ve got nothing.”

Additionally, you have to make sure you can afford to buy a replacement home that you like. Check home prices in your desired location before putting the “For Sale” sign out.

“My parents — the price of their house has gone up fairly substantially, but everything they want to sell and move into has increased even faster,” Gottshall says.

Research the costs

Make sure you understand property taxes and the basic costs of living in your desired locale, as well as the costs for selling your home. (Hint: The real estate agent commission is generally about 5.5%, although that may change after the recent legal settlement by the National Association of Realtors.) Also, if you’re picking up a mortgage on the new home, there will be closing costs, and rates are probably higher than they were when you last purchased property. All these numbers could chip away at your net sale profit.

“We’re at a place where 30-year mortgages are at 6.5% to 7%,” Gottshall says. “It could very well mean your monthly payment on a much lower-priced house is almost equivalent to the home that you’re in right now.”

In an area with a very low cost of living, do some digging to make sure you understand what to expect from the municipality. Are the streets and sidewalks maintained? How is garbage collected? Is the fire department responsive?

“I had one client who had a beautiful home on the Mississippi Gulf Coast,” says Ralph Bender, a CFP in Temecula, California. “I said, ‘Wow, you must like it, you basically pay no taxes down there,’ and he said ‘Yes, but you get no services either.’”

Weigh the current price of upkeep

Keeping your house could mean maintaining a big yard, replacing an old roof and managing a second-story primary bedroom into your later years. Selling gives you a chance to downsize your responsibilities and look for something that makes it easier to age in place.

“You have people with these four- and five-bedroom houses that no longer have kids staying with them,” Gottshall says. Moving to a home with less to clean and fewer stairs can make it easier to stay in your home long term.

Think about family

You don’t necessarily have to move closer to loved ones — but it’s helpful. Bender recalls a client who moved with his wife to South Carolina because they liked to golf. When the client died, his wife moved back to California because she didn’t know anyone in the area.

“There’s got to be a support network for the family,” Bender says. A community, he says, encourages social participation and contributes to overall longevity.

Test-drive the location

If you’re buying in a new city, visit in every season to ensure you like the area year-round, even in the snow or blazing sun. Vacation there if you can.

“Every area has its negatives,” Bender says. “You have to find out what they are before you move there and be prepared to deal with them.”

Hazel Secco, a CFP in Hoboken, New Jersey, remembers clients who moved from New Jersey to North Carolina and found that the lifestyle wasn’t what they expected. “I think they were visualizing and thinking about the difference theoretically, but I don’t think they fully grasped the implications,” Secco says. “They had to come back after selling the North Carolina [house], so it just ended up costing so much more.”

This article was written by NerdWallet and was originally published by The Associated Press.

 

Kate Ashford, CSA® writes for NerdWallet. Email: kashford@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @kateashford.

Sold a home recently? Here’s what you’ll get from the $418 million Realtor settlement

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Sold a home in the last four years?

Congratulations. You’re entitled to a piece of the $418 million Realtor settlement fund.

But don’t expect a big windfall.

Since you will be among 21 million other Americans who are part of the “settlement class,” the amount per seller — after deducting attorneys’ fees — could be as low as $13.

That’s a pittance compared with the $18,000-$22,000 commission Southern California sellers typically pay buyers’ agents — on top of what they paid their own agents.

“It’s not going to be a lot of money,” said Jack Miller, president and chief executive of Orange County-based consulting firm T3 Sixty. “It’s not really a financial thing. The rules changes are the bigger deal here.”

See also: Accused of price-fixing, Realtors talk change at annual convention in Anaheim

The size of the seller payout is one of four key takeaways from the 107-page settlement reached this month between plaintiffs in more than 20 class-action lawsuits and the National Association of Realtors.

Homeowners and their attorneys argued in federal lawsuits across the nation that the decades-old practice of requiring sellers to post compensation offers for buyer agents amounted to price-fixing, keeping the 5-6% commission rate artificially high.

NAR called those claims meritless and vowed to appeal.

Faced with protracted litigation, NAR decided to settle on behalf of its 1.5 million members and more than 200 Realtor-affiliated groups named as defendants.

Under the settlement, announced March 15, NAR agreed to pay $418 million, or less than a quarter of the $1.8 billion a Kansas City jury order it to pay Missouri home sellers in October.

In addition, the trade group agreed to revise its commission rules, dropping the requirement that sellers post offers of compensation in a listing database called an MLS or multiple listing service.

Some billed the agreement as an “earthquake” that’s likely to topple the standard 6% commission rate.

A senior fellow for the Consumer Federation of America predicted commissions could fall as much as 30% over the next few years as buyer agents compete for business.

Some real estate professionals pushed back, denying that commissions will fall much, if at all.

One industry blogger called the settlement a “total victory for NAR,” arguing things will change little.

The settlement must win court approval before becoming effective, possibly in July.

Here are key takeaways from that settlement.

1. Buyers and their agents must sign a contract

While most home sellers sign listing agreements with their agents, only about a fifth of California buyers sign contracts, according to a California Association of Realtors estimate.

Under the settlement, Realtors and buyers must enter into a written agreement before the buyer can tour any homes. The contract must specify the amount or rate of agents’ compensation.

The amount of compensation can’t be an open-ended phrase like, “whatever amount the seller is offering the buyer’s agent.”

See also: Realtor associations deluged with ‘copycat’ commission lawsuits

Agents also can no longer say their services are free unless they’re actually working pro bono.

“It’s going to be a different game,” said Art Carter, chief executive of the California Regional Multiple Listing Service, which covers most of Southern California. “For the first time, buyers and their agent are going to be under contract for the entirety of their relationship, and that discussion is going to happen up front.”

CRMLS General Counsel Edward Zorn called the mandatory buyer contracts “the change that’s going to impact the consumer the most.”

2. How buyer agents get paid will be up for grabs

The settlement doesn’t spell out how buyer agents get paid, so it’s possible sellers will continue to pay buyer’s commissions — or that some sellers will pay buyer commissions while some buyers will pay their own fees.

While the settlement prohibits offers of buyer-agent compensation on the MLS, sellers still can use the MLS to make offers of “concessions,” which buyers can use to pay closing costs, pay for repairs — or to pay their broker fees.

Listing agents also can still make compensation offers by any means outside the MLS — such as on their own websites.

Industry officials are hoping federal lending rules will be changed, allowing buyers to use part of their mortgage to pay their broker fees.

Zorn believes some buyers may include a request in their purchase agreement asking the seller to pay their broker fees.

“Now the buyer and the seller are negotiating how the buyer agent gets paid,” he said.

Since current rules prevent veterans receiving VA loans from paying commissions, the Department of Veterans Affairs also will need to revise those regulations.

Miller, the T3 Sixty CEO, predicted some buyers will face a difficult period as the industry goes through a transition.

“Consumers, especially first-time homebuyers (and) lower-income consumers … are struggling just to get the down payment together,” Miller said. “To place the additional cost or burden on them of paying an agent for representation may make homeownership totally unattainable for them.”

3. Will commissions really drop?

Industry insiders challenge media reports that commission rates or home prices are about to fall because of the settlement.

Rancho Cucamonga agent Laurel Starks was rankled by headlines like “Homebuying’s 6% commission is gone.”

“Blatantly false narratives have been published by mainstream media,” Starks said in an email. “Fictional statements are being published as though they are fact.”

Some observers also question the speculation that home sellers will lower their prices since they’re saving money on commissions. Miller and others note that bidding wars over a limited supply of homes are driving up home prices, not commissions.

“We think (sellers are) going to keep the money,” Miller said. “They are going to sell their home for what the market will bear.”

On the other hand, economists and consumer advocates expect commissions to drop by as much as $30 billion a year because of increased agent competition.

Consumer advocate Stephen Brobeck believes the NAR settlement will make price-fixing much more difficult.

“Buyers as well as sellers will be able to negotiate rates, which will be more transparent,” said Brobeck, a senior fellow at the Consumer Federation of America. “Discount brokers will be empowered to compete more effectively with agents trying to maintain 5-6% rates.”

He predicted commissions will decline by 20-30% over the next several years, “which represents tens of billions of dollars of annual consumer savings.”

Real estate commissions total about $100 billion a year, according to one industry estimate.

Rob Hahn of Las Vegas, a former industry consultant who writes a real estate blog under the moniker Notorious R.O.B., has an entirely different take on the settlement.

Asked how much commissions will drop, he said, “None. Zero. … Nothing changes.”

The settlement doesn’t eliminate seller-paid buyer commissions, he said. And it will do little to end the practice of “steering,” or directing clients to homes offering the biggest commissions.

“Agents already are out there saying, I’m just going to call that agent and say, ‘What are you guys offering?’ ”

If the listing agent says, “Nothing, we’re not required to,” he wrote, some agents will say, “Good luck selling (that house).”

“Steering is illegal, and yet, it happens all the time,” Hahn said. “I don’t know this settlement changes any of that.”

4. Who qualifies for settlement payments?

Anyone who sold a home after Oct. 31, 2019, will be eligible for a payment, so long as it was listed in an MLS and a commission was paid.

Sellers should receive notification if they’re entitled to a payment.

More than 21 million homes sold in that period, NAR figures show.

Assuming legal fees consume one-third of the settlement, that leaves just under $300 million for home sellers, or just over $13 apiece.

“Homeowners will get a cup of coffee, and lawyers will get millions,” Hahn said.

The total settlement pool is expected to reach about $2 billion once payments are included from large brokerages such as Re/Max, Anywhere, Keller Williams and others still negotiating, the Consumer Federation’s Brobeck said. That would raise individual payments to $63 per seller.

“But,” Brobeck added, “the main goal of the litigation was to change industry policies and practices, and that will certainly occur.”

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Israel-Hamas talks stall as Netanyahu balks at ‘extreme’ demands

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Alisa Odenheimer | Bloomberg News (TNS)

Cease-fire talks between Israel and Hamas broke down again, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accusing the Islamist group of making “extreme demands.”

“Hamas once again rejected any American compromise proposal,” Netanyahu’s office said on Tuesday. He cited the organization’s insistence on an immediate end to the war in Gaza, the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces from the territory and “remaining in power so that it could repeat the massacre of October 7.”

Israel’s Army Radio said the government has told its negotiators in Qatar — which is acting as a mediator between the two sides — to return home. Netanyahu’s statement did not mention that or say the talks had been halted.

The move comes after weeks of talks in which Israel and Hamas appeared to make little headway. Israel says a cease-fire can only be temporary — in the region of six weeks — and the war must continue until Hamas’s remaining brigades are destroyed.

Israel also says Hamas must agree to release hostages for a cease-fire to start.

The war erupted on Oct. 7 when Hamas fighters swarmed into southern Israel from Gaza, killing 1,200 people and taking around 250 hostage. Israel’s retaliatory attack on Gaza has killed more than 32,000 people according to the Hamas-run health ministry there.

Hamas is designated a terrorist group by the U.S. and European Union.

©2024 Bloomberg News. Visit at bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.