Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

This cartoon shows how the Senate could send the insurance market into a death spiral

You can’t just get rid of the unpopular part of Obamacare. Here’s why.

Senate Republicans released their health bill on Thursday, and they do two things that try to appease the people’s will.

They keep one of the most popular parts of Obamacare, which is the ban on preexisting conditions. No matter how sick you are, insurance companies need to accept you.

And they get rid of one of the most unpopular parts of Obamacare — the individual mandate, which fines people who don’t have health insurance. This is the provision that keeps healthy people in the insurance pool, ensuring that costs stay low. The House Republican bill tried to do this with its “continuous coverage” requirement, which says that if you go without coverage for more than 63 days, you’ll have to pay a 30 percent higher premium for one year to get back in.

But Senate Republicans don’t have any such provision, and this could lead the insurance market into a death spiral.

To understand why, let’s first go through how Obamacare works.

How Obamacare works

Imagine a group of people, ranging from healthy to sick:

Obamacare forces insurance companies to accept all these people, regardless of any preexisting conditions. So this raises costs for everyone — including healthy people.

Here’s how Obamacare deals with that. Keep track of those gauges on the top right of each panel that say how sick the pool is and how much insurance costs:

In short, it incentivizes healthy people to stay in the pool by a) giving subsidies based on income, and b) fining people for not having insurance.

The Senate Republicans got rid of the unpopular part, and this could lead to a death spiral

The Senate Republican bill gets rid of the individual mandate, and it doesn’t replace it with any incentive for healthy people to stay insured.

Here’s what could happen:

The House Republicans had a provision to replace the unpopular part

House Republicans had a few things in their bill to keep healthy people in the market and prevent a death spiral:

In order to keep costs reasonable, you need healthy people to stay in the pool.

The way House Republicans wanted to do this is: a) give you a subsidy, based on age. The older you are, the more you get. And b) if you leave the pool, you are punished for coming back, in the form of higher premiums for one year.

So what happens in a death spiral?

Let’s go back to this panel:

When healthy people leave the pool, it means the average cost for everyone goes up.

One way to incentivize people to buy insurance is to give them money to subsidize the costs. But even then, a substantial number of healthy people might decide it’s not worth it — and still decide to leave. That would make costs rise for everyone, and then slightly less healthy people might decide it’s not worth it and leave, which further increases costs for everyone.

And so on and so forth. That’s the death spiral.

That’s why Obamacare penalized people for not having coverage. It’s trying to make healthy people decide that having coverage is better than paying a penalty.

But in this bill, there’s nothing that replaces that part. There’s nothing that keep healthy people in the pool, which means costs could rise until only the sickest people keep coverage.

More in Health Care

Health
Hantavirus will test if the world learned anything from CovidHantavirus will test if the world learned anything from Covid
Health

The hantavirus outbreak is still small. But it’s a huge test for a battered public health sector.

By Dylan Scott
Health
How worried should I be about hantavirus?How worried should I be about hantavirus?
Health

5 questions about the hantavirus cruise ship outbreak, answered.

By Dylan Scott
Good Medicine
Do health influencers actually know what they’re talking about?Do health influencers actually know what they’re talking about?
Good Medicine

Most health influencers don’t have real credentials — but they are more influential than ever.

By Dylan Scott
Health
A major new study found AI outperformed doctors in ER diagnosis — but there’s a catchA major new study found AI outperformed doctors in ER diagnosis — but there’s a catch
Health

An Open AI model posted impressive results in emergency care. But we still need human doctors.

By Dylan Scott
Health
Please don’t inject yourself with bootleg peptidesPlease don’t inject yourself with bootleg peptides
Health

Why Americans have gone wild self-experimenting with the hottest thing in wellness: Peptides.

By Dylan Scott
Health
RFK Jr. is in his influencer eraRFK Jr. is in his influencer era
Health

The real reason Trump’s health secretary is launching a podcast.

By Dylan Scott