Skip to content

Some Newly Covered Illinois Residents Still Struggle To Pay For Health Care

For Martha Gruberman, a 63-year-old resident of south suburban Steger, Illinois, obtaining health insurance through the Affordable Care Act hasn’t made it any easier to pay for routine medical care.

A plan she chose through the federal marketplace requires her to pay $5,000 toward medical costs before her insurer contributes anything. With an income of about $22,000, she doesn’t expect to hit that mark.

“I’m never going to use it,” she said. “I can’t use it. I can’t afford it.”

Gruberman and others who picked plans with the lowest monthly costs have found that medical care is still out of reach because of the plans’ high deductibles. As a result, many consumers with high-deductible plans are following old habits: delaying care or taking their needs to community health centers that have traditionally served the uninsured, local health administrators said.

“These people, even though they have access to some form of insurance, really do not have health care,” said Suzanne Hoban, executive director of Family Health Partnership Clinic, a free and reduced-cost clinic in Crystal Lake.

Officials have cited the number of people who signed up for private insurance last year as a measure of the federal health law’s success. About 217,000 Illinoisans signed up, exceeding federal expectations, and about 7.1 million Americans enrolled during the law’s first open enrollment period. But about 63,000 Illinoisans enrolled in low-premium bronze plans, which last year had a median deductible of $5,600 in the state and for 2015 have a median deductible of $5,750. Plans in the other categories — silver, gold and platinum — cost more per month but have lower deductibles and better benefits.

Administrators at free and charitable health care clinics in the Chicago area say they are adapting to new challenges posed by those among the newly insured who need help paying for care. The challenges are expected to grow next year.

Premiums for the cheapest bronze plans in Illinois are increasing by an average of 11 percent in 2015, according to state data. In the Chicago area, that means a 40-year-old will choose among bronze plans that have an average premium of $243 and a median deductible of $5,000, lower than the state median.

Annette Kopczynski, 62, of Huntley, signed up last year for a $6,000-deductible bronze plan with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois. After tax credits, her monthly premium is $38. She said she sees a nurse practitioner at a reduced cost at Family Health Partnership Clinic because she cannot afford care through her insurance. She and her husband, who is on disability, pay about $25 per month toward the costs that accrue, she said.

“I don’t really go for tests or things that would cost, like physical therapy,” she said. “I would never do that. I’m just lucky. I’m mostly healthy. I just try to stay away from the doctors.”

Like other free and charitable clinics, Family Health Partnership traditionally served the uninsured. But this year the clinic changed its policy to accept people with insurance who can’t afford care, said Hoban, the clinic’s director.

“This is a paradigm shift for us,” she said.

CommunityHealth, a Chicago-based free clinic that serves 11,000 patients, is considering making a similar change next year, said Judith Haasis, CommunityHealth’s executive director.

“We’re going to consider serving individuals who are doing everything right, but when they look at the options won’t be able to access routine or medical care because the cost of accessing that care is going to be too great,” Haasis said.

“I don’t really go for tests or things that would cost, like physical therapy,” she said. “I would never do that. I’m just lucky. I’m mostly healthy. I just try to stay away from the doctors.”

Like other free and charitable clinics, Family Health Partnership traditionally served the uninsured. But this year the clinic changed its policy to accept people with insurance who can’t afford care, said Hoban, the clinic’s director.

“This is a paradigm shift for us,” she said.

CommunityHealth, a Chicago-based free clinic that serves 11,000 patients, is considering making a similar change next year, said Judith Haasis, CommunityHealth’s executive director.

“We’re going to consider serving individuals who are doing everything right, but when they look at the options won’t be able to access routine or medical care because the cost of accessing that care is going to be too great,” Haasis said.

“I don’t really go for tests or things that would cost, like physical therapy,” she said. “I would never do that. I’m just lucky. I’m mostly healthy. I just try to stay away from the doctors.”

Like other free and charitable clinics, Family Health Partnership traditionally served the uninsured. But this year the clinic changed its policy to accept people with insurance who can’t afford care, said Hoban, the clinic’s director.

“This is a paradigm shift for us,” she said.

CommunityHealth, a Chicago-based free clinic that serves 11,000 patients, is considering making a similar change next year, said Judith Haasis, CommunityHealth’s executive director.

“We’re going to consider serving individuals who are doing everything right, but when they look at the options won’t be able to access routine or medical care because the cost of accessing that care is going to be too great,” Haasis said.

While high-deductible plans sometimes contribute to poor health care decisions, they also force people to think more carefully about medical spending — a shift that could help contain medical costs and slow premium growth, another goal of the federal law, experts said.

“I can’t say it’s a direct cause and effect with high-deductible plans, but it does suggest to us that everyone in the system is doing a better job of managing care and managing the cost,” Connolly said.

All plans come with a set of free preventive services including cancer screening, immunizations and diet counseling. Since the health law passed, use of those services has increased, and young people are seeing primary care doctors more often and hospital admissions are starting to level off, Connolly said.

As consumers confront the nuances of health care, some patient advocates are looking for ways to simplify the way it is sold. Insurance companies have traditionally sold plans to businesses who offered their employees a few options, said Katherine Hempstead, who directs the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s work on health insurance coverage.

“This is a product that wasn’t designed to be sold to consumers, but now it’s being sold to consumers, and the design hasn’t changed that much,” Hempstead said.

The foundation is sponsoring competitions for developers to create tools that will help consumers select from the array of plans on the federal marketplace — there are 288 non-employer-based plans offered in Illinois this year. The tools would likely create algorithms that would narrow plans based on the medications people take, specialists they see and other personal health information.

While high-deductible plans sometimes contribute to poor health care decisions, they also force people to think more carefully about medical spending — a shift that could help contain medical costs and slow premium growth, another goal of the federal law, experts said.

“I can’t say it’s a direct cause and effect with high-deductible plans, but it does suggest to us that everyone in the system is doing a better job of managing care and managing the cost,” Connolly said.

All plans come with a set of free preventive services including cancer screening, immunizations and diet counseling. Since the health law passed, use of those services has increased, and young people are seeing primary care doctors more often and hospital admissions are starting to level off, Connolly said.

As consumers confront the nuances of health care, some patient advocates are looking for ways to simplify the way it is sold. Insurance companies have traditionally sold plans to businesses who offered their employees a few options, said Katherine Hempstead, who directs the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s work on health insurance coverage.

“This is a product that wasn’t designed to be sold to consumers, but now it’s being sold to consumers, and the design hasn’t changed that much,” Hempstead said.

The foundation is sponsoring competitions for developers to create tools that will help consumers select from the array of plans on the federal marketplace — there are 288 non-employer-based plans offered in Illinois this year. The tools would likely create algorithms that would narrow plans based on the medications people take, specialists they see and other personal health information.

Tribune reporter Alex Richards contributed.

Related Topics

Cost and Quality Insurance States The Health Law Uninsured