马萨诸塞州医疗改革:雇主、低薪工人和全民医保。

Laurie Felland, Debra Draper, Allison Liebhaber
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摘要

随着马萨诸塞州实现几乎全民健康覆盖的里程碑式努力的展开,该州现在把重点放在雇主采取措施增加覆盖范围上。根据2006年的法案,所有雇主——员工人数少于11人的公司除外——都面临新的要求,包括建立第125条,即自助计划,允许员工用税前资金购买保险,如果他们没有“公平合理”地为员工支付保险费用,就需要支付295美元的年费。通过对马萨诸塞州卫生保健领导人的采访(见数据来源),研究卫生系统变化中心(HSC)研究了法律如何可能影响雇主决定向工人提供健康保险和雇员决定购买保险。市场观察人士认为,许多小公司可能不知道具体的要求,其中一些可能会被证明是繁重的。此外,对小型雇主的最大影响可能来自要求所有居民拥有最低水平健康保险的个人授权。如果更多的工人接受保险,寻求更慷慨的保险或向雇主施加压力来提供保险,这项规定可能会增加公司的成本。尽管对个人和小团体市场进行了改革,包括开发新的保险产品,但人们仍然对保险的负担能力和遏制医疗保健费用上涨的能力感到担忧。
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Massachusetts health reform: employers, lower-wage workers and universal coverage.

As Massachusetts' landmark effort to reach nearly universal health coverage unfolds, the state is now focusing on employers to take steps to increase coverage. All employers--except firms with fewer than 11 workers--face new requirements under the 2006 law, including establishing Section 125, or cafeteria, plans to allow workers to purchase insurance with pre-tax dollars and paying a $295 annual fee if they do not make a "fair and reasonable" contribution to the cost of workers' coverage. Through interviews with Massachusetts health care leaders (see Data Source), the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) examined how the law is likely to affect employer decisions to offer health insurance to workers and employee decisions to purchase coverage. Market observers believe many small firms may be unaware of specific requirements and that some could prove onerous. Moreover, the largest impact on small employers may come from the individual mandate for all residents to have a minimum level of health insurance. This mandate may add costs for firms if more workers take up coverage offers, seek more generous coverage or pressure employers to offer coverage. Despite reform of the individual and small group markets, including development of new insurance products, concerns remain about the affordability of coverage and the ability to stem rising health care costs.

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Small employers and self-insured health benefits: too small to succeed? Employer-sponsored health insurance: down but not out. Rising hospital employment of physicians: better quality, higher costs? Key findings from HSC's 2010 site visits: health care markets weather economic downturn, brace for health reform. Physicians slow to e-mail routinely with patients.
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