Making Health Care Work for Oregon

LOWERING HEALTH CARE COSTS—A pro-consumer health insurance exchange would allow hundreds of thousands of families and businesses to join together and negotiate for cheaper health care plans.

Now the fight for lowering our health care costs is in Salem, and so are the health care industry’s lobbyists.

At stake is how we set up a new insurance marketplace in Oregon — the single biggest tool we have to clean up health care. The new state insurance exchange will allow small businesses, those of us who buy health care on our own, and the uninsured to shop for cheaper health care plans and find some relief from increasingly brutal premiums. 

Done right, the exchange will save billions and level the balance of power between consumers and the health care industry — driving the industry to cut waste and prioritize high-quality care. 

The health care industry has spent more than $9 million since 2009 to influence policy in Oregon, so they know how high the stakes are.

In order to help us fight back against the kind of price jumps and trap-door coverage we’ve all been suffering, OSPIRG is pushing to see that the exchange: 

  1. Negotiates for better plans. By demanding better care for less cost, the exchange can use the collective power of hundreds of thousands of Oregonians to finally demand that the industry do better.
  2. Has high standards, so that bad plans aren’t an option.
  3. Is open to as many Oregonians as possible. Limits that shut some individuals and businesses out of the exchange would reduce its ability to lower costs — and will be a key tactic that industry lobbyists use to weaken it.
  4. Is accountable to the public.

 

Issue updates

Media Hit | Health Care

Oregon Insurance Division OKs 12.8 percent health insurance rate increase, rejects 22 percent

The Oregon Insurance Division will allow the state's largest health insurer to raise rates on individual premiums an average 12.8 percent, far lower than the 22.1 percent the company had requested.

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Media Hit | Health Care

State decision draws reactions from Regence, consumers’ group

The Statesman Journal’s Editorial Board recently met with Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon regarding their proposed increase for individual plans. A ruling by the state’s insurance division prompted these statements today:

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Media Hit | Health Care

Influence and the Health Insurance Exchange

The federal Affordable Care Act frames health insurance exchanges as a transparent and competitive insurance marketplace where individuals and small businesses can get the same health insurance benefits as large corporations.

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Report | OSPIRG Foundation | Health Care

Comments on Regence Proposal to Increase Rates 22%

Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon (Regence) is proposing to raise rates an average of 22.1% on individual plans. These are plans for people who do not have employer-based coverage. If approved, this rate increase will impact 59,477 Oregonians effective August 1, 2011.

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Media Hit | Health Care

22 percent rate increase by Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon brings out strong protest

Concerns about surging health care costs drove more than 150 people Thursday to hear Oregon's largest health insurer defend its request to raise premiums an average 22 percent.

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We’ve got a chance to clean up the health care industry in Oregon, but with lobbyists lining the halls of the state capitol, we need your support.

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