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HHS secretary asks insurer to justify rate hike
by ERICA WERNER
Posted: 02.08.2010 at 12:19 PM
0

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration on Monday asked California's largest for-profit health insurer to justify plans to hike customers' premiums by as much as 39 percent, a move that could affect some 800,000 customers.

In a letter to the president of Anthem Blue Cross, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said she was very disturbed to learn of the planned increases. She said they were hard to understand in light of the profitability of Anthem's parent company, WellPoint Inc.

"I believe Anthem Blue Cross has a responsibility to provide a detailed justification for these rate increases to the public," Sebelius wrote. She said the company should also make public what percentage of customers' premiums go to medical care versus administrative costs.

Peggy Hinz, a spokeswoman for Anthem, said she would check whether the letter had been received.

President Barack Obama cited the Anthem rate hikes in an interview with CBS' Katie Couric on Sunday as a reason to move forward with his health overhaul legislation, which is stalled in Congress.

"That's a portrait of the future if we don't do something now," Obama said. "It's gonna keep on beatin' down families, small businesses, large businesses. It's gonna be a huge drain on the economy."

The Los Angeles Times reported the rate hikes last week. They could affect many of the approximately 800,000 customers who purchase insurance directly from Anthem, as opposed to getting coverage through their employers.

Anthem notified customers that rates would go up beginning March 1 and might increase more frequently going forward than the usual annual increase. The increases ranged from 30 percent to 39 percent.

The company has declined to provide details on the rate increases such as how many people would be affected or how much the new rates would be. It's also not clear whether customers in other states are being affected. In a statement last week the company blamed the increases on rising costs of medical care.

"We understand and strongly share our members' concerns over the rising cost of health care services and the corresponding adverse impact on insurance premiums," the statement said. "Unfortunately, the individual market premiums are merely the symptoms of a larger underlying problem in California's individual market — rising health care costs."

California's Department of Insurance is investigating the matter.

___

Associated Press Writer Shaya Mohajer in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

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