Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota is providing about $70 million in premium rebates and discounts after patients delayed or pulled back from many types of health care this spring as COVID-19 spread across the state.
Insurers across the country are making similar moves after health plan profits boomed this spring with dramatic reductions in nonemergency surgeries and procedures as a result of the pandemic.
Eagan-based Blue Cross, which is the state's largest health insurer, said Friday it would offer about $38 million in premium relief to Medicare members, people who purchase individual health plans and certain business customers through one-time credits of 10 to 25%. The credits would be in addition to about $31 million in rebate checks to individual market customers that are mandated by the federal Affordable Care Act (ACA).
"The premium holidays, and the advanced rebates, are good publicity," said Allan Baumgarten, an independent health care analyst in St. Louis Park. They also help health insurers maintain employer groups as customers, he said, despite the weak economy.
"I think these insurers are saying: If we give you a break, can we count on you to maintain your insurance coverage through 2020 as opposed to losing you as an insurance customer?" he said.
To conserve supplies for an expected surge in pandemic patients, states ordered a suspension of elective and nonemergency health care this spring that delayed thousands of surgeries and procedures. And in some cases, patients have been reluctant to return to health care settings due to concerns about the virus that causes COVID-19.
The end result is that health insurers have had fewer medical bills to pay.
On Friday afternoon, second-quarter financial results for the health insurance division at Blue Cross were not available. But a regulatory filing for the insurer's HMO showed increased profitability compared with the first half of 2019.