This week, the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation released its annual study about health insurance premiums across the country. Great news! Across the country, your health insurance premiums only increased an average of 7.7%. Of course, the overall rate of inflation increased by 3.5% and workers salary increased by 3.8%.
While our health insurance premiums are skyrocketing, keep in mind that health insurance companies like Aetna increased its revenues by approximately 13% to almost 22.5 billion dollars last year. Humana, another health insurance company increased its revenue by 10% to almost 14.5 billion dollars. Humana even increased its net profit by ten percent last year. Health insurance premiums jump, and at the same time, health insurance companies' revenues and profits seem to be increasing at an even faster pace.
These facts tell me that I should invest in health insurance companies. The fact that health insurance companies earn a high rate of return does not bother me. Kudos to the Aetnas and Humanas of our country. However, as long as companies have the ability to earn large profits, shouldn't they also be held accountable when company decisions breach certain obligations owed to policy-holders? If a company makes a decision solely based upon profits and consciously disregards the requirements of an insurance contract, I would hope that the company would be held accountable for its conduct. Such accountability does not always exist these days. Under the current federal law known as the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), health insurance companies issuing group health insurance policies are shielded from responsibility for general and punitive damages to compensate victims and punish reckless company actions. These liability limitations give no incentive to insurance providers to treat policyholders fairly. Companies issuing individual non-ERISA family health insurance policies are subject to liability for general and punitive damages for wrongful conduct. I believe that insurance companies treat individual policy-holders more respectfully and deferentially knowing that a breach of policy obligations can expose the company to real damage awards possibly affecting the company's overall profitability. I sincerely hope that any future debate about capping damages, expanding ERISA legislation or preventing lawsuits against insurance companies under the guise of tort reform would keep these principles in mind and that federal and state legislators will reject future tort reform efforts.
Have an opinion about this post? Please consider leaving a comment or subscribing to the feed to have future articles delivered to your feed reader.
Keep up with the latest updates using your favorite RSS reader
Your question will be referred to an attorney near you. If your question is of a legal nature, then by submitting this form you agree you are not forming a formal attorney / client relationship. Read our full privacy policy.
Looking for an InjuryBoard attorney closer to home? Click here.
Enter your email address if you would like to receive email notifications when comments are made on this post.
Drug Injury Watch
Legal Underground
Mealey's Legal News
SafetyLex
Find an InjuryBoard Blog in your area:
Alabama
Birmingham
Gadsden
Huntsville
Mobile
Montgomery
Alaska
Anchorage
Fairbanks
Arizona
Chandler
Phoenix
Scottsdale
Tucson
Arkansas
Bentonville
El Dorado
Jonesboro
Little Rock
Mountain Home
California
Bakersfield
Chico
Fresno
Glendale
Huntington Beach
Lancaster
Long Beach
Los Angeles
Modesto
Novato
Oakland
Orange County
Redding
Sacramento
San Diego
San Diego County
San Francisco
San Jose
San Luis Obispo
Santa Clarita
Stockton
Ventura
Colorado
Colorado Springs
Denver
Fort Collins
Grand Junction
Connecticut
Hartford
New Haven
Waterbury
District of Columbia
Metro D.C.
Washington
Florida
Central Florida
Fort Lauderdale
Ft. Myers
Gainesville, Ocala & Daytona Beach
Jacksonville
Melbourne
Miami
Orlando
Pensacola
Sarasota
Tallahassee
Tampa Bay
West Palm Beach
Georgia
Atlanta
Hawaii
Honolulu
Idaho
Boise
Illinois
Chicago
Chicago-Land
Cook County
Rockford & Moline
Springfield
Indiana
Bloomington
Indianapolis
Iowa
Council Bluffs
Davenport
Des Moines
Fort Dodge
Waterloo
Kansas
Topeka
Wichita
Kentucky
Bowling Green
Louisville
Paducah
Louisiana
Baton Rouge
Lafayette
New Orleans
Maine
Bangor & Augusta
Maryland
Baltimore
Massachusetts
Boston
Cape Cod
Stoughton / Canton
Michigan
Detroit
Grand Rapids
Lansing
Traverse City
Minnesota
Minneapolis
St. Cloud
Mississippi
Biloxi & Gulfport
Tupelo
Missouri
Jefferson City
Kansas City
St. Louis
Montana
Missoula
Nebraska
Lincoln
Omaha
Nevada
Las Vegas
Reno
New Hampshire
New Jersey
Bergen County
Cherry Hill
Jersey City
Newark
Trenton
New York
Buffalo
Long Island
New York City
Northern New York
Syracuse
North Carolina
Charlotte
Fayetteville
Greensboro
Greenville, OBX & Rocky Mount
Raleigh
Wilmington
Ohio
Akron
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dayton
Findlay
Sandusky
Toledo
Oklahoma
Oklahoma City
Tulsa
Oregon
Portland
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Rhode Island
Providence
South Carolina
Charleston
Columbia
Florence / Myrtle Beach
Greenville
Spartanburg
Tennessee
Chattanooga
Nashville
Texas
Austin
Beaumont
Brownsville
Corpus Christi
Dallas
Galveston Bay
Houston
Laredo
McAllen
North Dallas
San Antonio
Tyler
Victoria
Waco
Utah
Salt Lake City
Vermont
Virginia
Charlottesville
Fairfax, Leesburg & Loudoun
Norfolk
Northern Virginia
Richmond
Roanoke
Virginia Beach
Everett
King County
Olympia
Seattle
Tacoma
Vancouver
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Milwaukee
Wyoming
Cheyenne
Bowling Green Car Accident Lawyer