Critics worried Colorado's new law capping insulin costs would raise insurance rates. It hasn't.
When Colorado earlier this year became the first state in the country to cap the price that some people will pay for insulin starting next year, skeptics questioned whether the change would raise insurance prices for everybody else.
The answer, according to regulatory filings from insurance companies, is no.
The Colorado Sun reviewed the documents that 21 health plans submitted to the state Division of Insurance to justify their proposed 2020 rates for the individual and small-group markets. Most plans didnt mention the insulin caps at all as being a factor in their calculations. When they did, they used words like negligible and de minimus.
It is expected that the cost sharing caps will have a de minimus impact on rates, Kaiser Permanente wrote in the filings for its plans.
Read more: https://coloradosun.com/2019/09/11/colorado-insulin-price-insurance/