Expand the Health Savings Account 'Safe Harbor' To Reduce Healthcare Costs


A. Mark Fendrick, MD and Rashna Soonavala

As the health reform debate continues, partisans in both parties should adhere to a simple, overarching principle: help people who were hurt by Obamacare, but don't hurt those who were helped by the law.

In other words, policymakers ought to focus on reducing the rising premiums and deductibles that have harmed millions while still preserving the coverage that's now guaranteed to people with pre-existing conditions.

Fortunately, the Trump administration is considering an executive order that would accomplish both goals. Specifically, the administration may allow high-deductible health insurance plans to cover services used to manage chronic diseases before customers have reached their deductibles. The plan already has broad, bipartisan support.

High-deductible health insurance plans surged in popularity in the early aughts after health savings accounts, or HSAs, were established in the tax code. HSAs offer a triple tax advantage. Deposits are made with pre-tax income. Savings grow tax-free. And people can withdraw from their accounts without paying any taxes, so long as they're using the money to pay for a qualified medical expense.

The kicker? HSAs are only available to consumers who enroll high-deductible health plans. This year, individual consumers with such plans are on the hook for the first $1,350 in healthcare expenses.

The sole exception to this mandatory out-of-pocket spending is for preventive care services, such as screenings and vaccinations. A "safe harbor" provision in the tax code requires insurers to cover these services, even if individuals or families have not reached their deductibles.

The administration's efforts to improve the nation's health insurance offerings would expand this "safe harbor."

Right now, medical services used to treat any "existing illness, injury or condition" are excluded from the safe harbor. So the 133 million Americans with diabetes, HIV, depression, and other pre-existing conditions must pay the entire cost of their doctor visits, tests, and prescriptions until they reach their plan's deductible. This lack of pre-deductible coverage discourages people with pre-existing conditions from opening HSAs.

When Americans are asked to pay more for medical care, they buy fewer services. About one in three Americans with a high-deductible plan admits to delaying or avoiding care for chronic conditions. Nearly 50 percent of enrollees with a chronically ill family member report problems paying for medical care or other bills.

It's senseless to prohibit high-deductible health plans from covering services that prevent the chronically ill from growing even sicker.

This new generation of high-value health plans would offer lower premiums than most existing health plans, bringing relief to those burdened by rising premiums, and more generous coverage for pre-existing conditions than current high-deductible plans.

Leaders in both parties support this reform.

In 2016, Reps. Diane Black (R-TN) and Earl Blumenauer (D-OR) came together to introduce the Access to Better Care Act, which would direct the IRS to expand the safe harbor. And Sens. Thomas R. Carper (D-DE) and John Thune (R-SD) sent a letter to the Secretary of the Treasury urging the IRS to modify the safe harbor provision to ensure patients "have full access to adequate preventive care and chronic care management services."

By giving insurers the flexibility to expand the safe harbor, the Trump administration would make HSAs more attractive -- and boost the medical effectiveness of high-deductible plans. As a result, millions more Americans could find insurance that matches their financial and medical needs.

A. Mark Fendrick, M.D., is a professor at the University of Michigan School of Public Health and the director of the University of Michigan Center for Value-Based Insurance Design. Rashna Soonavala is a sophomore at the University of Michigan and an intern with the Center for Value-Based Insurance Design.

More Resources


01/25/2025
The Cold Civil War Is Over
The civilizational inflection point in our cold civil war happened sometime between Donald Trump's second inaugural address on Monday and the end of his new presidency's second day on Tuesday. At some indeterminate moment between Monday's soaring midday speech, in which the first nonconsecutive two-term president in over 130 years artfully took a sledgehammer to the entire Obama-Biden era legacy without so much as uttering the men's names, and Tuesday's epochal executive order coming as close as legally possible to banning wokeism throughout the republic, the war ended. And as with the...

more info


01/25/2025
A Test Case for Democrats Charting Their Future
Until hours before California Gov. Gavin Newsom greeted President Donald Trump with a bro-hug on the Los Angeles tarmac Friday, his advisers had spent the week monitoring new White House advance staffers' social media accounts, hoping for clues for where Trump was going to talk about the wildfire damage.

more info


01/25/2025
Ritchie Torres: 'We Should Break That Cycle of Insanity'
The Bronx's moderate congressman on Israel, immigration, Daniel Penny and the possibility of a primary challenge against Gov. Kathy Hochul.

more info


01/25/2025
Corrupt Reporters Give a Taste of How It Worked in 2020
Two former staffers at the far-left Politico confirmed what everyone already knew about Politico: it protects Democrats.

more info


01/25/2025
...On Day One
My first reaction was hopeful: He was wearing a blue tie with red dots that came across as purplish. Purplish, not his usual brazen red. Ah, unity? Trump cares about appearances. He sends messages through appearances. He also didn't use the term "American Carnage" in his Inaugural Address, which was nice. He opened and closed with optimism-a new golden age (and you can be part of it by purchasing Trump coins and crypto, on the website).

more info


01/25/2025
A Common Sense Revolution To Restore America
Thomas Carlyle would have been impressed by Donald Trump. The author of On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic in History (1841) thought that history organised itself around great men the way that iron filings form patterns in a magnetic field.

more info


01/25/2025
A Line-by-Line Breakdown of Birthright Citizenship Order
Almost every sentence of the order is wrong, misleading, or flagrantly unconstitutional.

more info


01/25/2025
Birthright Citizenship Is a Pernicious Lie
Beyond the legal arguments about the 14th Amendment is the moral argument: who is America for, and what makes someone an American?

more info


01/25/2025
Sen. Warren Sends Musk Spending Cut Ideas
The Senator sent Musk a letter with 30 ideas for how his DOGE commission could cut $2 trillion in U.S. spending.

more info


01/25/2025
Target Rolls Back DEI: What's Changing and How It Happened
All right, most of y'all already know what I do here. We expose woke companies and we get them changed and today we've got a new company to talk about and that company is Target. Target, as many of you know, has had a major wokeness problem for years now.

more info


01/25/2025
Yes, Reshoring American Industry Is Possible
Americans can make stuff, after all.

more info


01/25/2025
Republicans Must Confirm Trump's Nominees
The American people elected Trump as a wartime president. Moderate Republicans should get on board or get out of the way.

more info


01/25/2025
Rohit Chopra Still Has a Job
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau head has not been fired. Apparently, it's because the Trump team can't find anyone to replace him.

more info


01/25/2025
Bernie Sanders: Kingmaker
Bernie Sanders isn't the Democrats' presidential heir apparent; he's their coming kingmaker. The Democrats' discredited establishment and glaring need to counter Republicans' rising populist wave argue for it. The Democrats' continuing leftward lurch calls for it. Finally, the Democrats' historical precedent presages it.

more info


01/25/2025
China as It Is
Americans imagine that inside every Chinese person is an American struggling to get out. But China defies Western categories.

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

For Patients, Insurers Must Count the Coupons


COVID-19 is ravaging the nation - and taking a devastating toll on those living with chronic illnesses.

Why Did They Steal Our Flag?


For 20 years we have lived in our current home in humble Grove City, Pennsylvania. It came with a nice flagpole mounted on the front. We change the flag a lot. Sometimes we display flags with various types of art celebrating the seasons—for Fall, Winter, and Spring. Around July 4 and Memorial Day, it is an American flag. Lately, it has been a flag in honor of my oldest son.

Price Controls Inhibit Inovation and Patients' Health


With COVID-19 still raging, it's unlikely that trade negotiators from the United States and the United Kingdom will finalize a bilateral agreement before year's end.

Biden and Trump, Follow Your Heart and Mind


Typically, the heart leads us and keeps us in various places throughout life.

Trump's Drug Pricing Order Would Make George Washington Gnash His Wooden Teeth


Has America's 45th president forgotten our first commander-in-chief's most important warning?

Uncle Sam Shouldn't Steal Gilead's Remdesivir Patent


Over 30 state attorneys general recently sent a letter to federal health officials urging them to confiscate Gilead Sciences' patent on remdesivir, one of the only drugs approved for use on patients suffering severe symptoms caused by COVID-19.

Why COVID-19 Hates America


Pfizer and Moderna announced that in their advanced clinical trials, Covid-19 candidate vaccines have been 95 and 94.5 percent effective, respectively. Federal regulators have authorized the vaccines for emergency use -- and healthcare workers have started receiving shots already.

Americans Deserve a Healthy Dose of Bipartisanship


Our economy remains weak. A pandemic continues to kill thousands of citizens each day. And political tensions seem to have reached an all-time high.

America’s Minimum Wage Crisis


One problem with all Americans making a minimum of $15 an hour is that some business owners don’t make $15 an hour.

A Trump Administration Rule "protects" Insurers, Not Persons Living with HIV


Only hours before Donald Trump left the White House, the outgoing administration proposed a sweeping change to Medicare that could limit millions of Americans' access to lifesaving treatments, especially antiretroviral medications used to treat persons living with HIV.

What Are Your Solutions for America?


How do we solve the mass shootings? Do we take away all the guns? Or, do we require that every American carry a gun and be prepared to shoot back? Do we eliminate the assault rifles? Or, do we have more security guards at malls, grocery stores and work places carry assault rifles? We have a crisis in America with gun violence and mass shootings. What will Joe Biden and Congress do about this problem? Will they even attempt a solution? Mr. President and members of Congress, we need a solution.

Democrats Have a "Pack the Court, Pack the Congress" Strategy for Control of our Country And Our Lives


The political diversity of America is at serious risk as progressive forces seek to turn our nation into a one-party state -- not unlike the Communist Party that savaged Russia and its dominions in the last century. The agenda is as plain as day: pack the Supreme Court with liberal justices and grant statehood to the District of Columbia, giving the Democratic Party two new Senators.

The Worst-Kept Economic Secret in America: High Inflation Is Back


To most people, “inflation” signifies widespread rising prices. Economists have long argued, as a matter of technical accuracy, that “inflation” denotes an increasing money supply. Frankly, though, most people don’t care what happens to the supply of money, but they care a lot about the prices they pay, so I’ll focus primarily on the numerous rapidly rising prices Americans are paying today.

Patents Don't Impede Patients's Access to Drugs and Vaccines


Intellectual property rights are under assault overseas -- and here at home. These attacks could prevent the creation of dozens of lifesaving medicines. That should worry every American.