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54 U. Kan. L. Rev. 73 (2005-2006)
Discrimination against the Unhealthy in Health Insurance

handle is hein.journals/ukalr54 and id is 83 raw text is: Discrimination Against the Unhealthy
in Health Insurance
Mary Crossley*
I. INTRODUCTION
What ends do we expect health insurance to serve in our society?
This unresolved question, which one scholar aptly terms the struggle for
the soul of health insurance' arises today in many settings.          This
struggle pits a social solidarity vision of health coverage (by which
insurance permits the risk of medical costs to be spread broadly across
society, so that healthy persons subsidize the care received by unhealthy
persons) against an individualistic vision of health coverage (by which
insurance enables each person to pay an amount that reflects as closely as
possible his own anticipated cost of care).2    The tension between these
two views may emerge, for example, in debates over proposals to require
community rating of insurance premiums or to mandate that insurers
cover particular services.3
Laws that prohibit discrimination in health insurance also highlight
this tension.   These laws-whether they apply directly to insurance
issuers or to employers providing health insurance coverage as an
employment benefit-seem to embody the social solidarity view that
persons with particular traits should neither be denied a place in the
insurance pool nor be subjected to inferior coverage. The application of
these antidiscrimination laws to health insurance occupies center stage in
controversies   over   whether    employers    are  required    to  provide
prescription contraceptive coverage for their employees4 and whether
. Dean and Professor of Law, University of Pittsburgh School of Law.
1. Deborah A. Stone, The Struggle for the Soul of Health Insurance, 18 J. HEALTH POL.,
POL'Y & L. 287, 287 (1993).
2. See id. (discussing the pitfalls of an individualistic vision).
3. Cf Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Massachusetts, 471 U.S. 724, 731 (1985) (noting that mandated
coverage of mental health benefits responded to adverse selection in voluntary mental health
insurance market).
4. See, e.g., Dan Margolies, Area Women Sue AT&T over Contraceptive Coverage, KAN. CITY
STAR, Jan. 21, 2003, at D 17 (reporting on a case against the plaintiffs' employer for discrimination,
alleging the company insurance plan covered sex-related drugs for men, but not contraceptives for
women).

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