Florida Health Insurance Bill Would Prevent Gender Discrimination in Premiums
John Dorchner reports in the Miami Herald that the state might consider a bill that would require gender equity in Florida health insurance premiums. Florida’s insurance consumer advocate Sean Shaw is looking to team up with a congressperson that would sponsor legislation that would ban the practice of gender rating. Women pay higher premiums than men, even when you exclude maternity coverage.
For example, a Blue Cross Blue Shield of Florida policy for a 30-year-old in Miami costs $246 for a man and $291 for a woman. Insurers claim that women use more health care services and are more likely to keep up with regular screenings; some believe that’s a perverse incentive to forgo preventative care.
However, due to that higher level of utilization, older women are in better health and have lower health insurance premiums than their male counterparts. Using the BCBSFL example above, a 60-year-old Miami woman pays a monthly premium of $593, while a man of the same age pays $644.






















