Tag Archives: health care sharing ministries

Vermont Continues to Enable Health Care Sharing Ministry Scams

Well, we almost did it.

Back in 2019, the Vermont Legislature adopted a bill imposing penalties on those who didn’t have health insurance. But the bill included an exemption for those enrolled in so-called health care sharing ministries instead of actual health insurance. That same year, the Scott administration and the Attorney General’s Office issued a consumer warning about the perils of choosing an HCSM over insurance.

Now it’s 2023, and there are almost certainly more Vermonters in HCSMs now than there were four years ago. (HCSM participation grew dramatically during the Covid pandemic as many lost their insurance coverage due to unemployment, and were desperate for any cheaper option.) And we haven’t done much about it at all.

This issue came to my attention when I was writing up former health care reform opponent and former Trump administration appointee Darcie Johnston’s employment with the Alliance of Health Care Sharing Ministries. I didn’t include Vermont’s own sad little history because (1) I needed to do more research and (2) I do try to keep these posts from getting painfully long. But now it’s time to tell Vermont’s part of the story.

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Darcie Johnston, Now Advocating for Scammy Christian “Health Ministries”

Hey guys, remember Darcie Johnston? Former head of Vermonters for Health Care Freedom, the conservative advocacy group that fought tooth and nail against single-payer health care? Wannabe campaign consultant with a dismal track record? Former Trump administration functionary who had a lead role in one of its many fuckups during the early days of the Covid pandemic?

Well, it has come to my attention that Johnston is now Deputy Director of something called the Alliance of Health Care Sharing Ministries, which lobbies in D.C. and state capitols on behalf of an industry that profits off the gullibility of conservative Christians — a business model that’s never been known to fail.

Health care sharing ministries market themselves to Evangelical types as a cheaper option for health coverage — but when it comes to regulatory oversight, insist they are not insurers at all, just simple humble charities. The last thing they need is pesky state or federal regulators sticking their noses into the Lord’s work.

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