House Republicans Warn Not to Expect ACA Repeal on Day One

https://morningconsult.com/2016/12/02/house-republicans-warn-not-expect-aca-repeal-day-one/

Murphy said lawmakers don't want to move "in haste." (Rob Kunzig/Morning Consult)

House Speaker Paul Ryan discussed a path to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act during a closed-door conference meeting with House Republicans on Friday

“The speaker walked members through the process for delivering on our promise of repealing and replacing Obamacare,” AshLee Strong, a spokeswoman for Ryan, said in a statement. “Hetold members this is one of the President-elect’s top priorities for Congress and one of the first things we will do in the House.”

Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), who sits on the House Budget Committee, said the Senate will likely act on a budget resolution early next year, before sending it to the House, where committees will begin work on what will become a reconciliation package. In the House, the Ways and Means and Energy and Commerce committees are expected to play major roles in the repeal and replacement of the 2010 health care law.

While a formal timeline hasn’t been laid out, Cole guessed a bill repealing the law may be passed in February.

“It takes a little while to actually both work out exactly what you can do on reconciliation because there’s a lot of individual decisions the Senate parliamentarian makes, and then you’re going to be moving the replacement piece as well, and that takes real committee work,” he told reporters Friday.

While lawmakers plan to use reconciliation, a budget tool that allows the Senate to pass certain provisions with a simple majority of 51 votes to repeal the law, they likely won’t be able to pass a replacement through that process. Reconciliation itself will repeal the bulk of the ACA, but not the bill in whole.

Republicans have also raised concerns about trying to move too quickly on Obamacare, with some wary of setting a policy that could fail.

“This whole process will be done thoughtfully as we move forward with this,” Rep. Tim Murphy (R-Pa.), who hopes to chair the Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee during the next Congress, told reporters Friday. “We do not want to move in haste, as was done before, and make a lot of errors.”

Repeal and replace Obamacare: what could it mean?

https://www.brookings.edu/research/repeal-and-replace-obamacare-what-could-it-mean/?utm_campaign=Economic+Studies&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=38788605

Image result for Repeal and replace Obamacare: what could it mean?

Donald Trump’s pledge to “repeal and replace Obamacare” was one of his biggest crowd pleasers. It’s been noted, of course, that “repeal and replacing” is easier said than done, and indeed the President-elect has already begun to fudge. But moving forward on his broad replacement themes—expanding health savings accounts (HSAs) and state flexibility—could lead to some surprising and intriguing reforms.

Some have argued that Trump could and should strike a devastating blow to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) on his first day in office. For instance, he could decide not to appeal the lower court ruling in House v Burwell. A federal district court has ruled that that money cannot be spent on cost-sharing subsidies because Congress has not appropriated the money. So dropping the appeal would mean the end of these payments. In similar vein, he might demand repayment from insurers of billions of dollars of transitional reinsurance payments, citing a recent General Accountability Office letter declaring that the Administration lacks the legal authority to reassign to health plans some funds intended by statute for the US Treasury’s general fund.

Such first-day actions would destabilize the exchange plans, causing more insurers to withdraw and shredding the subsidy system. Even allowing a 1- or 2-year phase-out would gravely disrupt the exchange system. Yet the high cost of premiums and deductibles was the chief complaint about Obamacare among Trump supporters. In addition, the Trump surge was strongest in counties characterized by poor health. These voters would be outraged by even higher out-of-pocket costs and fewer plans.

To avoid a backlash, repeal and replace must be a measured and slower process. That’s true even if much, or all, of the restructuring could be accomplished through budget reconciliation, a budget process maneuver that would avoid a filibuster by Senate Democrats. Moreover, a replacement does not need to be nationally uniform. Republicans, long dismissive of “one-size-fits-all” solutions from Washington, should recognize that what will work in Texas and Utah may not be right for California and Massachusetts.

So, in broad terms, how might the stated themes of repeal and replace evolve?

Consultant: Trump’s choice for HSS, CMS leadership spells trouble for hospitals

http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/consultant-trumps-choice-hss-cms-leadership-spells-trouble-hospitals?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWm1Fd1pEWXdPV1V3TlRRNSIsInQiOiJqRitmbGZXbGdhVndGYytNYkdtSFkzMVlrM2tYanVNbXVJM1wvT3M3cHBmTnZHNDRkTG56MVwvZVQwQm5taExhRHlYaEtGYXFJWXd6WTBvbGdDRlJscFAwRThWMnFyejM2SUhFVmU5d0hxRGhJPSJ9

Most major healthcare organizations lavished praise on Price in statements released Tuesday, but Keckley paints a much less rosy picture.

“The big losers from November 8 on, with repeal a virtual certainty, are hospitals,” Keckley said. “They end up getting the raw end of the deal on doing away with the exchanges. They end up with uncertainly about ACO and bundles they’ve been developing.”

Keckley said healthcare systems are being cautious and are taking a second look at their value-based programs.

“The CFOs are saying to CEO, it’s time to be rethinking our capital commitments, interest rates are going to go up, the cost of borrowing is going up, margins are going down,” he said. “This is not a forward view where the knowns are clear. The only thing they can count on right now is, margins are going to shrink, cost of capital is going to go up.”

When Having Insurance Still Leaves You Dangerously Uncovered

Image result for underinsured

One of the few things that Donald J. Trump and Hillary Clinton seemed to agree on was that high out-of-pocket spending on health care was a problem. One of Mrs. Clinton’s most popular health care proposals during her campaign was to reduce out-of-pocket spending to more “manageable” levels for many Americans. President-elect Trump said he could fix this problem by repealing Obamacare and replacing it with something better.

As I’ve written before, while more Americans are insured, many are still underinsured — meaning that they are exposed to significant financial risk from out-of-pocket payments. Reducing out-of-pocket spending, however, will require some trade-offs. No easy solution exists, but there are examples out there worthy of consideration.

Before we can discuss any plan’s specifics, let’s look at exactly how the health care system extracts money from you. Plans differ in the amount of actuarial value they have. That’s the percentage of the cost of care that insurance will cover. If a plan has 60 percent actuarial value, then it covers 60 percent of your potential health care spending, and you cover 40 percent. Plans with higher actuarial value cost more. In the Affordable Care Act insurance exchanges, bronze plans have a 60 percent actuarial value. Silver plans have 70 percent, and gold plans 80 percent.

You pay up front for health insurance with a premium that is often charged monthly. But that’s not all the spending you’ll do. Almost all plans come with deductibles. This is an amount of money that you are responsible for paying for health care before insurance coverage kicks in. The reason plans have deductibles is that research shows you’re less likely to spend your money than the insurance company’s money. Plans with lower deductibles usually have higher premiums.

Even after you spend the deductible, you’re not done, though. Most plans come with co-pays. These are set fees that you have to pay each time you use the health care system. They may be $20 for a doctor’s visit, or $100 for an emergency room visit. Some plans use co-insurance instead. That’s when you pay for a percentage of your care instead of a set fee for each service.

The lower the actuarial value, the more you’re going to pay out of pocket in deductibles, co-pays or co-insurance. But plans on the Obamacare exchanges are all subject to an out-of-pocket maximum. In 2016, for a family, it was $13,700, and for an individual it was $6,850. Even the bronzest of bronze plans can’t ask you to pay any more, but they are more likely to let you hit the maximum.

That’s a lot of money. This is true even in the employer-based insurance market. In 2016, almost 30 percent of workers were enrolled in a high-deductible health care plan. More than half of employees with individual plans had deductibles of at least $1,000. Two-thirds of covered workers had co-pays, and 25 percent had co-insurance for primary care. Almost 20 percent of workers were in plans with an out-of-pocket maximum of $6,000 or more.

Mr. Trump offered no specific plans for reducing out-of-pocket spending. But that’s not surprising. It wasn’t that long ago that one of the most favored means by which conservatives proposed to bring down health care spending was to have consumers put more “skin in the game.” Many of them believed that if consumers were more exposed to health care spending, if they had to pay more out of pocket for care, then they would be more responsible consumers because of it.

In fact, calls have already begun for Mr. Trump to expose people to even more out-of-pocket spending. Right now, the Affordable Care Act has provisions that help reduce cost-sharing below the out-of-pocket maximum for those making less than 250 percent of the poverty line who purchase a silver-level plan. Those payments are made directly to health plans that cover those people.

It may be possible for the president to cut off those payments immediately, without any congressional involvement. If he were to do that, and it’s unlikely, it would either cripple those insurance companies, or they’d withdraw immediately from the exchanges, terminating coverage and leaving millions without health insurance overnight.

It’s also unlikely that the Trump administration would cover more people’s out-of-pocket payments with federal money. To argue suddenly that people should be shielded from the expense of health care would be a sea change for conservative health insurance design.

Beyond Birth Control, Women Could Pay More For Insurance Again Under TrumpCare

http://khn.org/news/beyond-birth-control-women-could-pay-more-for-insurance-again-under-trumpcare/?utm_campaign=KHN%3A+Daily+Health+Policy+Report&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=38366523&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_897SZznnGceZv4MmabxjLxrPyW4hbPxfmVCyzeOzoHDwhcLrJcgATPTlOK7a4G_p1jmSl9KDniqJoxePq0lCchIEPkg&_hsmi=38366523

Mayra Del Real, 28, holds her newborn baby. (Heidi de Marco/KHN)

As the prospect began to sink in of losing access to free contraceptives if the health law is repealed or replaced, women have reportedly been racing to get IUDs or stockpile birth control  pills before President Barack Obama leaves office. But birth control is just the tip of the iceberg, advocates say. There are a number of other women’s health benefits that are also at risk.

At or near the top of the list is guaranteed coverage of maternity services on the individual insurance market. Before the health law, it was unusual for plans in the individual market to pay for maternity services. But the Affordable Care Act required that care be included as one of the 10 essential health benefits that all individual plans must cover. In 2009, the year before the health law passed, just 13 percent of individual plans that were available to a 30-year-old woman in all the state capitals offered maternity benefits, according to an analysis by the National Women’s Law Center.

Some plans offered maternity services as an add-on through a special rider that paid a fixed dollar amount, sometimes just a few thousand dollars, the study found. But even with a rider, a woman’s financial exposure could be significant: The average total payment for a vaginal birth was $18,329 in 2010, according to a study by Truven Health Analytics.

Women were also generally charged higher rates for health insurance on the individual market before the law. According to the National Women’s Law Center’s analysis, 60 percent of best-selling individual plans in 2009 charged a 40-year-old non-smoking woman more than a 40-year-old man who smoked, even in plans that didn’t include any type of maternity coverage. That inequity disappeared under the health law, which prohibited insurers from charging women higher rates than men for the same services.

“Our concern is going back to a world where insurance companies are writing their own rules again, and returning women to those bad old days in health care and losing all the progress we’ve made,” said Gretchen Borchelt, vice president for reproductive rights and health at the law center.

Several other women’s preventive health services could be on the line if the health law is repealed or changed. Some may be easier to get rid of than others, say women’s health policy experts.

Tom Price, Obamacare Critic, Is Trump’s Choice for Health Secretary

f President-elect Donald J. Trump wanted a cabinet secretary who could help him dismantle and replace President Obama’s health care law, he could not have found anyone more prepared than Representative Tom Price, who has been studying how to accomplish that goal for more than six years.

Mr. Price, an orthopedic surgeon who represents many of the northern suburbs of Atlanta, speaks with the self-assurance of a doctor about to perform another joint-replacement procedure. He knows the task and will proceed with brisk efficiency.

Mr. Trump has picked Mr. Price, a six-term Republican congressman, to be secretary of health and human services, Mr. Trump’s transition team announced Tuesday morning.

 

 

If Republicans Repeal Obamacare, Ryan Has Replacement Blueprint

http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2016/11/21/502612264/if-republicans-repeal-obamacare-ryan-has-replacement-blueprint

Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress are vowing to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, the signature health care overhaul of President Obama.

Trump has offered a few ideas of where he’d like to see a health care overhaul go, such as a greater reliance on health savings accounts, but he hasn’t provided a detailed proposal.

The absence of specifics on health care from the president-elect makes the 37-page plan that Speaker of the House Paul Ryan has released the fullest outline of what Republicans would like to replace Obamacare. Some health policy analysts say it looks a bit like Obamacare light.

“Republicans through this plan have embraced, I think rightfully so, the basic idea that everybody in the U.S. should have health insurance,” says Jim Capretta, a health policy fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. “And people who are outside the employer system should get some level of financial help through a tax credit, because, frankly, that’s similar to the tax break that is available through employer coverage.”

Republicans had been criticized for years for promising to repeal the ACA and offering nothing as a replacement. Ryan unveiled the proposal at AEI in June.

Trump’s path on health care law intersects with a lawsuit

http://www.seattletimes.com/business/trumps-path-on-health-care-law-intersects-with-a-lawsuit/

FILE – In this Oct. 24, 2016, file photo, the HealthCare.gov 2017 web site home page as seen in Washington. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

President-elect Donald Trump says he wants to preserve health insurance coverage even as he pursues repeal of the Obama-era overhaul that provided it to millions of uninsured people.

How his administration handles a pending lawsuit over billions of dollars in insurance subsidies will reveal whether Trump wants an orderly transition to a Republican-designed system or if he’d push “Obamacare” over a cliff. Stripping away the subsidies at issue in the case would put the program into a free-fall.

The question in the House v. Burwell case couldn’t be more technical: whether the Affordable Care Act specifically states in its hundreds of pages that the government can pay money to help reduce out-of-pocket costs for low-income consumers on HealthCare.gov and state insurance markets.

Those subsidies for deductibles and copayments are paid directly to insurers, on top of the law’s tax credits that reduce premiums for consumers. Since the ACA’s basic coverage is fairly skimpy, the cost-sharing subsidies make it work for millions of people when they seek treatment. For example, subsidies can bring a $1,500 hospital copayment down to $100.

House Republicans have taken the Obama administration to court. They argue that the law lacks a specific congressional “appropriation” for the subsidies, estimated to total $9 billion next year. A federal district judge in Washington, D.C., agreed with the House and the case is now on appeal.

The Health Care Industry Is in a Panic Over Obamacare Repeal

http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/2016/11/22/Health-Care-Industry-Panic-Over-Obamacare-Repeal

The pledge by President-elect Donald Trump and congressional Republicans to swiftly repeal the Affordable Care Act — followed by months or even years of deliberation over a replacement – is no doubt troubling news to many of the roughly 20 million Obamacare beneficiaries.

House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) have vowed to jam through legislation as early as January to dismantle the heart of President Obama’s signature 2010 health insurance program, while leaving the question of precisely how they would replace it and when that new system would be put in place unanswered.

California healthcare advocates rally against Trump

http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article116320043.html

California Secretary of State Alex Padilla the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia on Wednesday, July 27, 2016.

They backed Obamacare, and they’re not letting it go without a fight.

The federal healthcare overhaul could be one of the first casualties of President-Elect Donald Trump, who has joined the Republicans controlling Congress in vowing to dismantle the law. Since winning the presidency Trump has softened his stance somewhat, speaking favorably about popular provisions that prohibit insurers from turning away people with pre-existing conditions and allow people to stay on their parents’ plans until they turn 26.

Still, Trump’s election has California healthcare advocates on high alert, not to mention the state’s new U.S. senator. California could forfeit billions of federal dollars that support Medi-Cal, the insurance program for poor Californians, and subsidize private insurance purchases. They’re worried about the fate of Medicare, a program that Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, said has “serious problems because of Obamacare” and is “going broke.”

 A rally today in Los Angeles offers the latest example of a policy rift between California and Washington, D.C., with elected officials joining healthcare workers and patients for an event billed as a push to “protect our health care.” Among the expected speakers are Senate Health Committee chair Ed Hernandez, D-West Covina, Los Angeles County Health Agency Director Mitch Katz, and California Secretary of State Alex Padilla, whose public denunciations of Trump have become a recurring feature.

BY THE NUMBERS: 13.6 million is the number of Californians enrolled in Medi-Cal as of June 2016, the most recent data available, a net increase of about 800,000 from a year earlier and about double Medi-Cal enrollment a decade ago. The total includes almost 3.4 million people who became eligible for Medi-Cal under the state’s optional Obamacare expansion. The Legislative Analyst’s Office last week reported that Medi-Cal caseload should grow by about 100,000 annually through mid-2021 among families, children and people covered by ACA expansion. Enrollment among senior citizens and people with disabilities will grow by an estimated 50,000.