AEH: Safety-nets will face $40.5B in losses without similar ACA replacement

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/america-s-essential-hospitals-says-it-will-face-40-5b-in-losses-without-similar-aca-replacement.html

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Washington D.C.-based America’s Essential Hospitals said if Congress repeals the ACA and does not replace it with a “comparable” plan, its safety-net hospital members will lose up to $40.5 billion nationwide.

The losses would reflect the decrease in coverage under an ACA repeal, cuts to Medicaid disproportionate share hospital funding and Medicare from 2018 through 2026, according to the association’s policy brief.

In addition, the association said even if Congress followed a December 2015 repeal plan, which rescinded the Medicaid DSH cuts, its members would face a $16.8 billion loss over the same period.

“These numbers really show what’s at stake for the patients who depend on the doors being open at essential hospitals,” said Bruce Siegel, MD, president and CEO of America’s Essential Hospitals. “These are unsustainable losses that would jeopardize vital services and access to care in communities across the country.”

Trump administration withdraws 340B mega-guidance: 6 things to know

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/trump-administration-withdraws-340b-mega-guidance-6-things-to-know.html

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The Trump administration has withdrawn guidance on the 340B Drug Pricing Program that was under review at the end of the Obama administration.

Here are six things to know about the guidance.

1. HHS’ Health Resources and Services Administration released the omnibus guidance on the 340B Drug Pricing Program in August 2015. The 340B Drug Pricing Program allows certain safety-net healthcare organizations to purchase outpatient drugs at discounted prices.

2. The guidance addressed a broad range of topics within the 340B program, including the definition of patient, contract pharmacy compliance requirements, hospital eligibility criteria and eligibility of off-site outpatient locations.

3. On Jan. 30, the White House Office of Management and Budget marked the final guidance document as withdrawn.

4. Although the pharmaceutical drug industry generally supported the guidance, hospitals raised concerns about the proposal. The American Hospital Association previously expressed concern about the guidance, arguing that redefining patient eligibility for the 340B program would have inappropriately narrowed the number of drugs that qualify for 340B pricing.

5. On Wednesday, AHA Executive Vice President Tom Nickels said, “We are pleased that the administration chose not to finalize the Health Resources and Services Administration’s guidance, which, if enacted, would have jeopardized hospitals’ ability to service vulnerable populations, including low-income and uninsured individuals and patients receiving cancer treatments.”

6. For HRSA’s guidance to move forward, it would have to be resubmitted to the Office of Management and Budget.

Caring for High-Need, High-Cost Patients — An Urgent Priority

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1608511?utm_source=TrendMD&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=NEJM_TrendMD

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Improving the performance of America’s health system will require improving care for the patients who use it most: people with multiple chronic conditions that are often complicated by patients’ limited ability to care for themselves independently and by their complex social needs. Focusing on this population makes sense for humanitarian, demographic, and financial reasons.

From a humanitarian standpoint, high-need, high-cost (HNHC) patients deserve heightened attention both because they have major health care problems and because they are more likely than other patients to be affected by preventable health care quality and safety problems, given their frequent contact with the system. Demographically, the aging of our population ensures that HNHC patients, many of whom are older adults, will account for an increasing proportion of users of our health care system. And financially, the care of HNHC patients is costly. One frequently cited statistic is that they compose the 5% of our population that accounts for 50% of the country’s annual health care spending.

At least three steps are essential to meeting the needs of these patients: developing a deep understanding of this diverse population; identifying evidence-based programs that offer them higher-quality, integrated care at lower cost; and accelerating the adoption of these programs on a national level. Although we are making progress in each of these areas, much work remains.

 

Top 10 states most affected by ACA repeal

http://managedhealthcareexecutive.modernmedicine.com/managed-healthcare-executive/news/top-10-states-most-affected-aca-repeal?cfcache=true&ampGUID=A13E56ED-9529-4BD1-98E9-318F5373C18F&rememberme=1&ts=15022017

Making good on one of his campaign promises in his first executive order, President Trump directed his administration to take steps that will facilitate the repeal and replacement of the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

Although the future of the ACA and what comes next is murky, what is clear is that certain states would suffer more than others from a repeal. In order to assess repeal’s impact on Americans based on where they live, personal-finance website WalletHub analyzed states across seven key metrics that range from “growth of uninsured rate by 2019 post-ACA repeal” to “potential economic impact due to repeal of premium tax credits and Medicaid expansion (2019 to 2023).”

“The most affected states by the ACA repeal have some of the highest insured rates in the country and have expanded Medicaid,” says WalletHub analyst Jill Gonzalez.

Here are the top 10 states that are most affected by repeal of the ACA, according to the report.

Federalism and the End of Obamacare

http://www.yalelawjournal.org/forum/federalism-and-the-end-of-obamacare

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Federalism has become a watchword in the acrimonious debate over a possible replacement for the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Missing from that debate, however, is a theoretically grounded and empirically informed understanding of how best to allocate power between the federal government and the states. For health reform, the conventional arguments in favor of a national solution have little resonance: federal intervention will not avoid a race to the bottom, prevent externalities, or protect minority groups from state discrimination. Instead, federal action is necessary to overcome the states’ fiscal limitations: their inability to deficit-spend and the constraints that federal law places on their taxing authority. A more refined understanding of the functional justifications for federal action enables a crisp evaluation of the ACA—and of replacements that claim to return authority to the states.

The upshot of the piece is that there’s much to be said—more than the ACA’s supporters generally acknowledge—for returning power to the states. That’s so even with respect to some of the ACA’s most sacrosanct provisions:

[C]onsider the ban on medical underwriting. The ACA reflects the judgment that it is unfair to deny coverage to the sick or to ask them to pay more for their coverage. The ACA thus embraces policies—in particular, the much-maligned individual mandate—that its drafters thought necessary to cope with the risk that people will wait until they got sick to purchase coverage. For the ACA’s supporters, the individual mandate is a reasonable price to pay to prevent discrimination against the sick. But many people don’t see it the same way. Some reject the claim that the government should be in the business of guaranteeing coverage for everyone. Others don’t think that medical underwriting, however distasteful, warrants a heavy-handed purchase obligation. Still others doubt that the individual mandate is strictly necessary to prevent adverse selection, and would prefer less-intrusive alternatives. If those who disagree with the ACA’s approach command the levers of political power within a state, why shouldn’t those states be allowed to try something different?

The argument can be generalized to most of the ACA’s insurance reforms. And I can already hear the response: Because this “something different” will not work. The ACA’s opponents are completely unrealistic about the tough tradeoffs that health-care policymaking entails. They will take federal money and squander it, leaving millions of people without coverage.

That might be right; indeed, I suspect it is right. But that’s my judgment. Lots of smart people do not share that judgment. And if federalism means anything, it is that national judgment should not supersede state judgment, absent a good reason for federal intervention. Yes, federal money might be squandered in a state that adopts stupid insurance rules. People could go bankrupt and even die as a result of the lack of coverage. But that’s an issue between the state and its voters. If other states use the money more effectively, the state with the stupid rules will come under pressure to improve them. And what if it turns out that what seemed stupid is not so stupid after all?

Democracy rests on the conceit that we all have an equal voice in determining what the good is, which is why Michigan voters don’t get to tell Ohioans how to spend their tax dollars, even if Wolverines know in their hearts that they make better decisions than Buckeyes. And while the federal government can make decisions for Ohio, it should not do so just because it doubts the wisdom, intelligence, or values of Ohio residents. “The states have bad ideas” is a poor justification for federal law (unless, again, those bad ideas turn on views about the inferiority of minority groups). Federalism thrives when we recognize the limits of what we know, appreciate that good people can hold views that many others find repugnant, and acknowledge that our own misconceptions and prejudices can blind us. Sometimes federalism means letting the states wave their crazy flags.

I’d welcome any suggestions and criticisms. And a big thank you to the Yale Law Journal, which has moved with stunning speed to get the piece up.

 

GOP Considers Medicaid Reforms for Reconciliation Bill

https://morningconsult.com/2017/02/14/gop-considers-medicaid-reforms-reconciliation-bill/

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House Republicans are weighing specific reforms to Medicaid that could be included in a reconciliation measure to overhaul the Affordable Care Act.

How to deal with the federal expansion of Medicaid under the ACA is one of the main unanswered questions as Congress works to overhaul Obamacare — one that has exposed divisions between the House’s most conservative members and GOP lawmakers from states that chose to expand the federal program for low-income Americans.

Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.), the vice chairman of the Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee, said Tuesday that lawmakers are considering what types of reforms — specifically shifting to per capita allotments or allowing states to choose block grants — could be included in a House reconciliation bill to repeal the ACA.

“We’re going to deal with Medicaid reform in reconciliation, is kind of what was discussed. There’s no details yet,” Guthrie told reporters Tuesday after a House GOP conference meeting. Guthrie led a working group focused on Medicaid reforms in the last Congress.

Rep. Michael Burgess (R-Texas), who chairs the health subcommittee, told reporters Medicaid reform would be a discussion all week. House Majority Whip Steve Scalise’s office held a listening session Tuesday afternoon with members on Medicaid, and other committees are also gathering feedback. House Republicans are expecting to learn more information about health reform in a Thursday conference meeting focused on Obamacare.

House Speaker Paul Ryan attended the GOP senators’ policy lunch on Tuesday, and told attendees that appropriators and the authorizing committees are working out Medicaid reforms, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said.

In the House, proposals to transition to per capita allotment or block grants were included in the House GOP’s “Better Way” agenda, rolled out last year.

How has Obamacare impacted state health care marketplaces?

https://www.brookings.edu/research/how-has-obamacare-impacted-state-healthcare-marketplaces/?utm_campaign=Brookings+Brief&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=42427416

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The Affordable Care Act (ACA) changed the nature of competition among health plans by creating regulated insurance exchanges, introducing new insurance industry regulations, and providing premium and cost-sharing reduction subsidies. Through these reforms, the law aimed to increase access to and the value of insurance coverage while lowering costs. To better understand the law’s implementation and its effect on competition, researchers with the ACA Implementation Research Network interviewed key marketplace stakeholders to analyze why carriers chose to enter or exit markets, how provider networks were built, and how state regulatory decisions affected the landscape.

As Congress and the new Administration deliberate on what’s next for the law, the Network presents their analyses of competition in California, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, and Texas (PDFs). A summary report(PDF) of the general findings, authored by Texas A&M Professor Michael Morrisey, Brookings Senior Fellow Alice Rivlin, ACA Network Lead Richard P. Nathan, and Mark A. Hall, Brookings Nonresident Senior Fellow, is intended to generate hypotheses for further testing across state marketplaces and to identify individual idiosyncrasies within the states that provide context for national- and state-level reforms.

CONCLUSION

While the results of this five-state study may not be applicable across the country, the authors emphasize a few key lessons for further consideration when crafting a potential replacement plan or changes to the law:

    1. Health insurance markets are local and depend on the ability of insurers to create competitively priced plans. While this is often more difficult in rural locations, metropolitan areas also see variation in competition.
    2. Higher-than-expected claims costs caused concern for insurers initially, as they lacked information on the amount of health care service utilization to expect from exchange enrollees. It remains to be seen whether the trend will continue or if recent market adjustments reflect a “one-time correction.”
    3. Insurer networks have narrowed, which potentially provides greater opportunity for insurers to negotiate lower prices by assuring a greater volume of patients to a more limited number of providers. The number of preferred provider organization (PPO) exchange plans has also been decreasing, as these plans had disproportionate enrollment of people with pre-existing conditions and are generally less able to negotiate low prices from providers.
    4. Both hospital and provider competition are vital for competitive markets, with population and the number of physician groups and health systems playing a role in cost competition.

Why Republicans are suddenly talking about repairing not replacing Obamacare

https://www.brookings.edu/blog/fixgov/2017/02/09/the-politics-of-repairing-vs-repealing-obamacare/?utm_campaign=Brookings+Brief&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=42427416

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In the past six years, Republican congresses voted more than 60 times to repeal Obamacare.  And repeal of Obamacare was the leading issue on the Republican side in both the 2014 and the 2016 congressional elections.  The cliché of the month is that the Republican Party is like the dog who caught the bus and doesn’t know what to do with it.  As one observer remarked, it may be even worse than this: the dog is now driving the bus.

Republicans have had six years to prepare an alternative to Obamacare, and they still don’t know what to do about health care.  Asked about this issue, Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn) said that he has “no idea” when Republicans would start drafting an alternative to Obamacare and reported that “There’s not any real discussion taking place right now.”

The Republicans have a lot of tough policy issues to address.  And as a recent Gallup survey shows, they also have a political problem that will make these challenges even harder.

As part of the promised replacement for Obamacare, Republicans led by Speaker Paul Ryan are determined to transform Medicaid into a block grant, strip it of most federal regulations, and send it to the states.  Over a decade, this would result in a huge cut in overall Medicaid spending, forcing the states to reduce benefits and coverage.

But here’s the political problem: the states that Donald Trump carried in 2016 disproportionately benefitted from the expansion of Medicaid that was one of the building-blocks of Obamacare, and they will suffer disproportionately from Medicaid cuts.

 

Why is it so hard for Republicans to replace Obamacare?

https://www.brookings.edu/opinions/why-is-it-so-hard-for-republicans-to-replace-obamacare/?utm_campaign=Brookings+Brief&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=42427416

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Republicans in Congress have been attacking Obamacare and vowing to repeal it for nearly seven years, and President Trump made “repeal and replace Obamacare” a central promise of his winning campaign. Now the President and his party are in charge, but they are scrambling to craft a replacement. Why are they having such trouble?

The main problem is that Republicans are a diverse bunch who opposed Obamacare for a variety of reasons. Those most focused on shrinking the size and reach of the federal government thought Washington was already too involved in health care and should pull back, not expand its role or raise taxes to pay for new health spending. Those preoccupied with personal freedom balked at being required to buy health insurance. Others thought the widespread use of insurance to fund health care was already driving health spending too high and objected to further expanding health insurance. Still, others thought broadening health coverage was a desirable goal, but that the subsidies and regulations that Obamacare used to accomplish this goal were poorly designed and transferred too much power from the states to Washington. All of these Republicans could agree on trashing Obamacare, but they did not have a common intellectual basis for designing a replacement and they still don’t.

The 2016 Republican Platform says: “Our goal is to ensure that all Americans have improved access to affordable, high-quality healthcare…” It avoids saying that the federal government has a responsibility to provide that access, which many conservative Republicans do not accept.

If you changed the goal to “all Americans should have affordable health insurance,” you would lose even more conservative Republicans—the ones who see health insurance as an undesirable way to pay for most health expenditures. They believe generous health insurance keeps people from being cost-conscious consumers looking for the most cost-effective provider of knee replacement surgery or cardiac care. If these procedures are covered by insurance, providers don’t have to compete to offer attractive prices (or even make clear to the patient what their prices are). If most of their health care costs are paid by insurance, people tend to use more care, and health care spending goes up. Hence, many Republican health care proposals feature tax subsidies that help people fund health savings accounts (HSAs), so they can shop for health care with their own money. They typically encourage health insurance coverage only for relatively rare “catastrophic” events, although they allow people to use their HSAs to buy more generous health insurance if they want it.

What Made Obamacare Succeed In Some States? Hint: It’s Not Politics

http://khn.org/news/what-made-obamacare-succeed-in-some-states-hint-its-not-politics/

People standing in line at the Panorama Mall to sign-up for Covered California at an enrollment event in 2014. (Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Ask anyone about their health care and you are likely to hear about ailments, doctors, maybe costs and insurance hassles. Most people don’t go straight from “my health” to a political debate, and yet that is what our country has been embroiled in for almost a decade.

study out Thursday tries to set aside the politics to examine how the insurance markets function and what makes or breaks them in five specific states.

Researchers from The Brookings Institution were exploring a basic idea: If the goal is to replace or repair the Affordable Care Act, then it would be good to know what worked and what failed.

“The political process at the moment is not generating a conversation about how do we create a better replacement for the Affordable Care Act,” said Alice Rivlin, senior fellow at The Brookings Institution, who spearheaded the project. “It’s a really hard problem and people with different points of view about it have got to sit down together and say, ‘How do we make it work?’”

The researchers focused on CaliforniaFloridaMichiganNorth Carolina and Texas, interviewing state regulators, health providers, insurers, consumer organizations, brokers and others to understand why insurance companies chose to enter or leave markets, how state regulations affected decision making and how insurers built provider networks.

“Both parties miss what makes insurance exchanges successful,” said Micah Weinberg, president of Bay Area Council Economic Institute who led the California research team. “And it doesn’t have anything to do with red and blue states and it doesn’t have anything to do with total government control or free markets.”

Despite the political diversity of the five states, some common lessons emerged. Among them: