The Fundamentally Different Goals of the Affordable Care Act and Republican ‘Replacement’ Plans

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2016/06/07/the-fundamentally-different-goals-of-the-affordable-care-act-and-republican-replacement-plans/?utm_campaign=KFF-2016-June-Drew-ACA-GOP-alternatives&utm_medium=email&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9Uqf60gdSQ_FC57uSLNkYvFicHfqEALEVvadSgR8xY01bL5QFOrYsCgcl6KB_N5PVHy5G8fwynf8MEywb7m1kUxPljFQ&_hsmi=30331935&utm_content=30331935&utm_source=hs_email&hsCtaTracking=7825060e-e865-4738-ba5a-68a31a8904b6%7C192993c0-5763-4c2a-b289-c32fd7a5274a

Rep. Pete Sessions and Sen. Bill Cassidy introduced legislation last month calling for replacing elements of the Affordable Care Act. A House task force established by SpeakerPaul Ryan is expected to follow with more health-care proposals. These Republican health plans are generally referred to as “replacements” for the ACA–in the spirit of “repeal and replace”–as though they would accomplish the same objectives in ways that conservatives prefer. But the proposals are better understood as alternatives with very different goals, trade-offs, and consequences. Whether they are “better” or “worse” depends on your perspective.

To boil down to the most basic differences: The central focus of the Affordable Care Act is expanding coverage and strengthening consumer protections in the health insurance marketplace through government regulation. By contrast, the primary objective of Republican plans is to try to reduce health-care spending by giving people incentives to purchase less costly insurance with more “skin in the game,” with the expectation that they will become more prudent consumers of health services. They also aim to reduce federal spending on Medicare and Medicaid and the federal government’s role in both programs. Elements of the ACA were designed to reduce costs, such as the law’s Medicare payment reforms, and elements of Republican plans such as tax credits aim to expand access to insurance, but the primary aims of the ACA and the Republican plans differ.

Republicans unveil long-sought ACA replacement

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payer/republicans-unveil-long-sought-aca-replacement?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mrkid=959610&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTVROaVlUYzFOV1psTnpJNSIsInQiOiI4MDNhTTZwVEtacWtLV0k2NjZTaDBSc24zYndQNGh2aUE0cUNqRnhISGV0eEdVaUErbjl1K05rSksyOFhKYUljWHBPVDM0Zm9lM1JjOUJNdWdVU3dtZEJrUXNmNXZMM1AxU0w0WnhZMms0cz0ifQ%3D%3D

Paul Ryan holding up "A Better Way" document

Click to access ABetterWay-HealthCare-PolicyPaper.pdf

http://khn.org/news/house-republicans-unveil-long-awaited-plan-to-replace-health-law/

 

Questions to Ask About the House Republican Health Reform Proposal

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2016/06/20/questions-to-ask-about-the-house-republican-health-reform-proposal/?utm_campaign=KFF-2016-Drew-WSJ-Jun20-HouseGOP&utm_medium=email&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_NbfoCIZCQG6kGUv8vUld3vokzSuvVI9VWa9kHidYn8XYKLqHjC9eueS2Fqt39v_03tgl-QzorxDZgvw5Gkw7Fo5VqJA&_hsmi=30791782&utm_content=30791782&utm_source=hs_email&hsCtaTracking=092901de-a8d1-4b84-8ccf-2a923a6826ad%7C85e450b8-093a-4acd-840b-c16aa780d05c

Paul+Ryan21

House Speaker Paul Ryan’s health-care task force is expected to outline its alternative to Obamacare this week. The outline reportedly will not include the level of detail that would allow much external analysis of its impact by health-care experts and the media, though Democrats are likely to attack its concepts, most of which will be familiar proposals that Republicans favor and that Democrats have opposed in the past. The outline is part of Mr. Ryan’s effort to add Republican policy ideas to the election debate, in particular to the presidential campaign, and seems aimed at helping down-ticket Republicans as a part of an agenda that can appeal to their base. Details will be needed to understand whether the plan is more progressive or regressive and how many uninsured people would be covered. Another big question is how Donald Trump will respond.

 

The Fundamentally Different Goals of the Affordable Care Act and Republican ‘Replacement’ Plans

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2016/06/07/the-fundamentally-different-goals-of-the-affordable-care-act-and-republican-replacement-plans/

cover art

 

Rep. Pete Sessions and Sen. Bill Cassidy introduced legislation last month calling for replacing elements of the Affordable Care Act. A House task force established by SpeakerPaul Ryan is expected to follow with more health-care proposals. These Republican health plans are generally referred to as “replacements” for the ACA–in the spirit of “repeal and replace”–as though they would accomplish the same objectives in ways that conservatives prefer. But the proposals are better understood as alternatives with very different goals, trade-offs, and consequences. Whether they are “better” or “worse” depends on your perspective.

To boil down to the most basic differences: The central focus of the Affordable Care Act is expanding coverage and strengthening consumer protections in the health insurance marketplace through government regulation. By contrast, the primary objective of Republican plans is to try to reduce health-care spending by giving people incentives to purchase less costly insurance with more “skin in the game,” with the expectation that they will become more prudent consumers of health services. They also aim to reduce federal spending on Medicare and Medicaid and the federal government’s role in both programs. Elements of the ACA were designed to reduce costs, such as the law’s Medicare payment reforms, and elements of Republican plans such as tax credits aim to expand access to insurance, but the primary aims of the ACA and the Republican plans differ.

Declining Charity Care Levels Raise Questions About 340B Hospital Eligibility

https://morningconsult.com/opinions/declining-charity-care-levels-raise-questions-340b-hospital-eligibility/

340B Drug Pricing Program

The 340B program was created for an important purpose: to help uninsured, needy patients access the medicines they need. However, a new analysis paints a very different picture of how the program is currently operating. While 340B hospitals are tasked with serving vulnerable patients, data show 64 percent of these hospitals provide less charity care than the national average for all hospitals, including for-profit entities. Not only is this low number concerning, it represents a decrease in charity care rates for 340B hospitals since 2011. This begs the question of whether hospitals or patients are benefitting more from the program.

Some Democrats Aren’t Giving Up on Universal Health Care

https://morningconsult.com/2016/06/20/some-democrats-arent-giving-up-on-universal-health-care/?utm_campaign=KHN%3A+Daily+Health+Policy+Report&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=30825191&_hsenc=p2ANqtz–5Khvbin0eqd8lOVYUGjQOCkwHgK5yFJ0JfrGJu02u5DsX0eb2C2YyRqxE3kUAn9t8R_u1LZq77IAcdplSGjmcrsJmqA&_hsmi=30825191

Rob Kunzig/Morning Consult

Democrats should push for universal health coverage ahead of the November election, several health care advocates urged the committee drafting the Democratic National Committee’s platform at a recent session focused on health policy.

Their liberal health care proposals echo a similar theme from an environment-themed session the same day, in which activists criticized DNC members for not pushing harder on climate change.

The hearing was part of a series of regional events held by the Democratic Platform Drafting Committee “designed to engage every voice in the party.”

Too many people are still uninsured six years after the passage of the Affordable Care Act, said many of the advocates who spoke before the committee in Phoenix on Friday. Still more are underinsured, they said, and people are struggling to pay for rising premiums and to afford prescription drugs.

This Obamacare Repeal Plan Cripples State Budgets—and Economies

http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/2016/06/14/Obamacare-Repeal-Plan-Cripples-State-Budgets-and-Economies

If Republicans finally make good on their vow to repeal the Affordable Care Act — but without adopting a suitable replacement — 24 million Americans would be removed from the health care insurance rolls in 2021. And federal spending on health care would decline by $927 billion over the next decade, according to a provocative new study by the Urban Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

Gardens Regional Hospital, which treated the poor and homeless, files for bankruptcy

http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/gardens-regional-hospital-which-treated-poor-and-homeless-files-bankruptcy

The California hospital was cited last year for ‘patient dumping’ a homeless woman at Los Angeles area of Skid Row.

The Ripple Effects Of Medicaid Expansion

http://healthaffairs.org/blog/2016/06/07/the-ripple-effects-of-medicaid-expansion/

Blog_Florida_Medicaid

The 19 states that continue to decline federal funding to offer Medicaid coverage to more uninsured residents are missing out on more than just improvements to their uninsured and uncompensated care rates. In fact, the ability of providers in Medicaid expansion states to deliver care to their most vulnerable patients has notably improved.

Residents of Medicaid expansion states—both adults and children—are more likely to have insuranceand thus more likely to have a usual source of care and less likely to have unmet health care needs or problems paying medical bills. Furthermore, Medicaid expansion has helped the financial bottom line forsafety-net clinics and hospitals because more of their patients can afford to pay for their care.

Health Care Costs for Average American Family Now Exceed $25,000 a Year

http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/2016/05/24/Cost-Health-Care-Average-American-Family-Now-Exceed-25000-Year?utm_campaign=541c47950e351dbe08037e5f&utm_source=boomtrain&utm_medium=email&bt_alias=eyJ1c2VySWQiOiJkYzYxNmI4YS03YTE4LTYyZjAtZWI5Ni02Mzk3ZDdkNDM4YWMifQ%3D%3D