Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
After Capitalizing On Antipathy Against Health Law, E&C Chairman Now Focusing On 'Repair And Rebuild'
Rep. Greg Walden spent four years capitalizing on Americans鈥 unease with Obamacare to usher in the largest House Republican majority in 90 years.聽Now, he has to help figure out how to replace it. (Cheney and Bade, 1/18)
Vice President-elect Mike Pence said Wednesday that Republicans do not yet have a bill to replace Obamacare, but that he has "seen a lot of great ideas" and that transition officials and GOP leaders are "getting very close" to having a replacement. "It's being crafted right now," Pence said Wednesday in an interview with CNN's Dana Bash, when asked about a replacement to the President's signature health care law. "We're getting very close. We expect to have that plan come forward in the early days of the administration." Pence's comments came after Trump said in an interview Saturday with The Washington Post that his health care replacement plan "is very much formulated down to the final strokes." (Diamond, 1/18)
Seven years after unruly Democratic town halls helped stoke public outrage over the Affordable Care Act, Republicans now appear keen to avoid the kind of dustups capable of racking up millions of views on YouTube and ending up in a 2018 campaign commercial. One week after the Republican Congress kicked off the process of repealing the landmark health-care legislation, only a handful of GOP lawmakers have held or are currently planning to host in-person town hall meetings open to all comers 鈥 the sort of large-scale events that helped feed the original Obamacare backlash in the summer of 2009. (DeBonis, 1/19)
On the public opinion front聽鈥
Sylvia Douglas twice voted for President Barack Obama and last year cast a ballot for Democrat Hillary Clinton. But when it comes to "Obamacare," she now sounds like President-elect Donald Trump. This makes her chuckle amid the serious choices she faces every month between groceries, electricity and paying a health insurance bill that has jumped by nearly $400.聽"It's a universal thing, nobody likes it," Douglas, a licensed practical nurse in Huntsville, Alabama, said of Obama's signature law. (Kellman and Swanson, 1/18)
Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Texas) on Tuesday had contentious exchanges with some constituents during a local meeting about the GOP plan to repeal and replace ObamaCare. Dozens showed up to a meeting with Brady, the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, meant as a chance for "local people affected by ObamaCare" to "share their experiences with rising costs and loss of coverage and choice," the Houston Chronicle聽reported. (Savransky, 1/18)
U.S. Rep. Kevin Brady, R-The Woodlands, faced a skeptical and at times testy crowd Tuesday as dozens of people arrived at an afternoon meeting to make sure he knew they would not let the Affordable Care Act end without a fight. The hourlong session, tucked away in a back meeting room at The Woodlands Area Chamber of Commerce headquarters, was not publicly announced and was billed by Brady's staff as a chance for "local people affected by ObamaCare" to "share their experiences with rising costs and loss of coverage and choice." ... But if he was expecting a completely friendly, like-minded group, he quickly found something else from many in the 50 or so who crowded the room. (Deam, 1/18)
And in other health law news聽鈥
No item on Donald Trump鈥檚 agenda seems to have received as much publicity as his desire to repeal the Affordable Care Act and replace it with 鈥渟omething terrific.鈥澛燬ince his election, the prospects for repeal have taken many a twist and turn. Two weeks ago, repeal suddenly appeared doubtful 鈥 as key Senate Republicans balked at the idea of repeal without a full-fledged replacement. (Sides, 1/19)
Government bureaucrats are not often Twitter celebrities. But Andy Slavitt, current head of the agency that runs Medicare and Medicaid, is making a name for himself with a barrage of fiery Tweets in defense of the Affordable Care Act, breaking with the traditionally mute posture taken by federal employees. As the Act 鈥斅爇nown as Obamacare 鈥 is coming under attack by the new Republican-controlled Congress and incoming Trump administration, Slavitt, acting administrator of the Centers for Medicare &聽Medicaid Services, isn鈥檛 being shy online. (Bluth, 1/19)
California officials on Wednesday withdrew their request to sell unsubsidized insurance policies to people who can't prove they're legally in the United States after learning the decision would fall to President-elect Donald Trump's administration. (Cooper, 1/18)
California has withdrawn its request to the federal government for permission to allow undocumented people to obtain health insurance from the state exchange, with a lawmaker linking the decision to concerns about the incoming Trump administration. State Sen. Ricardo Lara, D-Bell Gardens, called the action 鈥渢he first California casualty of the Trump presidency.鈥 (Miller, 1/18)
Hospitals across the state could be forced to cut back services or even close if the Affordable Care Act is repealed without an adequate replacement, several health care executives in Colorado warned on Wednesday. A hospital in the San Luis Valley, for instance, may not be able to maintain a level of care that means patients currently don鈥檛 have to leave the valley for chemotherapy or to have surgery on broken bones, its CEO said. A hospital in Delta County 鈥 already with a profit margin only in the low single digits 鈥 could see its revenue dip dangerously close to the red, its CEO said. (Ingold, 1/18)
Surgeon Atul Gawande says we need to reconsider health care鈥檚 focus on generously rewarding physicians who practice heroic interventions, rather than those who practice incremental medicine for chronic conditions. Gawande talks with William Brangham about the value of that kind of care, and the potential effects of a Republican repeal of the Affordable Care Act. (Brangham, 1/18)
Evergreen Health, an innovative Baltimore-based health insurer, took a big step toward assuring its future by finalizing a deal to repay part of a federal startup loan and sever ties with the Affordable Care Act program under which it was founded. The deal with federal health regulators, made possible by an influx of cash from unnamed investors, allows Evergreen to move forward with plans to seek state approval to convert to a for-profit insurer. (Gantz, 1/18)
Thousands of Covered California enrollees face higher-than-expected bills from their insurers because the exchange sent incorrect tax credit information to the health plans.聽The exchange confirmed it gave insurers wrong subsidy information for about 25,000 policy holders, resulting in inaccurate bills. Insurers are now sending out new bills correcting the errors, and in most cases that means higher premiums than consumers had initially anticipated. (Bazar, 1/18)
Paula Wilson has seen some tough times in her 23 years as the CEO of Valley Community Healthcare, a clinic that provides care for the poor in North Hollywood, Calif. But nothing was quite like November 9, the day after the U.S. elections, when walking around the office 鈥渨as like coming into a funeral,鈥 she said.聽Her staff worried that a repeal of the Affordable Care Act, long promised by Republicans, would obliterate their jobs. Patients fretted it would jeopardize their care. (Brown, 1/19)
As Republicans seek to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, advocacy organizations around the nation are strategizing on how best to respond. Do they defend the law at all costs? Do they take part in the repeal conversation so they can help design an alternative? (Gorman, 1/19)