Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Alaska Judge To Rule Today On Suit Against Governor's Medicaid Expansion Plan
A trial court judge said Thursday he would deliver an oral ruling Friday on the Alaska Legislature鈥檚 lawsuit to stop Gov. Bill Walker from unilaterally expanding the public Medicaid health-care program. ... The ruling, [Judge Frank] Pfiffner said, will approve or deny the Legislature鈥檚 request to temporarily bar Medicaid expansion while legal questions are fully argued. Friday鈥檚 decision will not address the underlying question of whether Walker's executive power allows him to use federal money to expand the Medicaid program without legislative approval. (Herz, 8/27)
A popular middle-class tax benefit could become one of the first casualties of the Affordable Care Act鈥檚 so-called Cadillac tax, potentially affecting millions of voters. Flexible spending accounts, which allow people to save tax free for everything from doctor鈥檚 co-pays to eyeglasses, may vanish in coming years as companies scramble to avoid the law鈥檚 40 percent levy on pricey health care benefits. (Faler, 8/27)
Nonprofit health insurers created with billions of dollars in Obamacare loans have doubled their enrollments this year, but they haven鈥檛 been able to slow their financial losses, according to a POLITICO analysis of their most recent financial reports. Although the nearly two dozen co-op plans have signed up almost 1 million customers during Obamacare鈥檚 second enrollment period, they鈥檝e lost roughly $200 million during the first six months of this year. That puts the nonprofit plans on pace to lose nearly the same amount as they did during their first year of operations. (Demko, 8/27)