Azar Touts Trump’s ‘Decisive Action’ On Health Law, But Experts Say It’s States’ Work That’s Stabilizing Marketplace
The marketplace is getting stronger and next year's premiums are not expected to be as shockingly high as previous years. While HHS Secretary Alex Azar credits that success to President Donald Trump's policies, other experts say that it's because states' insurance departments have been working to blunt the attacks to the law. Meanwhile, Azar took a swing at Democrats' "Medicare for All" plan, saying it's too good to be true.
HHS Secretary Alex Azar on Thursday praised President Donald Trump for taking "decisive action" to stabilize the individual insurance market and lower health insurance exchange premiums for American consumers. Health insurers have proposed to reduce benchmark exchange premiums by 2% in 2019 following years of increasing rates, Azar said, providing evidence that the Trump administration's moves to gives states flexibility to prop up their insurance markets and expand the types of health plans allowed have been successful. (Livingston, 9/27)
Speaking in Nashville on Thursday, Azar said premiums for a popular type of 鈥渟ilver鈥 plan will drop by 2 percent in the 39 states served by the federal HealthCare.gov website. The number of marketplace insurers will grow for the first time since 2015. Azar鈥檚 comments track with a broader independent analysis earlier this month. (Alonso-Zaldivar, 9/27)
"It turns out, when you have a president who鈥檚 willing to take decisive action, who understands business, who鈥檚 willing to work with the private sector, you can find a way to help American patients, even within a failed system like the ACA," Azar said. 鈥淭he president who is supposedly trying to sabotage the Affordable Care Act has proven better at managing it than the president who wrote the law.鈥 (Kelman, 9/27)
The Trump administration鈥檚 top health official on Thursday dismissed 鈥淢edicare for all鈥 as a promise that鈥檚 too good to be true. 鈥淲hen you drill down into the details, it鈥檚 clear that Medicare for all is a misnomer. What鈥檚 really being proposed is a single government system for every American that won鈥檛 resemble Medicare at all,鈥 Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said during a wide-ranging speech in Nashville, Tenn. (Weixel, 9/27)
And in other health law news聽鈥
Some business associations and insurers are plunging ahead in launching a cheaper type of health plan newly permitted by the Trump administration, while others are holding back due to big regulatory and legal uncertainties about the future of these products. Since the U.S. Labor Department issued a final rule in June allowing small employers and self-employers to band together across state lines and form association health plans, or AHPs, there have been intensive discussions between business groups, state insurance commissioners and Labor Department officials about how states can regulate these plans. (Meyer, 9/27)
Small Business Owners say that the most important issue affecting them is the cost of health care, according to the National Small Business Association鈥檚 annual Politics of Small Business Survey.聽When asked what issues they raised most with elected officials, 40 percent of the surveyed owners said health care costs. Local issues were second on the list at 28 percent and tax reform came third with 37 percent. (Elis, 9/26)