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Monday, Mar 20 2017

Full Issue

Changes To GOP Plan Will Provide Relief To Older Americans, Ryan Promises

House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) spoke about the tweaks they would make to the American Health Care Act after the Congressional Budget Office predicted older, rural Americans would be negatively affected under the legislation.

Days before a pivotal vote, House Speaker Paul Ryan said Sunday he will seek changes to a GOP health care bill to provide more help to older people. The new willingness to compromise was a bid for more support from moderate Republicans, who expressed continuing unease about the plan to replace Barack Obama's health law unless significant changes were made. (3/19)

鈥淲e think that we should be offering even more assistance than what the bill currently does,鈥 Ryan (R-Wis.) said in a 鈥淔ox News Sunday鈥 interview, in which he confirmed that House leaders are eyeing a Thursday vote on its passage. Meanwhile, a key conservative senator said White House officials were continuing to negotiate through the weekend on even more dramatic revisions to the bill in hopes of winning over hard-liners who have threatened to tank the legislation. (DeBonis, 3/19)

House Speaker Paul Ryan聽on Sunday聽expressed confidence that the Republican health-care plan will pass the House later this week, saying his party鈥檚 lawmakers are working to make聽changes to the bill to address remaining concerns, including providing more assistance to older Americans. 鈥淚 feel very good about it. This is exactly where we want to be,鈥 the聽Wisconsin Republican聽said in an interview with 鈥淔ox News聽Sunday.鈥 (Hayashi, 3/19)

Ryan's comments came in the wake of a Congressional Budget Office analysis showing that older people could pay higher premiums under the GOP bill. Ryan expressed skepticism about the CBO analysis but said his leadership team is looking at more ways to help older people under the new plan. (Kullgren, 3/19)

Ryan said Sunday the CBO looked at "a little piece of the issue." "When we know the secretary of [Health and Human Services] will help bring market freedom and regulatory relief to the health insurance markets to dramatically lower the price of the plan for the 50- and 60-year-olds," Ryan said. (Savransky, 3/19)

鈥淲e have to do something about the fact that the House bill disproportionately affects older, rural Americans,鈥 Republican Senator Susan Collins of Maine said on NBC鈥檚 鈥淢eet the Press鈥 on Sunday. Ryan didn鈥檛 say whether he had the 218 votes necessary to pass the bill, which would replace President Barack Obama鈥檚 signature Affordable Care Act, but he said he feels 鈥渧ery good about where we are.鈥 (Brody and Edney, 3/19)

Among the groups hardest hit by the Republican plan to replace the Affordable Care Act is one that swung for Donald Trump during last year's presidential race 鈥 older Americans who have not yet reached Medicare age. Many of those who buy their own health insurance stand to pay a lot more for their coverage. That is especially true for the nearly 3.4 million older Americans who have enrolled through the government marketplaces, many of whom receive generous federal subsidies through the health care law enacted under former President Barack Obama. (3/19)

Just shy of Medicare eligibility, [Erika] Snyder is part of the age 50 to 64 demographic that would face much higher insurance costs under the GOP plan, known as the American Health Care Act. The law would eliminate Obamacare subsidies that 3 million Americans in that age bracket currently rely on to purchase insurance. It would also allow insurers to charge older people up to 5 times as much as younger Americans for individual policies, while providing an age-based tax credit that experts say would fall far short of covering these聽additional costs. (Ross, 3/17)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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