Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
GOP Search For Health Law Replacement Is Gaining Momentum
The legal campaign to destroy President Obama鈥檚 health care law may be nearing its conclusion, but as the Supreme Court deliberates over the law鈥檚 fate, the search for a replacement by Republican lawmakers is finally gaining momentum. Senior Republicans in Congress hope that by June, the Supreme Court will invalidate the subsidies that 7.5 million Americans in 34 states have been given to purchase health insurance through the federal Healthcare.gov website. (Weisman, 3/6)
Freshman Republican Sen. Ben Sasse has introduced a bill designed to get his party out of the political problems that could arise if the Supreme Court rules against the White House over Obamacare subsidies 鈥 without having the GOP embrace the health law. (Haberkorn, 3/5)
The Supreme Court heard arguments in King v. Burwell this week, but lawmakers were listening closely too. The issue before the court is whether citizens of states that are using the federal insurance exchange are eligible for subsidies, amid a dispute over wording in the law. If the court finds those people aren鈥檛 eligible, more than seven million people in as many as 37 states could lose those supports, making insurance prohibitively expensive. (Chinni, 3/5)
Also on Capitol Hill -
A group of Senate Democrats on Thursday introduced a bill that would provide free birth control to women enrolled in Medicaid, while also expanding access to preventative services nationwide. Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), the top Democrat on the Senate health committee, said the bill would allow more women 鈥渢o be in the driver鈥檚 seat about their own health care.鈥 (Ferris, 3/5)
In related news -
More than two-thirds of women with unplanned pregnancies rely on public assistance, costing $51 billion each year, according to a new study. Unplanned births are almost twice as likely to require public assistance than planned births, according to new research from the nonprofit Guttmacher Institute. (Ferris, 3/5)