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Thursday, Mar 30 2017

Full Issue

HHS Secretary Tight-Lipped On Health Law Changes, But Says 'We Have To Fix The Problem'

Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price faced scrutiny from House appropriators over any changes the administration is considering for the Affordable Care Act.

Republicans, struggling to figure out their next steps after their health-care bill鈥檚 collapse, delivered mixed signals on Wednesday about how they will contend with the 2010 law, with a Trump administration official promising to uphold the law and others saying they will continue working on its repeal. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price said on Wednesday he is obligated to uphold the Affordable Care Act as long it is in place, but he didn鈥檛 commit to specific actions, including implementing the requirement that most Americans pay a penalty if they don鈥檛 have health coverage. (Armour, Peterson and Radnofsky, 3/29)

President Donald Trump's top health official got strong pushback Wednesday from lawmakers of both parties about deep cuts the White House is pressing in medical research, public health and social service programs. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price also dodged repeated attempts by Democrats to flush out the administration's next move on the Obama-era health insurance law. President Donald Trump's push to repeal the health care law failed last week because of disagreement among Republicans. (Alonso-Zaldivar, 3/29)

[U]nder intense questioning from Democrats, Price outlined how his department could make insurance plans cheaper by scaling back several federal mandates, including what the ACA currently defines as 鈥渆ssential benefits鈥 in coverage. And he refused to say whether the administration will keep providing cost-sharing subsidies for insurers participating in the federal marketplace. The multibillion-dollar infusion is critical to maintaining the system鈥檚 stability, insurers say. (Eilperin and DeBonis, 3/29)

Pressed by Representative Mark Pocan, a Democrat from Wisconsin, on whether the administration still wants to repeal the law, Price said: 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e trying to do is make sure individuals have access to coverage and care.鈥 (Edney and Tracer, 3/29)

He did note that he will enforce the law, including ObamaCare's mandate for people to have coverage. "So long as the law is on the books, we at the department are obliged to uphold the law," Price said. (Sullivan, 3/29)

As a member of Congress, Price was adamant: He spent years vowing to destroy the law, and addressing House appropriators on Wednesday, he railed against Obamacare for restricting Americans鈥 health care freedoms and vowed to do whatever he could to expand choice and lower premiums. But he left both lawmakers and the health care industry with several big, unanswered questions. (Cancryn, 3/29)

In other news on the HHS secretary聽鈥

Nine senators are pushing U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions to reveal what he knows about a reported investigation into Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price鈥檚 stock trades that a top federal prosecutor might have begun before being fired by the Trump administration this month. In a letter Wednesday, seven senators 鈥 six聽Democrats plus Vermont independent Bernie Sanders 鈥 called on Sessions to assure them that any investigation of Price 鈥 or others connected to the Trump administration 鈥 would be 鈥渁llowed to continue unimpeded.鈥 (Kopp and Bluth, 3/29)

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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