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Morning Briefing

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Monday, Feb 6 2017

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Hospitals Lost Billions In Funding When ACA Passed -- Now They're Fighting To Get It Back

The health law cut two types of hospital funding: charity care money and annual raises in Medicare reimbursement. But as Republicans take aim at dismantling the legislation, hospitals say they're going to need those cuts repealed too. Meanwhile, insurers don't want to go back to pre-health law days when they were seen as the bad guys.

Hospital executives are descending on Washington with a message: They are concerned about losing insured patients and revenue under any plan to dismantle or significantly alter the Affordable Care Act. In a flurry of recent meetings, the executives have told lawmakers they don鈥檛 want Americans to lose insurance under any alternative the Republicans devise for the Affordable Care Act. If that happens, however, hospitals say they want Congress to restore billions of dollars in federal funding they lost when the ACA took force. (Evans, 2/5)

Iowa hospitals have seen a $127 million drop in annual charity-care costs since the Affordable Care Act took full effect in 2014, financial reports show. That was a decline of almost 38 percent. Over the same period, 2013 through 2015, Iowa hospitals saw a $168 million annual drop in 鈥渂ad debt,鈥 or medical bills that were sent but weren鈥檛 paid. Hospital leaders say the improved finances helped them stabilize and improve their organizations. They聽worry that if the law is completely rescinded, they would be worse off than they were before it passed. (Leys, 2/5)

President Donald Trump and other Republican leaders have been working to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. And the millions of Americans who have health insurance through the Obamacare marketplaces aren't the only ones wondering about their fate. Leaders of insurance companies are, too. (2/3)

In other health law-related news聽鈥

Lost in the bipartisan battle in Congress, many health experts say, are all the聽little-known aspects of former President Barack Obama鈥檚 signature health care law: They say it鈥檚 not just the 22 million Americans who now buy individual health policies on insurance exchanges 鈥 or who qualify for an expanded Medicaid program 鈥 who benefited from the 2010 law. From coast to coast, tens聽of millions of other Americans 鈥 including many who often rail against 鈥淥bamacare鈥欌 鈥 are also covered by the law鈥檚 consumer protections. (Seipel, 2/4)

The leaders at Colorado鈥檚 health insurance exchange are working to keep alive聽the online marketplace, even if the Affordable Care Act is repealed, while Republican state lawmakers want to shut it down now.聽The contradictory approaches put Connect for Health Colorado, the state-based exchange where 175,000 residents purchased insurance in 2016, at the center of a debate that is only amplified by the efforts in Washington to repeal President Barack Obama鈥檚 signature health care law. (Frank, 2/3)

A Superior Court of New Jersey judge on Friday approved the liquidation of聽Health Republic Insurance of New Jersey, one of 23 nonprofit consumer-operated and -oriented health plans established under the Affordable Care Act. Last fall, the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance put the insurer in rehabilitation, taking it out of the market for this year, but holding out the possibility that it could return to selling health insurance plans next year if Health Republic found investors. The insurer was expected to have a deficit of $18 million last month. (Brubaker, 2/3)

And KHN explains how budget reconciliation works聽鈥

After capturing the White House, Republicans put repealing the health law at the top of their to-do list. But since they can鈥檛 get around a Democratic filibuster in the Senate, they are forced to use an arcane legislative tool called budget reconciliation to disassemble parts of the law. KHN鈥檚 Julie Rovner and Francis Ying explain the process. (2/6)

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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