Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Obama, Staples Quibble Over Health Law Employment Issue
U.S. President Barack Obama singled out office supply company Staples Inc as undercutting his healthcare reform law and said large corporations should not use the health insurance issue as an excuse for cutting wages, the news website BuzzFeed reported. "It's one thing when you've got a mom-and-pop store who can't afford to provide paid sick leave or health insurance or minimum wage to workers ... but when I hear large corporations that make billions of dollars in profits trying to blame our interest in providing health insurance as an excuse for cutting back workers鈥 wages, shame on them,鈥 Obama said in an interview with BuzzFeed. (2/11)
In a rare instance of corporate criticism of a president, Staples Inc. on Wednesday said that President Barack Obama 鈥渁ppears not to have all the facts鈥 when he criticized the company鈥檚 policy of limiting worker hours. ... In a statement Wednesday, Staples denied that its part-time employee policy was the result of the Affordable Care Act. 鈥淭he initial [BuzzFeed] story was misleading as our policy regarding hours for part-time employees is more than a decade old,鈥 said Kirk Saville, a Staples spokesman. 鈥淚t鈥檚 unfortunate that the president is attacking a company that provides more than 85,000 jobs and is a major taxpayer,鈥 he added. (Robb, 2/11)
In other news about the health law implementation --
The Obama administration is cutting off health-insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act for 200,000 people who haven鈥檛 proved they are legally residing in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services officials on Wednesday said health plans would terminate Feb. 28 for people who had signed up for coverage in 2014 and whose plans had been automatically renewed for 2015, after officials concluded those people hadn鈥檛 supplied enough information to verify their immigration or citizenship status. (Radnofsky, 2/11)
A growing number of Obamacare plans are imposing the highest cost sharing on patients for entire classes of drugs, even including some generics, according to a new Avalere study. Researchers looked at 20 classes of drugs and found that some plans placed all of the drugs in five classes on the costliest 鈥渟pecialty tier鈥 of their formulary. Two of those classes 鈥 protease inhibitors and multiple sclerosis agents 鈥 include generic options, yet 29 percent and 51 percent of silver plans, respectively, put them on their top tier in 2015. That鈥檚 up from 16 percent and 42 percent of plans in 2014. (Norman, 2/11)
A new analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation shows just how much Obamacare鈥檚 cost-sharing subsidies are worth to the people who would lose them if the Supreme Court blocks that assistance in states with federal-run exchanges. (Norman, 2/11)