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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Jan 26 2017

Full Issue

Taking Stock Of The Repeal-And-Replace Effort

Editorial writers and columnists detail how this push by the Trump administration and the new GOP Congress is moving forward.

Now that Republicans control both the executive and legislative branches, their plans to replace Obamacare -- yes, they exist -- will amount to more than just hot air. One new proposal shows they鈥檙e beginning to take their newfound responsibility seriously. (1/25)

The executive order鈥檚 language鈥攕topping anything in the law that creates 鈥渁 fiscal burden on any State or a cost, fee, tax, penalty, or regulatory burden鈥濃攕hould be music to the ears of congressional Republicans. They have been struggling with Senate procedural rules regarding reconciliation, which likely preclude repealing ObamaCare鈥檚 cost-increasing insurance regulations without Democratic support, while still allowing the repeal of the law鈥檚 mandates and subsidies. Why does this matter? Insurance companies cannot presently afford to sell the policies people actually want. The law imposes a $100-a-day penalty on insurers for every person to whom they sell a noncompliant policy. That effectively limits the individual market to nothing but ObamaCare-compliant plans, with premiums and deductibles driven sky-high by the law鈥檚 regulatory burdens. For many, even ObamaCare subsidies can鈥檛 keep up with these increasing costs. (Heather R. Higgins and Phil Kerpen, 1/25)

What鈥檚 more daunting than creating a massive federal entitlement program? Unwinding it with the least amount of damage to people and providers, as Republicans are learning about the Affordable Care Act. After seven years of opposing the ACA, forever known as Obamacare, the GOP finds itself in a position to finally fulfill their promises to repeal it entirely and replace it with market-based reforms. (Edward Morrissey, 1/26)

The nation is focused on what new leadership in Washington will mean for the Affordable Care Act (ACA), better known as Obamacare. Republicans won partly because of Obamacare鈥檚 implosion 鈥 including rising premiums, declining coverage quality, and diminished choices 鈥 and are expected to deliver fundamental changes to health-care policy. Nevertheless, Obamacare, though unpopular on the whole, contains several popular features. Hence the GOP鈥檚 path might seems relatively direct: keep the tolerable parts, repeal the unpopular ones, and move forward with replacement legislation. But the notion that a so-called 鈥渞epeal and replace鈥 approach can start by cherry-picking a few popular components is wrongheaded. (Tom Haynes, 1/26)

The US House of Representatives and Senate recently took initial steps towards repealing the Affordable Care Act (ACA), passing budget resolutions that pave the way towards a 鈥渂udget reconciliation鈥 measure that can repeal major aspects of Obamacare with a 51-vote majority in the Senate. (Larry Levitt, 1/24)

Congress is beginning to take a whack at untangling the snarl of mandates, guarantees and requirements in the flawed Affordable Care Act. It's time to stop arguing over the failures and work toward constructive revisions that fix the problems while preserving popular protections. (1/26)

The Trump Administration and congressional Republicans seem to be moving full speed towards capping federal payments for Medicaid. But they may be missing a key piece of the story: Two-thirds of the program鈥檚 dollars go to the frail elderly and younger people with disabilities. ... More than four out of every 10 Medicaid dollars are spent on people with disabilities, for both medical care and long-term services and supports (LTSS). One-quarter of program鈥檚 funding is used for older adults, mostly for nursing home care or personal assistance at home. In 2014, Medicaid spent as much as $150 billion on LTSS. While they are often ignored, these people would be profoundly affected if the program is redesigned. (Howard Gleckman, 1/25)

In urging Congress to repeal the Affordable Care Act 鈥渋n its entirety,鈥 Gov. Matt Bevin has put himself at odds with some of his fellow Republican governors and also with his own former position. House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy asked governors to share their ideas for achieving the Republican goal of repealing and replacing the ACA. (1/25)

Last week, I went looking for the real Obamacare. Not the one that鈥檚 been vilified by President Trump and House Speaker Paul D. Ryan, but the Obamacare that鈥檚 otherwise known as the Affordable Care Act, the one providing health coverage to more than 5 million people in California. (Ed Hernandez, 1/26)

One of the first things our new president did Friday was sign an executive order urging his administration to fight the ACA. The executive order has no teeth. It simply states the Trump administration鈥檚 position, and, sure, that carries with it all the heft brought to bear by the Oval Office. But what is worrisome for proponents of the ACA is that the executive order follows current legislative efforts in Congress to obliterate the centerpiece of President Barack Obama鈥檚 legacy. With a newly installed majority, Republicans are poised to dismantle the historic law that helped 20 million uninsured Americans get affordable healthcare. (Adam Levin, 1/26)

The Physician Payment Sunshine Act has been a valuable tool for revealing industry payments to our nation鈥檚 physicians. Nearly $17 billion in payments from drug and device companies have been recorded since the act was passed as part of the Affordable Care Act. The publicly available data it has created lets consumers and other interested parties judge for themselves whether their doctors have important conflicts of interest that might affect their treatment decisions. (James Rickert, 1/25)

The reality is the mandate merely camouflages significant growth of government spending and control over health insurance. This has been the case in Massachusetts since day one: Spending has grown out of control despite many failed efforts to bend the cost curve. (John Graham, 1/25)

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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