Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Keep Health Costs Down; Political Riders May Heat Up Budget Battle
It really matters who the next president is. But there are other things that matter just as much to the nation鈥檚 future prosperity. One of them is: What is happening to health care costs? If health care costs start to rise again the way they did before, then health care spending will swallow the economy and bankrupt the federal government. If they are contained, then suddenly there鈥檚 a lot more money for everything else, like schools, antipoverty efforts and wages. The good news is that recently health care inflation has been at historic lows. (David Brooks, 11/6)
If you think the budget fight is over, you鈥檙e sorely mistaken. It鈥檚 just heating up. See, for the most part, appropriations bills have language that looks like this: 鈥淔or carrying out titles I and II of the Imaginary Piece of Legislation Act, $10,000,000 shall be available.鈥 But lately legislators have been littering appropriations bills with language that looks more like this: 鈥淣one of the funds made available by this Act may be used to implement [law/rule/regulation we hate].鈥 In other words, a backdoor repeal. If you can鈥檛 beat 鈥檈m, defund 鈥檈m. Can鈥檛 successfully repeal Obamacare, despite more than 50 votes to do so? No worries. Just craft a health-care appropriations bill that explicitly prevents any funds from being 鈥渦sed to implement, administer, enforce, or further any provision鈥 of the Affordable Care Act. (Catherine Rampell, 11/5)
Kentucky just volunteered to be a national political experiment, and it can't help but be an edifying one for the whole country. Ever since the 2010 passage of the Affordable Care Act, Republicans have worked to sabotage the law and have done their best Yosemite Sam imitations to show the folks back home how furious they are at that varmint Barack Obama who signed it. Democrats have operated on the theory that Sam's six-shooter fires only blanks. If offered a genuine opportunity to repeal health insurance coverage for millions of Americans, would Republicans go through with it? The election of Matt Bevin as governor of Kentucky ought to settle the question. (Francis Wilkinson, 11/5)
Throughout his campaign for Kentucky governor, Matt Bevin, a Republican who won the election Tuesday, railed hard against the Affordable Care Act, promising to repeal the state鈥檚 expansion of Medicaid under the law. He has recently pulled back on that vow, saying he will instead freeze the program and prevent new enrollment. He may not be able to implement such a freeze 鈥 it would require a waiver from federal authorities, who will probably block it 鈥 but if he does get his way, a freeze is likely to eliminate health coverage for thousands of low-income people. (Anna Maria Barry-Jester, 11/5)
A key piece of the Obama administration鈥檚 plan to control the health insurance market is in a state of collapse. With it will go the philosophical underpinning of big government solutions to private-sector problems--and that will pose a core question for voters in the upcoming national elections. (Edward Morrissey, 11/5)
The federal government has warned Texas that it cannot block Medicaid participants from 鈥渜ualified providers of their choice鈥 or because of the provider鈥檚 鈥渟cope of practice.鈥 In doing so, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has essentially put the state on notice that it is fooling no one on the reasons it is trying to oust Planned Parenthood from the program. (11/5)
Thankfully, the nation has moved on from the reckless 鈥渄eath panel鈥 rhetoric that could have derailed a compassionate new policy that would help millions of patients do end-of-life planning before a medical crisis strikes. On Oct. 30, the federal agency overseeing Medicare finalized a policy that will pay medical providers to advise patients on advance-care planning. ... Regrettably, this sensible initiative is years in the making. In 2009, former Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin made death panels a national buzzword, wielding it so effectively that officials eventually backed off including payments in the 2010 Affordable Care Act. (11/5)
Each year the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services pays more than $853 billion in health-care claims, amounting to almost 25% of the federal budget. But an estimated 10% of the claims paid are fraudulent. This year alone, the federal government will pay about $85 billion in fraudulent claims. That is more than the combined earnings of Exxon, Wells Fargo and Microsoft. Most people would be surprised to hear that government health-care programs are 鈥渢rust-based鈥 systems that rely on the good faith of medical providers to bill only for legitimate services. The government does little to assess the legitimacy of a claim before paying it.(Hank B. Walther, 11/5)
More than 16,000 Americans die each year from prescription opioid overdoses, with a disproportionate number of these deaths attributed to methadone. Now, the federal government is calling on states to consider removing methadone from the list of preferred drugs used as pain relievers for Medicaid patients. This proposal is part of a larger White House initiative to stop the nation鈥檚 prescription drug abuse epidemic. (Cynthia Reilly, 11/5)
Purvi Patel, a 33-year-old Indian-American woman, is sitting in an Indiana prison serving a 20-year sentence for fetal homicide. Last spring, she became the first woman in the country to be imprisoned on that charge for allegedly ending her own pregnancy .... In 2011, Bei Bei Shuai, a Chinese immigrant, attempted suicide and lost her pregnancy in the process. She also was charged under Indiana鈥檚 feticide law, but pled guilty to a lesser charge. ... Across the country, Asian American women鈥檚 reproductive rights are being challenged and their family-planning decisions are being policed based on racial stereotypes held by anti-choice activists and officials. (Miriam Yeung, 11/4)
Support for making marijuana legal is increasing around the world, and that is a good thing. Earlier this week, the Mexican Supreme Court opened the door to legalizing the drug by giving four plaintiffs the right to grow cannabis for personal use. (11/5)