Monday, January 23, 2017

Executive Order: Trump throws bomb into Obamacare

With executive order, Trump tosses a 'bomb' into fragile health ...

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With executive order, Trump tosses a ‘bomb’ into fragile health insurance markets

Posted Jan. 22, 2017, at 3:10 p.m.
President Donald Trump’s new executive order instructing federal agencies to grant relief to constituencies affected by the Affordable Care Act has begun to reverberate throughout the nation’s health care system, injecting further uncertainty into an already unsettled insurance landscape.
The political signal of the order, which Trump signed Friday just hours after being sworn into office, was clear: Even before the Republican-led Congress acts to repeal the 2010 law, the new administration will move swiftly to unwind as many elements as it can on its own — elements that have changed how 20 million Americans get health coverage and what benefits insurers must offer some of their customers.
But the practical implications of Trump’s action are harder to decipher. Its language instructs all federal agencies to “waive, defer, grant exemptions from or delay” any part of the law that imposes a financial or regulatory burden on those affected by it. That would cover consumers, doctors, hospitals and other providers, as well as insurers and drug companies.
The prospect of what could flow from pulling back or eliminating administrative rules — including no longer enforcing the individual mandate, which requires Americans to get coverage or pay an annual penalty, and ending health plans’ “essential benefits” — could affect everything from how many people sign up on the marketplaces before the current open enrollment ends Jan. 31 for 2017 coverage to how many companies decide to participate next year.
Robert Laszewski, president of the consulting firm Health Policy and Strategy Associates, called the executive order a “bomb” lobbed into the law’s “already shaky” insurance market. Given the time it will take Republicans to fashion a replacement for the law, he expects that federal and state insurance exchanges will likely continue to operate at least through 2018.
“Instead of sending a signal that there’s going to be an orderly transition, they’ve sent a signal that it’s going to be a disorderly transition,” Laszewski, a longtime critic of the Affordable Care Act, said. “How does the Trump administration think this is not going to make the situation worse?”
Teresa Miller, Pennsylvania’s insurance commissioner, said Saturday that several insurers on her state’s exchange “seriously considered leaving the market last year” and that Trump’s action could propel them to indeed abandon it in 2018.
“When I saw the executive order … all I kept thinking was this just creates more uncertainty and adds more instability to this market,” she said.

 
Po Some insurers in Pennsylvania also have raised the possibility of withdrawing from the exchanges during 2017, Miller said, which would mean consumers could keep their plans, but no longer receive federal subsidies to help them afford the coverage.
“That would create a nightmare scenario,” she said.
As of this year, nearly a third of all counties nationwide already have just one insurer in the federal marketplace, and almost two-third of counties have two or fewer insurers.
The White House did not return requests for comment over the weekend.
On Capitol Hill, Republican leaders are offering cautious praise for the president’s executive order. Yet, more broadly, the GOP remains in a state of uncertainty on health care, with unresolved questions about the path forward.
Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tennessee, the chairman of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, was briefed on the details of Trump’s order only Thursday, according to a GOP aide who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe private talks.
Alexander said in a statement late Friday that Trump was “right to make the urgent work of rescuing Americans trapped in a collapsing Obamacare system a top priority on his first day in office.”
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, speaking on “Fox News Sunday with Chris Wallace,” focused primarily on what Trump could do through executive action.
“President Obama implemented a lot of Obamacare himself, so President Trump will be able to undo a lot of it himself,” McConnell said. Asked if he knows what the new president’s replacement plan is, McConnell said Senate Republicans are working with the administration “to have an orderly process.”
The GOP-led House and Senate have passed a budget measure that was designed to serve as a vehicle for repealing key parts of the law. But they have yet to rally around a consensus idea for when and what to do to replace it. They were placed under further pressure to act quickly after Trump vowed “insurance for everybody” in a recent interview with The Washington Post.
A key Trump ally said Sunday that the president’s decision to sign the order on his first day in office, coupled with his recent comments about moving swiftly on repealing and replacing the law, has applied pressure on GOP lawmakers to act more quickly than they might have initially planned.
“I think Trump has consistently moved that needle with the mindset of our conference,” Rep. Chris Collins, R-New York, said.
Democratic leaders, however, are casting the executive order as evidence that Republicans are in a state of disarray on health care.
“They don’t know what to do. They can repeal but they don’t have an plan for replace,” Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer, D-New York, said in an interview that aired Sunday morning on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “The president’s executive order just mirrored that.”
At least publicly, the insurance industry’s reaction has been muted. America’s Health Insurance Plans spokeswoman Kristine Grow, whose group represents nearly 1,300 insurers, said in an email Saturday that it is “too soon to tell” what the executive order will mean for the industry.
“There is no question the individual health care market has been challenged from the start,” Grow said. “The president said he would take swift action to move our country to improve it, and he has.”
A key question following Trump’s order is what actions Republican-led states might take to withdraw from key provisions of the law. Republican Florida Gov. Rick Scott’s office said Saturday he was reviewing his options.
Jackie Schutz, a spokeswoman for Scott, said the governor “appreciates” that the new administration is “swiftly taking action.” But asked about how and when Scott would seek to take advantage of it, Schutz said, “we’re still look into it to see what it specifically means to Florida.”
Republican Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who met with Senate Finance Committee Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and nearly a dozen other GOP governors on Thursday to discuss the future of Medicaid, said afterwards that there are “some fundamental things that we can do that can settle people down so they are not worried they are going to lose their coverage, but that at the same time bring significant changes to the Obamacare package.”
Kasich, who expanded Medicaid in his state under the Affordable Care Act, said one option he favors is paring Medicaid coverage to people with incomes up to 100 percent of the poverty level, rather than the current 138 percent, and then letting those above 100 percent go on the marketplace to get coverage.
Asked if he could guarantee than none of his constituents would lose health care coverage, Kasich responded, “I can’t guarantee anything.”
Even if the new administration is eager to grant waivers to states, it does not yet have the political appointees in place at the Health and Human Services and Treasury departments to do so.
But timing is key. Insurers must finalize the rates they will charge for 2018 plans on the federal exchange in May, which means they will start crunching those numbers in March. And their projections will be far less certain if the president’s executive order prompts changes that in turn prompt healthier people to either drop their plans or purchase short-term plans outside of the exchanges.
Chris Jennings, who served as a senior White House adviser on health care in both the Clinton and Obama administrations, said that in the health care arena, “more than any other domestic policy, details matter. Plans, they live off a comma, or an incentive, or a disincentive, or a penalty, or an enforcement mechanism.”
Ceci Connolly, president and CEO of the Alliance of Community Health Plans, said her members are in a particularly difficult position because they are unlike large national companies that can “pick and choose” which markets they operate in under the federal exchange.
“Local nonprofit plans are in their communities, so they can’t look around for certain markets and pull out of ones that they don’t like,” noted Connolly, who added that her group’s “biggest concern” is that some consumers might just stop paying their premiums if they believe they won’t be penalized for lacking coverage. That could lead to hospital and doctor visits that won’t be reimbursed, which then would impose costs on providers and insurers more broadly.
With less than 10 days to go in the current enrollment period, Mila Kofman, executive director of the D.C. Health Benefit Exchange Authority, said that “all of this discussion of whether or not people will have access to affordable quality health insurance is very unsettling.”
Some residents have asked Kofman whether she can assure them they will get the same health benefits if Congress and the administration overhaul the system in the coming months. “I tell them, ‘Sign up. We will certainly do everything we can to ensure that you’ll have access to quality health insurance.’”
Yet, Mona Mangat, a solo practitioner in allergy and immunology in St. Petersburg, Florida, is not sure what to say when patients ask her whether they will be able to afford the kind of prescriptions and services they’ve taken advantage of under the Affordable Care Act.
“Unfortunately, I don’t have an answer for them,” Mangat said. “I say, ‘Oh my God, I don’t know what’s going to happen.’”
Washington Post writers John Wagner and Amy Goldstein contributed to this report.

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