Call & Times

GOP health care reform moves to Senate

- Herb Weiss Herb Weiss, LRI’12 is a Pawtucket writer covering aging, health care and medical issues. To purchase Taking Charge: Collected Stories on Aging Boldly, a collection of 79 of his weekly commentari­es, go to herbweiss.com.

House Speaker Paul Ryan’s words are now coming back to haunt him and GOP leadership that rammed American Health Care Act (AHCA), without procedural safeguards, through the House chamber days ago.

“I don’t think we should pass bills that we haven’t read that we don’t know what they cost,” said Ryan in a 2009 interview on MSNBC when Congress was debating President Obama’s 1990-page Affordable Care Act (ACA), or Obamacare.

Last month, the Trump Administra­tion’s efforts to repeal and replace Obamacare, with the AHCA went down in flames when so many GOP moderates and conservati­ve House lawmakers opposed the bill that the leadership didn’t dare bring it up for a vote. Successful negotiatio­ns of the GOP factions crafted a new version that passed last Thursday by a razor-thin vote of 217213, a slim margin of four votes. All 193 Democrats opposed passage, along with 20 Republican lawmakers. With House passage, the bill moves to the Senate for deliberati­on.

Before the House vote on the GOP health bill there were no legislativ­e hearings held to debate its merits and its full text was posted on the Web less than 24 hours before the vote. Ryan did not even wait for the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office (CBO) to provide an updated financial analysis of AHCA. The CBO’s analysis of the original bill, pulled moments before a scheduled vote on March 24, found that the GOP health care proposal estimated that if passed 24 million or more Americans could be uninsured by 2026.

Opposition Mounting to OP Health Care Proposal

With the passage of AHCA, Democratic Policy and Communicat­ion Committee Co-Chair David N. Cicilline (D-RI) issued the following statement, saying “This is the cruelest and most immoral thing I’ve seen the Republican Party do to the American people. They just passed a bill that they know will result in the deaths of thousands of working people each year. I don't know how they sleep at night.”

“All you need to know about this bill is that Republican­s tried to exempt themselves from coverage [of the GOP health care proposal]] before they got caught. That’s because they know it’s a raw deal,” says Senator Sheldon Whitehouse. This legislatio­n sets us on a path to the bad old days when insurance companies could refuse coverage to those with preexistin­g conditions and deny people health benefits that should be in every plan – like maternity and mental health care, he says.

Whitehouse warns that AHCA’s passage will leave millions of Americans without access to affordable health insurance. “Rhode Islanders rely on the Affordable Care Act and it’s working here. If they want to improve it, that’s one thing, but this House bill will hurt Rhode Islanders,

Within hours of the House vote on AHCA, a joint statement was issued by six prestigiou­s national medical organizati­ons (American Academy of Family Physicians, American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of Physicians, American Congress of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts, American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n American and the American Osteopathi­c Associatio­n), representi­ng over 560,000 physicians and medical students, denouncing the GOP health bill. Dozens of other state and national health care organizati­ons, including the American Nurses Associatio­n and American Hospital Associatio­n (and this number grows daily) also gave a thumb down on the Republican health bill that is considered “unworkable and flawed.”

Aging advocacy groups came out

swinging, too.

AARP, representi­ng 38 million members and considered to be one of the nation’s most powerful aging lobbying groups, plans to hold GOP House lawmakers accounting for their support of AHCA while gearing up to oppose the Republican health care proposal in the Senate.

In a statement, AARP Executive Vice President Nancy LeaMond reiterated AARP’s opposition to the GOP health bill passed in the U.S. House of Representa­tives, calling it “flawed” and warning that the legislativ­e proposal “would harm American families who count on access to affordable health care.”

LeaMond says, “the bill will put an Age Tax on us as we age, harming millions of American families with health insurance, forcing many to lose coverage or pay thousands of dollars more for health care. In addition, the bill now puts at risk the 25 million older adults with pre-existing conditions, such as cancer and diabetes, who would likely find health care unaffordab­le or unavailabl­e to them.”

According to LeaMond, AARP will continue its opposition of AHCA as it moves for Senate considerat­ion because it “includes an Age Tax on older Americans, eliminates critical protection­s for those with pre-existing conditions, puts coverage at risk for millions, cuts the life of Medicare, erodes seniors’ ability to live independen­tly, and gives sweetheart deals to big drug and insurance companies while doing nothing to lower the cost of prescripti­ons.

LeaMond warns, “We promised to hold members of Congress accountabl­e for their vote on this bill. True to our promise, AARP is now letting its 38 million members know how their elected Representa­tive voted on this health bill in The Bulletin, a print publicatio­n that goes to all of our members, as well as through emails, social media, and other communicat­ions.”

Medicaid Takes a Major Blow

“The bill threatens the very heart of the Medicaid program, taking away the guarantee that Medicaid will be there when seniors need it most. By slashing Medicaid funding by over $800 billion, the AHCA will place tremendous strain on state budget, says Kevin Prindivill­e, Executive Director of Justice in Aging, a nonprofit advocacy group for low-income seniors. “States will be forced to cut services, restrict eligibilit­y, and reduce benefits for seniors, children, people with disabiliti­es, and low-income older adults, he says.

“Congress is forcing families to pay more out-of-pocket when grandparen­ts and other loved ones need nursing home care or home care. Two-thirds of all Medicaid spending for older adults pays for long-term services and supports. The AHCA puts this vital care for seniors in jeopardy,” says Prindivill­e. “By passing the ACHA, the House chose to cut taxes for the wealthy and pharmaceut­ical companies while harming Medicare beneficiar­ies by increasing Part B premiums and reducing the life of the Medicare Trust Fund, he says.

Max Richtman, President and CEO of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare calls the AHCA vote “appalling” for retirees and views the “raid of Medicare, cuts to Medicaid among the most problemati­c parts of the AHCA.”

“Despite the bill’s name, risking the health of our nation’s most vulnerable citizens to give the wealthy an $ 600 billion tax cut is tremendous­ly uncaring – and does not reflect real American values,” says Richtman. In modifying the original AHCA bill to give reluctant Republican­s political cover, the House leadership made a bad piece of legislatio­n even worse,” he says.

No Protection for Pre-existing Conditions

“Recent amendments to this cruel, illadvised bill could put coverage for older Americans with pre-existing conditions like cancer and diabetes out of reach. The $8 billion (over 5 years) added to the legislatio­n at the last minute to defray the cost of higher premiums is woefully inadequate. It’s a thin veil that covers a head of snakes,” notes Richtman

“Equally inadequate are the meager tax credits that the GOP bill offers older Americans to buy insurance. A $4,000 annual tax credit doesn’t come to close to covering premiums for seniors ages 6064, meaning millions of older Americans will lose coverage altogether,” says Richtman.

According to Richtman, AHCA slashes nearly $1 trillion from the Medicaid by converting the social health care program into a block grant program or imposing per capita caps. “This would make it harder for impoverish­ed seniors to access long term skilled nursing care and community or home care. Overall, the Congressio­nal Budget Office estimates that 14 million people will be kicked off the Medicaid rolls in the next 10 years if this bill becomes law,” he says.

Richtman observes that the enactment of AHCA would reduce Medicare’s solvency by repealing Obamacare’s 0.9 percent payroll tax on wages above $200,000. This could lead to cuts in Medicare, including privatizin­g the program – harming current and future beneficiar­ies, he says.

“Under the GOP bill, insurers can charge older enrollees five times more than younger ones. The Congressio­nal Budget Office predicts that by 2026 this provision will substantia­lly raise premiums for older people by as much as 25 percent,” notes Richtman.

Senate Becomes New AHCA Battlegrou­nd

After the politicall­y decisive House vote to pass AHCA, President Donald Trump and House GOP lawmakers celebrated their major political victory at the White House Rose Garden claiming that they had fulfilled a promise made seven years ago to repeal and replace Obamacare. But this celebratio­n was short lived. Like House Democratic lawmakers, Democratic and Republican Senators began voicing their skepticism and strong opposition to the House’s passed health bill. Holding a slim 52-to-48 advantage in the upper chamber, GOP Senate Leadership must craft a bill that can win the support of at least 50 of their caucus members.

Washington insiders are now reporting that the House’s unpopular AHCA is “Dead on Arrival” in the Senate. Senate Republican­s say they will not vote on the House passed bill and the upper chamber is expected to move slowly in crafting its health bill, starting from scratch. Many GOP Senators opposed AHCA, especially those who want to protect their constituen­ts with pre-existing conditions and others who represent states that have expanded their Medicaid program under Obamacare.

Agroup of 13 Republican Senators (all men) have begun the process of hammering out their own health bill. Senate rules do not allow a review of the legislatio­n or the determinat­ion of the rules of the debate until the CBO provides its official fiscal impact estimate. Because of this the health policy debate may not begin until summer.

Hopefully, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican from Kentucky, and his partisan working group will reach across the aisle to Democratic Senators to assist in crafting a bipartisan solution. Won’t that be refreshing.

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