Houston Chronicle Sunday

What Trump’s first executive order means for Obamacare.

Directive’s language appears to target fines for uninsured

- By Julie Pace and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s first executive order targets the sweeping Affordable Care Act by giving federal agencies broad leeway to chip away at the measure. But Trump still needs Congress to do away with the law for good.

The one-page directive gives agencies authority to grant waivers, exemptions and delays of provisions in the law known as Obamacare.

But until it becomes clear what steps federal agencies take as a result, its full impact on Americans and their health insurance is uncertain. Q: What does the order do?

A: Trump’s order states that federal agencies can grant waivers, exemptions and delays of Obamacare provisions that would impose costs on states or individual­s.

That language appears to be aimed squarely at undoing the law’s unpopular requiremen­t that individual­s carry health insurance or face fines — a key provision of the measure former President Barack Obama signed in 2010.

It’s not spelled out whether the IRS could waive the fines for failing to secure coverage, and the White House has not explained how it wants agencies to respond to the order.

The order also directs agencies to stop issuing regulation­s that would expand the health care law’s reach.

And it says the federal government must allow states greater flexibilit­y in carrying out health care programs.

“It’s a sign that the Trump administra­tion is looking to unwind the law in every way it can administra­tively,” said Larry Levitt of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisa­n clearingho­use for informatio­n and analysis about the health care system.

Q: Will people who get insurance under Obamacare lose their coverage as a result of Trump’s order?

A: The order doesn’t directly target the insurance marketplac­e at the center of the health care law. But some experts say that if the directive leads to broad exemptions from the law’s coverage requiremen­t, it could scare off insurers.

Insurers see the coverage requiremen­t, or so-called individual mandate, as an essential tool to nudge healthy people into the coverage pool.

Without it, the companies and most independen­t experts believe premiums would spike, making HealthCare.gov’s insurance markets unsustaina­ble.

Leslie Dach, campaign director of the Protect Our Care Coalition, issued a statement saying, “While President Trump may have promised a smooth transition, the executive order does the opposite, threatenin­g disruption for health providers and patients.” He called the executive order “irresponsi­ble.”

Q: How quickly will any changes take effect?

A: The executive order may not have much impact for 2017, since government rules for this year have already been incorporat­ed into contracts signed with insurance companies.

Department­s like Health and Human Services and Treasury will have to issue policies that embody the new president’s wishes.

The Trump administra­tion can rewrite regulation­s carrying out the legislatio­n.

New regulation­s cannot be issued overnight, but would have to follow a legally establishe­d process that requires public notice and an opportunit­y for interested parties to comment on the administra­tion’s changes.

Q: What is Congress’ plan for the Affordable Care Act?

A: With Republican­s in control of both the White House and Congress, undoing Obama’s health care law is at the top of the party’s agenda for 2017.

Trump has also been vague about what he wants included in a replacemen­t package, saying his administra­tion will have a plan after the Senate confirms his nominee to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, Rep. Tom Price.

The president has said he wants to keep some of the measure’s more popular elements, including allowing young people to stay on their parents’ insurance until age 26 and preventing insurance companies from denying coverage to people with pre-exiting conditions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States