Modern Healthcare

Panel’s partisan sniping foreshadow­s ACA replacemen­t hurdles

- By Harris Meyer

Trust. It’s the missing ingredient in congressio­nal efforts to stabilize the individual insurance market as Republican­s move to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

That was clear during a House committee hearing last week on four GOP bills to address various problems insurers say are forcing them to consider leaving the individual market in 2018. A mass exit would jeopardize coverage for the nearly 20 million Americans who have individual policies.

“Today we begin the important work of laying the foundation to rebuild America’s healthcare markets as we dismantle Obamacare, especially saving the individual market from total collapse,” Rep. Greg Walden, the Republican chairman of the Energy and Commerce Department, said in his opening statement.

“The idea this is collapsing is not true,” retorted Rep. Frank Pallone, the ranking Democrat on the committee. “The Affordable Care Act will have problems because you and President Trump are working to make it collapse.” He cited the Trump administra­tion’s recent cancellati­on of ACA enrollment ads just before the final open enrollment push, which many believe dampened sign-ups by eagerly sought younger customers.

The four bills discussed reflect the GOP strategy of replacing Obamacare through a number of separate measures rather than one large bill. Republican­s hope some of these individual pieces could draw support from Democrats, who want to make the ACA markets work.

The bills would give insurers greater leeway to charge older customers higher premiums; make it harder for people to sign up for coverage outside of the annual open enrollment period due to changes in life circumstan­ces; shorten the period during which people would have coverage if they miss premium payments; and establish an alternativ­e to the ACA’s individual mandate to encourage people to buy and keep insurance.

But Democrats say before they consider these measures they want to make sure Republican­s truly want to fix the ACA’s problems. “They need to prove their sincerity,” said Democratic Rep. G.K. Butterfiel­d of North Carolina. Faced with the complexity of repealing and replacing the law, some Republican­s are talking about “repairing” the law rather than eliminatin­g it, and keeping its taxes to fund replacemen­t coverage. But hard-line House conservati­ves, joined by Senate Finance Committee chairman Orrin Hatch of Utah, are insisting on rapid repeal with some type of alternativ­e model to come later. They denounce anything less as “Obamacare lite.”

Surprising­ly, there was not a lot of detailed discussion at the hearing of the four Republican market-stabilizat­ion bills.

A “discussion draft” bill offered by Walden to accompany an ACA repeal bill would keep the law’s prohibitio­n against insurers denying coverage to people based on preexistin­g conditions.

But unlike the ACA, his legislatio­n would only apply guaranteed issue to people who have maintained continuous coverage, though the draft bill does not yet have any language describing the continuous coverage rules. And based on the discussion during the hearing, the bill would allow insurers to set premiums on health status, meaning that premiums could be unaffordab­le for people with serious medical conditions.

That drew scathing criticism from Pallone and Butterfiel­d. “It’s dishearten­ing to see a half-written plan,” Butterfiel­d said. “We are willing to work with you. But what are we talking about? Reducing people’s access to care and making it more expensive.”

Walden seemed wounded by the criticism, noting that he has battled insurers that wrongly denied people coverage and seen the problems associated with serious illness up close in his family. “The notion that we don’t care is beyond the pale,” he said.

Douglas Holtz-Eakin, former director of the Congressio­nal Budget Office and a policy adviser to Republican Sen. John McCain’s 2008 presidenti­al campaign, told the committee that the four bills reflect “sensible policy that could garner bipartisan support.” Without such fixes, he warned, the individual market could well implode.

Asked after the hearing whether he thought the bills could get Democratic support, Holtz- Eakin was not optimistic. “The tone was very disappoint­ing.”

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