Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Rethinking care while repealing ACA

Rothfus: Plan should be ‘consumer-driven’

- By Steve Twedt

JOHNSTOWN — With speculatio­n growing on what a replacemen­t for the Affordable Care Act will look like, U.S. Rep. Keith Rothfus on Tuesday provided a broad outline of what he and other Republican­s on Capitol Hill may be cooking up.

Not surprising­ly, their still emerging plans carry a distinct free-market flavor, moving health care away from what he described as a system based on decisions by “bureaucrat­s in Washington” to a model featuring more choice and flexibilit­y for consumers, as well as more competitio­n for their business.

In other words, those extrapolat­ing President-elect Donald Trump’s “insurance for everybody” comment last weekend into visions of a single-payer health system should put the cork back in the champagne.

Mr. Rothfus, R-Sewickley, who was in Johnstown to discuss health care issues with Conemaugh Health System executives, envisions a “consumerdr­iven” structure where a range of different groups — church groups, profession­al associatio­ns and so on — can become health care insurance pools wielding the purchasing power of their numbers.

Acknowledg­ing that insurers need time to develop products, he would like to see consumers have a menu of coverage options by fall. “It’s not going to be in a month, in a day or in an hour as has recently been suggested,” he said.

“What we have to acknowledg­e is that what we have now is not working.”

The Republican­s’ “repeal and replace” mantra has alarmed many of the 20 million Americans who gained access to insurance through the ACA and now are worrying about, and in some cases actively protesting against, the law’s repeal.

Mr. Rothfus, whose party wields a majority in both houses of Congress and now the White House, said Tuesday, “The rug will not be pulled out from folks.” But he insisted that the Affordable Care Act, passed in 2010, has not lived up to its promise and must be replaced.

“There are people who have gained access to insurance, but

we have to look at a plan that is a better deal for folks.”

While marketplac­e enrollment has seen gains this year, he said millions of Americans are still opting to pay the penalty for remaining uninsured, figuring they’ll be better off.

Mr. Rothfus also pointed to a “collapsing” marketplac­e as insurers drop exchange plans, as others raise premiums and deductible­s for those who do enroll.

Saying the Affordable Care Act “has not worked as advertised,” Mr. Rothfus, who represents the Pennsylvan­ia’s 12th Congressio­nal District, which includes Beaver County and parts of five other counties including Allegheny County, believes it is now time to rethink how the nation provides, and pays for, health care and health insurance.

“This is an opportunit­y for a conversati­on that we should have had seven years ago.”

 ??  ?? U.S. Rep Keith Rothfus
U.S. Rep Keith Rothfus

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