Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Court backs expansion of cheap health insurance

-

A divided federal appeals court on Friday upheld the Trump administra­tion’s expansion of cheaper short-term health insurance plans, derided by critics as “junk insurance,” as an alternativ­e to the Affordable Care Act’s costlier comprehens­ive insurance.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said in a 2-1 decision that the administra­tion had the legal authority to increase the duration of the health plans from three to 12 months, with the option of renewing them for 36 months. The plans do not have to cover people with preexistin­g conditions or provide basic benefits like prescripti­on drugs.

President Donald Trump, who wants to get rid of the entire health care law but failed to repeal it in Congress, has praised the plans as

“much less expensive health care at a much lower price.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the decision would allow the administra­tion to “keep railroadin­g vulnerable families into shoddy junk health insurance plans.“

Judge Thomas Griffith wrote for the court that the administra­tion lifted the three-month cap put in place by the Obama administra­tion because “premiums for ACA-compliant plans continued to soar while enrollment dropped off.“

The goal was to increase “the availabili­ty of more affordable insurance,” Griffith wrote, in an opinion that was joined by Judge Greg Katsas. Griffith is a George H.W. Bush appointee, and Katsas was put on the court by Trump.

In dissent, Judge Judith Rogers wrote that insurers offering the short-term plans “can cut costs by denying basic benefits, price discrimina­ting based on age and health status, and refusing coverage to older individual­s and those with preexistin­g conditions.“The plans “leave enrollees without benefits that Congress deemed essential and disproport­ionately draw young, healthy individual­s,” making ACA plans more expensive, wrote Rogers, an appointee of President Bill Clinton.

The Associatio­n for Community and Affiliated Plans, an insurer group that sued the administra­tion, said it would appeal to the full appeals court.

“Junk insurance is an inferior and hazardous substitute for comprehens­ive coverage. The court’s decision today protects these plans and their harmful practices, placing patients, families, and providers at increased risk amidst a global health emergency,” the group’s CEO, Margaret A. Murray, said in a statement.

Premiums in the short-term plans are one-third the cost of comprehens­ive coverage, and the option is geared to people who want an individual health insurance policy but make too much money to qualify for subsidies under Obamacare.

 ??  ?? Trump
Trump

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States