The Day

Higher prices, fewer options lurk after health bill collapse

- By TOM MURPHY AP Health Writer

The health care law of the land has survived for now, but it needs help — and it needs it soon.

Soaring prices and fewer choices may greet customers when they return to the Affordable Care Act’s insurance marketplac­es this fall, in part because insurers are facing deep uncertaint­y about whether the Trump administra­tion will continue to make key subsidy payments and enforce other parts of the existing law that help control prices.

Assurances don’t look to be coming anytime soon. “As I said from the beginning, let ObamaCare implode, then deal. Watch!” President Donald Trump tweeted early Friday, soon after the Senate narrowly rejected the latest push to dismantle the Obama-era health care law.

Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price said in a statement after the Senate vote that the Trump administra­tion would pursue its health care goals through regulation.

That kind of uncertaint­y rattles insurers, many of whom have already stopped selling policies through public insurance markets establishe­d by the health law because they were losing money.

Their main concern now is that the Trump administra­tion will stop paying crucial subsides called for in the law that help reduce costs like deductible­s for people with low incomes. The subsidies, estimated at $7 billion a year, have been challenged by Republican­s in court, and Trump has only guaranteed them through this month.

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