The Palm Beach Post

Trump pushes health plans

Executive order will allow cross-state insurance pooling.

- By Ken Thomas and Ricardo AlonsoZald­ivar

WASHINGTON — The White House is finalizing an executive order that would expand health plans offered by associatio­ns to allow individual­s to pool together and buy insurance outside their states, a unilateral move that follows failed efforts by Congress to overhaul the health care system.

President Donald Trump has long asserted that selling insurance across state lines would trigger competitio­n that brings down premiums for people buying their own policies.

Experts say that’s not guaranteed, partly because health insurance reflects local medical costs, which vary widely around the country.

Moreover, White House actions may come too late to have much impact on premiums for 2018.

Trump was expected to sign the executive order this week, likely Thursday, a senior administra­tion official said Sunday.

Under the president’s executive action, membership groups could sponsor insurance plans that cost less because — for example — they wouldn’t have to offer the full menu of benefits required under the Affordable Care Act, also called “Obamacare.” It’s unclear how the White House plans to overcome opposition from state insurance regulators, who see that as an end-run to avoid standards.

“There are likely to be legal challenges that could slow this effort down,” said Larry Levitt of the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation.

Similar alternativ­es have been promoted by Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, a Republican holdout during the health care debate. Senate leaders didn’t bring the latest GOP health care bill to a vote because they lacked the votes to pass it.

Associatio­n plans “kind of went away with the ACA, and now the idea seems to be to re-create them,” said Jeff Smedsrud, a health insurance marketing entreprene­ur. “It’s not clear what they would really look like.”

Smedsrud said a different option also under considerat­ion by the White House, to loosen restrictio­ns on “short term” insurance plans, could be a safety valve for some consumers.

Those plans generally have limited benefits and remain in force for less than a year. During the Obama administra­tion, the availabili­ty of short-term coverage was restricted. One of Smedsrud’s companies sells short-term plans.

Others warned that over time, the White House order could undermine state insurance markets created under Obama’s law by siphoning off healthy people to plans with lower premiums and skinnier benefits.

The order was being drafted as Trump expressed his willingnes­s to work with Democrats on health care after Republican­s were unable to approve legislatio­n that would have repealed and replaced “Obamacare.”

The president said Saturday that he had spoken to Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York to see if Democrats would want to collaborat­e with him on improving health care.

Schumer said through a spokesman Saturday that Trump “wanted to make another run at ‘repeal and replace’ and I told the president that’s off the table.”

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