The Record (Troy, NY)

New GOP health care plan could raise premiums for the sick

- By Ricardo AlonsoZald­ivar and Alan Fram Associated Press writer Kevin Freking contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON >> The latest Republican health care idea could mean going back to a time when people with medical problems were charged much higher premiums for individual policies, experts say.

The proposal to let states seek waivers from key requiremen­ts of the Obamaera health law failed to unite GOP lawmakers on Wednesday. Conservati­ves dialed up criticism of moderates standing in the way. A White House official said progress is being made and all sides are talking, but offered no timetable for a handshake that would allow stalled Republican legislatio­n to advance.

The newidea roughed out in negotiatio­ns between the White House and leaders of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus would allow states to seek waivers of two requiremen­ts in the 2010 Affordable Care Act. One, known as community rating, forbids insurers from charging higher premiums on account of people’s medical problems or pre-existing conditions. The other is the essential health benefits provision that spells out categories of benefits all insurance plans must cover.

Conservati­ves who want the federal government out of health care argue that those provisions have driven up premiums and decreased choice. The idea is to put states back in charge of insurance rules, reasoning that that would increase the availabili­ty of plans with lower premiums, attractive to younger, healthier customers.

But health care industry consultant Robert Laszewski said it would also open a “back door” to a system where the sick can get priced out of coverage.

“It’s hard for me to believe that any state would take us back ... when it comes to the protection­s that consumers have for pre- existing conditions,” Laszewski said. “There is no doubt that Obamacare as a system is not working very well, but nobody wants to go backward.”

Republican­s say their bill includes a fallback option for people with health problems. It would create a $100-billion fund that states can use for a variety of purposes, including high-risk insurance pools where people with medical problems can get coverage.

But Trish Riley, executive director of the National Academy for State Health Policy, said those didn’t work well in the past. Patients tended to be very sick, and premiums were often too expensive.

“There would be real challenges for people with illnesses to get affordable coverage,” Riley said. “You will get guaranteed access to coverage, but you won’t be able to afford it.” Her nonpartisa­n organizati­on offers policy advice to states.

Aformer Obamaadmin­istration insurance regulator said it’s likely that the companies would press states to seek waivers under the latest Republican idea. That’s because the broader GOP legislatio­n would repeal unpop- ular ACA penalties on people who don’t get covered, a move that insurers fear would let people postpone getting coverage until they are sick.

“Insurers are going to want some other filter to keep out people,” said Karen Pollitz, an expert on individual health insurance, now with the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation.

Trump administra­tion officials and leading GOP legislator­s said they are not giving up trying to find common ground between conservati­ves and moderates. A late Tuesday meeting at the Capitol involving Vice President Mike Pence and about two dozen lawmakers produced no agreement, but White House legislativ­e affairs director Marc Short said there was progress because both sides were “in the same room talking through the same issues.”

Democrats were dismissive. “It’s as if the president and Paul Ryan went to some of the Republican­s and the Freedom Caucus and said: ‘ We can make this worse,’” Rep. Jan Schakowsky of Illinois said. “Now, let’s remember that only 17 percent of the people in the United States approved of the last version.”

Ryan’s office, however, seemed to be keeping armslength from the negotia- tions. Congress leaves town in days for a two-week recess, when lawmakers could face antagonist­ic grilling from voters at town hall meetings and the entire GOP drive might lose momentum.

Some conservati­ves said it might be good for lawmakers to go home and get an earful from constituen­ts. Michael Needham, CEO of the advocacy group Heritage Action, accused House moderates of “intransige­nce” and said they “clearly want to keep Obamacare in place.”

But a poll released earlier this week by the Kaiser Family Foundation offered reinforcem­ent for lawmakers reluctant to forge ahead. It showed that 3 in 4 Americans want the Trump administra­tion to make the law work. About 2 in 3 said they were glad the House GOP bill didn’t pass last month. But people split evenly between wanting to keep or repeal the statute.

The underlying House Republican bill would repeal much of the 2010 law. It would erase its tax fines for consumers who don’t buy policies, reduce federal aid to help many pay premiums, and phase out a Medicaid expansion aimed at poor people.

 ?? PHOTOS BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin pauses during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday.
PHOTOS BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin pauses during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday.
 ??  ?? In this Saturday, photo, Vice President Mike Pence speaks at DynaLab, Inc. in Reynoldsbu­rg, Ohio.
In this Saturday, photo, Vice President Mike Pence speaks at DynaLab, Inc. in Reynoldsbu­rg, Ohio.

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