The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

How losing Obamacare could cost you

- Liz Weston Nerd Wallet

If the Supreme Court throws out the Affordable Care Act, your finances and your future could pay the price.

Retiring early or starting a business might become too hazardous if your access to health insurance isn’t guaranteed. You might have to wait a year before preexistin­g conditions are covered by an employer’s plan. Young adults could be kicked off their parents’ policies. Millions of people who buy insurance through the ACA marketplac­es or who now qualify for Medicaid could lose their coverage as well.

Even if you were able to keep your health insurance, you could face caps on your coverage that expose you to enormous medical bills. Preventive care and birth control could cost you more. Medicare beneficiar­ies could face higher premiums, deductible­s and copays. Insurers could cancel your policy retroactiv­ely for even minor mistakes on your applicatio­n.

In the decade since the ACA became law, many Americans have become so accustomed to the protection­s and savings afforded by the landmark legislatio­n that they may not realize how much could change if Obamacare is struck down. Its effects on health care are so pervasive that nearly every American could be affected, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, which tracks health care issues.

THE RETURN OF PREEXISTIN­G CONDITIONS

The Trump administra­tion and a group of Republican attorneys general have asked that the entire law be thrown out. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments on Nov. 10.

Before the ACA, insurers routinely used preexistin­g health conditions as a reason to deny coverage or charge people more. Preexistin­g conditions included serious ailments such as cancer or heart disease as well as more common conditions such as high cholestero­l, high blood pressure, asthma, diabetes and obesity, and temporary conditions including pregnancy. Insurers denied about 1 in 5 applicatio­ns for individual policies because of preexistin­g conditions, and some employer-provided group policies required people to wait up to a year before their preexistin­g conditions were covered.

Back then, many people who had health issues — or whose family members did

— avoided changing jobs, starting businesses or retiring early because of the risk they couldn’t find affordable health insurance.

President Trump signed an executive order in September announcing “a steadfast commitment to always protecting individual­s with preexistin­g conditions,” but the order alone can’t force insurers to offer coverage if the ACA is struck down.

And America is a land of preexistin­g conditions. Half of adults under age 65, or up to 133 million people, had health issues that could cause them to be denied coverage or charged exorbitant premiums, according to a 2017 government analysis.

‘USE IT AND LOSE IT’ COVERAGE

Health insurance is meant to help people pay their medical expenses and avoid potentiall­y catastroph­ic bills. Before Obamacare, however, using your insurance could cause you to lose it.

If someone with an individual insurance policy got sick, the insurer could scour the person’s applicatio­n looking for errors. Even minor mistakes could cause the company to revoke the policy, a practice called rescission. Under the ACA, rescission­s are allowed only if there’s fraud or a material misreprese­ntation of facts.

Policies also routinely had caps that limited how much insurers had to pay out over someone’s lifetime. People who were sick enough could hit those caps and be on the hook for 100% of their medical costs afterward.

OTHER POTENTIAL SIDE EFFECTS

Millions could become uninsured if the ACA exchanges are shut down, expanded Medicaid coverage is rescinded and insurers are no longer required to cover children under 26 on their parents’ plans. Some employers may continue dependent coverage, since young people in general tend to use less health care. But young people in poor health or with preexistin­g conditions could be shut out.

Without the ACA, insurers could once again charge copayments or coinsuranc­e for preventive care, including screenings, immunizati­ons, annual checkups and birth control. Medicare beneficiar­ies could once again have to pay for certain services, including screenings for breast cancer, colorectal cancer, cardiovasc­ular disease and diabetes. The law also closed the infamous “doughnut hole” in

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