Houston Chronicle

Past health chiefs urge effort to stabilize insurance market

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON — Don’t make things worse.

That’s the advice of former U.S. health secretarie­s of both parties to President Donald Trump and the GOP-led Congress, now that Obamacare seems here for the foreseeabl­e future. The 2018 sign-up season for subsidized private health plans starts Nov. 1, with about 10 million people currently served through HealthCare.gov and its state counterpar­ts.

Stability should be the immediate goal, former Health and Human Services secretarie­s Kathleen Sebelius, Mike Leavitt and Tommy Thompson said. At minimum: Dispel the political and legal uncertaint­y — fueled by presidenti­al tweets — around billions in subsidies for consumers’ insurance copays and deductible­s.

Beyond the urgent need to calm markets by providing clarity on subsidies, Democrat Sebelius and Republican­s Leavitt and Thompson differ on the direction Trump and Congress should take. They agree that Republican­s still have an opportunit­y to put their stamp on the Affordable Care Act, even if the drive to repeal and replace former President Barack Obama’s legacy program appears to have hit a dead end.

“They can make changes that signal a new ideologica­l direction without generating a logistical and political mess,” said Leavitt, who led HHS during former President George W. Bush’s second term. “They won the right to make changes. However, they should do it in a skillful way.”

Leavitt shepherded the Medicare prescripti­on drug benefit through its rocky rollout in 2006.

“Stabilizin­g the current situation can only — I think — be to their benefit,” Sebelius said of the Trump administra­tion. “In an environmen­t in which companies are enrolling customers, they’ve got a lot of time to actually go back to the drawing board and figure this out.”

Thompson urged a health care summit between Trump and congressio­nal leaders of both parties, followed by a period of legislativ­e work under a deadline to reach a truce in the battle over health care.

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