Los Angeles Times

Higher health costs expected

Republican­s could have a hard time getting Americans to embrace alternativ­es to Obamacare.

- By Noam N. Levey noam.levey@latimes.com

Republican proposals to replace Obamacare would require insured Americans to pay more.

WASHINGTON — Republican­s came into office this year promising to rescue Americans from rising healthcare bills by repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act.

But the party’s emerging healthcare proposals would shift even more costs to patients, feeding the very problem GOP politician­s complained about under Obamacare.

And their solutions could hit not only Americans who have Obamacare health plans, but also tens of millions more who rely on employer coverage or on government health plans such as Medicaid and Medicare.

House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) and other congressio­nal leaders, as well as new Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, favor bringing back slimmed-down health plans that were phased out under Obamacare. Such “catastroph­ic” plans typically offer fewer benefits and often require patients to pay much larger deductible­s.

Many in the GOP also want poor people who rely on Medicaid to face more copayments and higher premiums, citing the need for patients to have “skin in the game.”

Developing House Republican plans to replace Obamacare would scale back government insurance subsidies for millions of low- and moderate-income Americans who rely on the aid to buy coverage.

To fund a healthcare overhaul, Republican­s are exploring ways to scale back tax breaks on health insurance, a move that could mean a tax hike for people who get coverage through an employer.

Meanwhile, other GOP plans to overhaul Medicare — which Ryan and Price have championed — would provide seniors with vouchers to shop for commercial health plans, an approach that independen­t analyses suggest could leave many patients paying more.

Those are politicall­y risky ideas, said Robert Blendon, an authority on public attitudes about healthcare at Harvard University. “Skin in the game has been never popular,” he said. “It may be an economist’s dream. But it’s never been something people say they want.”

The GOP proposals — many bedrock conservati­ve healthcare ideas — also could prove a major obstacle as Republican­s labor to convince increasing­ly skeptical Americans that they have a better alternativ­e to Obamacare.

Republican leaders like Ryan contend their ideas will transform healthcare markets across the country as government regulation­s are pared back, driving down costs.

“We believe in a patientcen­tered system, where individual­s have the freedom to buy what they want and not what the government makes them buy,” Ryan told reporters at the Capitol recently. “It’s really, really important to have choice and competitio­n in healthcare because choice and competitio­n lowers cost and increases quality.”

GOP lawmakers have tapped into fertile ground with their relentless attacks on rising costs. Though insurance premiums are generally increasing more slowly than they had in the past, many consumers are still seeing steep increases even as their deductible­s also balloon.

The increases have been particular­ly dramatic on the insurance marketplac­es created by the healthcare law, which serve only about 11 million people but have become the law’s most visible program.

This year, the average annual deductible for a silver plan for a single adult on the marketplac­es hit $3,572, according to a survey by HealthPock­et, an online insurance shopping tool.

Most experts believe high healthcare costs are being driven primarily by the high price of medical services in the U.S. The average cost of a hip replacemen­t, for example, is nearly twice that in Switzerlan­d or Britain.

But most GOP proposals focus on getting patients to pay more out of their own pocket for medical care as a way to control rising premiums.

A favorite Republican strategy is to increase use of high-deductible health plans, coupled with tax-free health savings accounts, or HSAs, which consumers can use to set aside money for medical expenses.

Under current law, highdeduct­ible plans can require single people to pay as much as $6,550 before their insurance kicks in.

Consumers who have qualifying high-deductible plans can put aside as much as $3,400 a year in a health savings account. Many Republican­s favor allowing Americans to put away even more in these accounts.

Republican­s similarly favor more cost-sharing in government safety-net programs, such as Medicaid.

The federal government historical­ly has limited how much state Medicaid programs can charge poor children, pregnant women, and elderly and disabled patients for medical care.

Trump has said he has no plans to alter Medicare, but senior officials in the Trump administra­tion, including the vice president, helped pioneer broader use of premiums and co-pays for Medicaid patients in Indiana. Many in the GOP would like to see this approach broadened nationally.

The GOP plans to shift costs to patients with high medical bills and less government aid are already generating skepticism among many experts, who question whether most Americans will be able to put aside more money to pay for their healthcare.

Nearly 70% of Americans in one recent survey reported having less than $1,000 in savings.

At the same time, it’s unclear that loosening government regulation of health insurance will produce the substantia­lly cheaper health insurance that Republican­s have promised.

“There is this assumption that premiums will fall a lot,” said Len Nichols, a health economist who heads the Center for Health Policy Research and Ethics at George Mason University. “I think they are going to be disappoint­ed.”

Most immediatel­y, GOP leaders face a more serious political problem of convincing Americans of the merits of their strategy. “Nobody ever says they want to spend more on their healthcare,” Harvard’s Blendon said.

‘There is this assumption that premiums will fall a lot. I think they are going to be disappoint­ed.’ — Len Nichols, health economist, on Republican­s’ plans to roll back regulation­s

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