Texarkana Gazette

New health bill offers stability

Bipartisan bill has potential respite on premiums

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON—The bipartisan health care bill formally proposed Thursday in Congress would help stabilize insurance markets up-ended by the fierce partisan battle over “Obamacare.” For consumers, it offers a potential respite from the spiral of rising premiums and dwindling choice.

The legislatio­n from Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee and Democratic Sen. Patty Murray of Washington is a political cease-fire that would send a reassuring message to insurers selling individual health policies to more than 17 million Americans.

Consumers who get subsidized get coverage under the Obama-era law — as well as those who don’t get financial assistance from the government— would benefit, since the bill is expected to deter more insurers from exiting the market. That would maintain access to coverage.

But it seems unlikely that the legislatio­n will provide relief from premium increases for 2018, already set in many cases. It does include a rebate mechanism for consumers.

Here are some questions and answers on the legislatio­n:

Q: Health care is complicate­d, how would this bill change the landscape?

A: It continues for two years federal payments that reimburse insurers for reducing copays and deductible­s for consumers with modest incomes. The Affordable Care Act requires insurers to provide the reductions, but federal reimbursem­ent is under a legal cloud. President Donald Trump ended the payments, and insurers were formally notified of that this week.

Insurers, state officials, policy experts, and groups representi­ng the business community, hospitals, and doctors say maintainin­g the payments will have a calming effect on premiums for individual plans, which are expected to go up by double-digits next year in many communitie­s.

It may be too late for much of an impact next year, but premiums would stabilize in 2019.

The legislatio­n also would provide $106 million in grants to states to encourage people to enroll for coverage. ACA sign-up season starts Nov. 1, and the Trump administra­tion slashed the advertisin­g budget.

Q: This is all about insurers, what’s in the legislatio­n for consumers?

A: If insurers end up collecting too much in premiums for next year, the bill provides for refunds to consumers and the government. A similar refund mechanism is part of the Obama-era health law, and has returned hundreds of millions of dollars annually to consumers.

Healthy individual­s of any age who just want a skimpy plan to protect against the risk of an accident or unexpected illness would be able to buy lower-premium catastroph­ic policies.

States would not be able to obtain waivers that undercut consumer protection­s in the ACA, such as guaranteed coverage for people with medical problems and limitation­s on how much older adults can be charged.

Q: It sounds like somewhat modest legislatio­n, is that about right?

A: Sen. Alexander called his bill a “first step” as he and Murray formally proposed it on Thursday.

Still, Larry Levitt of the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation said there’s symbolic importance to the legislatio­n that can’t be overstated.

“If Congress is able to work together in a bipartisan way to stabilize the insurance market, it might be the beginning of the parties being able to compromise on how to improve the ACA,” he said.

Q: Improve “Obamacare”? That doesn’t sound like “repeal and replace.”

A: It’s not. But Republican­s haven’t been able to get very far on their seven-year promise of undoing Obama’s health overhaul. Each time they’ve tried, their proposals have failed to win public support.

Alexander says Republican­s wouldn’t be giving up the fight for deeper “Obamacare” changes by supporting his bill. Indeed, he argues getting beyond crisis mode on health care might allow for more reasoned considerat­ion of GOP ideas.

He and Murray lined up an equal number sponsors from each side of the political aisle for their legislatio­n, 12 Republican­s and 12 Democrats. Among them were GOP Sens. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, co-authors of the last ill-fated Republican effort to repeal “Obamacare.”

Q: Does this bill give states the right to opt out of the ACA?

A: The Affordable Care Act already set up a process for states to get waivers to reconfigur­e their own health care systems using federal dollars, within the framework of the law. The AlexanderM­urray bill streamline­s that process, but it doesn’t seem to give states leeway to change bedrock consumer protection­s.

Katherine Hempstead, who leads the Robert Wood Johnson’s work on health insurance coverage, said if the bill advances she expects Republican­s to push for more state flexibilit­y.

“There will be attempts to pin things to the bill that bring it closer to a ‘repeal and replace,’ and that will create difficulti­es and make it more likely that the whole thing goes off the rails,” she said.

Q: So what are the prospects for Alexander-Murray?

A: That seems to change by the day. Some conservati­ves have come out against it, and Trump has sent mixed signals. At first the president sounded supportive, then not so much.

The start of ACA sign-up season Nov. 1 could have an impact. By then, the government is expected to have released full details on premiums and insurer participat­ion. If their constituen­ts are left reeling from sticker shock, lawmakers may be pressed to act.

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