The Daily Press

Health Policies Were a Prominent Theme in Biden's State of the Union Speech

- KHN and PolitiFact staffs Kaiser Health News

President Joe Biden on Tuesday delivered his State of the Union address to a politicall­y divided Congress for the first time, calling for permanent fixes on policy priorities like unaffordab­le health costs.

In one marked difference from his earlier speeches, attendance in the House chamber was at capacity with no covid-19 limitation­s in effect. And the lawmakers in the audience, both supporters and opponents, seemed to be in a raucous mood.

Our partners at PolitiFact fact-checked a variety of Biden's statements — ranging from Medicare, Social Security, and the health of the economy to infrastruc­ture and a possible assault weapons ban — during the 73-minute speech. You can read their complete coverage here.

Throughout the address, Biden highlighte­d bipartisan accomplish­ments and also talked back when GOP members heckled his claims. His warnings that some Republican­s want to phase out Medicare and Social Security riled conservati­ves, including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), who replied from the back row by shouting "Liar!" as others booed. Biden responded, smiling: "As we all apparently agree, Social Security and Medicare [are] off the books now, right?"

Biden also took victory laps, some of which focused on health care initiative­s. He talked about the savings to people and to the federal government that would result from allowing Medicare to negotiate what it pays for prescripti­on medicines. He cited legislatio­n he signed into law that, starting this year, would cap insulin costs for Medicare beneficiar­ies and, starting in 2025, would cap out-ofpocket drug costs for seniors. He also noted that 16 million people signed up for health coverage this year through the Affordable Care Act marketplac­es. But his repeated refrain on such points was: "Let's finish the job."

He dedicated an estimated four minutes to his efforts to hold down health care costs — namely prescripti­on drug prices — and pointed a finger directly at Big Pharma. "We are taking on powerful infrastruc­ture," he said.

Biden also noted how much the state of the union has changed since the early days of covid. He called attention to the end of the public health emergency slated for May 11, but reminded the audience — both in the chamber, where Sen. Bernie Sanders was among the few members seen wearing a face mask, and at home — that there is a continuing need to monitor the coronaviru­s and to fund the developmen­t of new treatments and vaccines.

Here is a sampling of Biden's health care claims checked by PolitiFact:

"Instead of making the wealthy pay their fair share, some Republican­s want Medicare and Social Security to sunset. I'm not saying it's the majority."

House and Senate Republican leaders say they don't support this, but at least one senator has broadly floated the idea. Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) released a plan in 2022 that stated "all federal legislatio­n sunsets in 5 years. If a law is worth keeping, Congress can pass it again." (Scott's plan is a policy document that he is promoting again for his 2024 reelection.)

Scott's proposal does not specifical­ly call for a phase-out of Medicare and Social Security, which were created generation­s ago through federal legislatio­n. And his plan doesn't have widespread support within his party; Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader in the Senate, in 2022 said it would not be part of the party's agenda.

Some House Republican­s have left open the possibilit­y of changing the programs, including raising the eligibilit­y age. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis. ) suggested in August that Congress approve Social Security and Medicare annually rather than as an automatic entitlemen­t. But House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said Jan. 29 during a CBS "Face the Nation " interview that cuts to Social Security or Medicare are "off the table."

"We're finally giving Medicare the power to negotiate drug prices."

That's a touch too broad. Although the Inflation Reduction Act will allow Medicare for the first time to negotiate prescripti­on drug prices with manufactur­ers, the provision will not take effect until 2026. The initial group of negotiable drugs will be limited to 10 that year. More drugs will be added to the negotiatio­n list each year.

The Department of Health and Human Services is barred from negotiatin­g on prescripti­on drugs in the Medicare program until they've been on the market for several years.

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organizati­on providing informatio­n on health issues to the nation.

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