Kamis, 10 November 2016

Despite Republican pledges, 'repealing Obamacare' will be almost impossible — but it could be vandalized - Los Angeles Times

The promise to "repeal and replace" the Affordable Care Act[1] has been a staple of the Republican Party platform virtually since the law's enactment in 2010.

Now it looks like it might happen. President-elect Donald Trump[2] picked up the theme in his campaign, promising "on Day One of the T rump administration" to "ask Congress[3] to immediately deliver a full repeal of Obamacare[4]." He pledged to supplant it with "something terrific."

This promise is about to come face-to-face with reality. Repealing many Obamacare provisions isn't possible without the assent of congressional Democrats[5]. Perhaps more important, dismantling key elements of the law risks leaving the U.S. healthcare system in chaos — certainly in worse shape than it was even before the Affordable Care Act was passed. As my colleague David Lazarus observes[6], at stake is coverage for approximately 20 million Americans and the cost of coverage for many more.

Starting in January, when it assumes control of the White House and both chambers of Congress, the GOP will be "it" on healthcare. The party will own every change made to the law and take the blame for every consequence of its actions, so it will be well-advised to tread carefully.  

Trump on Thursday took a shot at putting meat on the bones of his "something terrific" pledge, posting a healthcare policy outline[7] on his president-elect website. Interestingly, the outline replaces the "Day One" promise with a commitment to "work with Congress to repeal the ACA and replace it," which sounds like a longer timeline.

The outline includes several traditional GOP shibboleths, such as returning "the historic role in regulating health insurance to the states" (though under the ACA, they still have considerable authority); expanding the availability of tax-exempt health savings accounts, a provision that benefits the rich and is virtually worthless to l ow-income households that don't pay much federal income tax; and allowing the sale of policies across state lines, which would launch a race to the bottom as insurers established themselves in states with the most minimal consumer protections. 

Trump also put in a pitch for reestablishing high-risk pools, public insurers which would enroll customers with especially costly healthcare needs. Trump called this "a proven approach to ensuring access to health insurance coverage for individuals who have significant medical expenses and who have not maintained continuous coverage." 

The truth is almost exactly the opposite. As we explained in April[8], when high-risk pools were being promoted by House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), the only thing these pools have been proven to be in the 35 states that tried them before the ACA is a failure. The pools were never adequately funded, which prompted states either to place caps on enrollments or saddle members with sky-high, unaffordable premiums. 

Conservative economist James Capretta estimated in 2010[9] that a high-risk program would need $15 billion to $20 billion a year to cover 4 million enrollees -- and he was in favor of the idea. What are the chances that such a program would succeed in the budget-cutting environment sure to prevai l under a Trump White House and GOP Congress?

Trump also tosses in pledges to protect "human life from conception to natural death," which doesn't sound good for abortion rights or end-of-life planning, and to "modernize Medicare[10]," which sounds like a warning for seniors to hold on to their wallets.

Many provisions of the Affordable Care Act are better appreciated by the public than GOP rhetoric would have one believe. Repealing them won't necessarily be a crowd-pleaser. Jeffrey Young of the Huffington Post[11] points to Kentucky, where right-winger Matt Bevin rode into the governor's mansion on a platform of unadorned Obamacare hate and a promise to dismantle it, root and branch.

The problem is that Obamacare had worked spectacularly well in Kentucky, reducing its uninsured rate to 7.5%, from 20.4%, thanks to Medicaid[12] expansion and an efficient state-run exchange, Kynect. The law's provisions were broadly popular, even if Obamacare's image was wi dely abominated.  

Republicans "made the public think Obamacare caused all the trouble," former Medicare official Don Berwick[14] told Kaiser Health News. "That's absolutely wrong. They could repeal it tomorrow and costs would continue to go up." If the GOP executes broad changes in the law but can't quell the cost trends, it will be blamed for the failure.

More than political risk stands in the way. Numerous provisions of the Affordable Care Act are subject to filibuster in the Senate, which the GOP doesn't have 60 votes to avoid. According to healthcare expert Timothy Jost, an emeritus law professor at Washington and Lee University, those may be safe from repeal[15]. As it happens, they include many consumer-protection reforms that are very popular, including the ban on exclusions or higher premiums for preexisting conditions, and caps on annual and lifetime benefits. 

Politically safe, probably: The ban on exclusions for pre-existing conditions, though Republicans may impose a condition requiring continuous coverage, that is, no lapse in coverage for some period of time. This could be legislated, but leaves open the question of how to care for those who drop coverage temporarily because of economic reversals. Also probably safe: The right to keep children on parents' employer plans up to the age of 26, and bans on annual and lifetime benefit limits.

Legislative limbo: The Child Health Insurance Program, or CHIP, comes up for reauthorization next year. The program covers about 8 million children in low-income households who would lose their benefits if the program is allowed to die. But CHIP is associated with Hilla ry Clinton[21], who is widely credited with a "pivotal" role[22] in its creation. If Trump and the Republicans really want to draw a sharp line between them and Clinton, this is the place to do it — with 8 million kids as collateral damage.

So, good luck, GOP. Until now, the party has not paid serious attention to the U.S. healthcare system and all its ills, because it chose the course of sniping from the sidelines and obstructing problem-solving efforts by federal agencies. Now it is the government, and the risks and rewards of healthcare policy are in its possession. Republicans could make things better by careful policymaking, or immeasurably worse by maintaining its ideological opposition to "Obamacare" without thinking too hard about the consequences. Let's see how they do.

Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm[23] on Twitter, see his Facebook page[24], or email michael.hiltzik@latimes.com[25].< /p>

Return to Michael Hiltzik's blog.[26]

ALSO

A primer on executive power: What Trump can and can't do[27]

Fear of a Trump-triggered rece ssion gives way to hope for short-term economic boost[28]

After Trump's win, even some in Silicon Valley wonder: Has Facebook grown too influential?[29]


UPDATES:

2:36 p.m.: This post has been updated with details from the Trump Administration's healthcare website.

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