Trump promised to repeal Obamacare. Now
what?
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[November 10, 2016]
By Caroline Humer
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Republican
President-elect Donald Trump vowed on the campaign trail to repeal
Obamacare, but making good on that promise may be easier said than done.
President Barack Obama's 2010 national healthcare reform law extended
medical insurance to 25 million more people by expanding the Medicaid
plan for the poor and creating subsidized coverage for individuals.
Republican lawmakers, who have voted more than 50 times to repeal all or
part of the law, have begun pressing Trump to deliver. Senate Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell said on Wednesday repealing Obamacare is a
"pretty high item on our agenda" for the new Congress.[nL1N1DA2ZE]
But a complete repeal of Obama's Affordable Care Act may not be
immediately in the cards, as Republican lawmakers now hold 51 seats in
the Senate at latest count, well short of the 60 seats required to
overturn it.
Instead, health policy experts said, Trump could try to dismantle key
elements through a process called budget reconciliation. That would
allow him to eliminate funding for the income-based subsidies that make
the new insurance plans affordable, or cut the money providing expanded
Medicaid benefits in 31 states.
"Some of the policy experts on the Republican side would say tearing it
up and starting over would be very disruptive," said Paul Howard,
director of health policy at the conservative Manhattan Institute.
Parts of the law have been weakened through legal challenges. Several of
the largest U.S. health insurers have pulled out of the exchanges for
individual coverage after losing money on a sicker-than-expected group
of patients. Consumers not eligible for government subsidies have seen
premiums rise sharply, including a projected average increase of 25
percent for 2017.
Scrapping the law altogether without a clear plan for providing
replacement coverage for so many people would be politically risky,
experts said.
Trump also would face a tight deadline were he to try to dismantle the
insurance exchanges by 2018; many state-based health insurance
regulators require insurers to submit plans for the upcoming year by
April or May - only a few months into a new administration.
Trump also could seek changes to other provisions of the law, such as a
tax on medical device makers, or the so-called "Cadillac tax" that is
due to hit rich employer-based healthcare plans in 2020.
However, some elements could not be eliminated by depriving the law of
funds. For instance, the law prevents insurers from denying coverage to
people based on their health or pricing insurance based on gender.
Mandatory coverage of preventive benefits also would be unaffected -
short of a complete repeal.
It also is not clear if Trump would try to reverse the individual
mandate, which requires people to purchase health insurance or pay a
penalty. The goal of the requirement was to broaden the pool of
policyholders to include more healthy Americans.
SOWING CONFUSION OVER HEALTHCARE
Trump's surprise victory over Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton
rattled healthcare investors on Wednesday, depressing shares in hospital
operators and some insurers.
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Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump arrives for his
election night rally at the New York Hilton Midtown in Manhattan,
New York, U.S., November 9, 2016. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Medicaid focused health insurer Molina Healthcare Inc. fell nearly
16 percent, and hospital chain Tenet Healthcare Corp dropped 25
percent. Large insurers, who have been losing money on the
exchanges, gained, with Anthem Inc. up 1.5 percent.
Enrollment opened on Nov. 1 for 2017 coverage and once those plans
are purchased, it would be legally difficult for Trump to cancel
them before the one-year contracts run out, said Molina Healthcare
Chief Executive Officer Dr. Mario Molina.
"Any changes they make will have to be on a prospective basis to
begin in 2018," Molina said.
It's not clear what Trump's plan to replace Obamacare would look
like. Options he raised on the campaign trail include replacing the
Obamacare individual coverage with high-deductible healthcare plans,
and lumping the sickest people together into high-risk pools that
are insured separately.
"I think there is going to be a lot of confusion and a lot of
anxious people," Molina said.
Among the worries for some people covered under Obamacare is how
long it will last.
Before the law took effect, Marc Dobin, a 57-year old mediator and
lawyer in Jupiter, Florida, said his insurer put a surcharge on his
premium because he has heart stents. Under Obamacare, insurers are
barred from charging more for pre-existing conditions.
"Imagine the disaster if, part way through the year, they cancel
it," Dobin said.
For others, the cost of premiums bolstered their support for Trump.
Crista Simmons, 63, a piano teacher in Kalamazoo, Michigan, spends
about a third of her gross income on premiums and medical care.
"There are people who pay more in premiums than their mortgage," she
said.
(Reporting by Caroline Humer, additional reporting by Sue Horton;
Editing by Michele Gershberg and Lisa Girion)
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