Trump
administration issues final rule on stricter Obamacare
enrollment
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[April 14, 2017] By
Yasmeen Abutaleb
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration on Thursday issued a final rule that will shorten the
Obamacare enrollment period and give insurers more of what they say they
need in the individual insurance market, likely making it harder for
some consumers to purchase insurance, healthcare experts said.
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It could also raise out-of-pocket medical expenses, the experts
said, because it gives insurers more flexibility in determining the
value of their coverage.
The rule, which takes effect later this year, comes as President
Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress have renewed efforts to
repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as
Obamacare, after an effort to pass a bill in the U.S. House of
Representatives failed last month.
Issued by a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services and first proposed in February, the rule aims to aid
insurers, who have lost hundreds of millions of dollars in the
individual insurance markets set up by Obamacare. Several major
insurers, including Humana Inc and Aetna Inc, have announced plans
to exit some state exchanges in 2018.
Insurers welcomed the rule but said there is still too much
uncertainty in the market. On Wednesday, Trump told the Wall Street
Journal that he may withhold Obamacare payments to insurers that
amount to about $7 billion a year to force Democrats back to the
negotiating table.
Marilyn Tavenner, president and chief executive of America's Health
Insurance Plans, said in a statement that funding for the payments
must continue uninterrupted. Otherwise, she said premiums will rise
20 percent across the market and more insurers would drop out of the
exchanges.
The changes under Thursday's final rule include a shortened open
enrollment period for Obamacare plans. They also make it harder for
people to enroll outside that period, which is allowed under certain
circumstances such as a pregnancy or a move.
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The rule could also allow insurers to collect unpaid premium
payments and make it tougher for people to move in and out of
insurance plans, according to healthcare industry experts.
Insurers say "gaming the system" has created an unprofitable mix of
healthy and sick customers.
The rule also gives states broader authority by removing the federal
government's role in overseeing doctor and hospital networks
included in insurance plans. Republicans have said any healthcare
reform or overhaul must give states more flexibility.
The Affordable Care Act enabled 20 million Americans to gain
insurance, mostly through the individual insurance markets set up by
the law or through an expansion of Medicaid, the government health
insurance program for the poor and disabled.
(Reporting by Yasmeen Abutaleb; Editing by Tom Brown)
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