How one U.S. state is leading the charge
to dismantle Obamacare
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[May 06, 2017]
By Yasmeen Abutaleb and Robin Respaut
FRANKFORT, Ky./SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -
For nearly three years, Democrats and former President Barack Obama
pointed to Kentucky as one of the Affordable Care Act’s biggest success
stories.
A poor, rural state that straddles the North and South, Kentucky was an
early adopter of the healthcare law commonly known as Obamacare and saw
one of the country’s largest drops in the uninsured rate.
Now Kentucky is poised for a new distinction: to be the first state to
save money by reducing the number of people on Medicaid, the government
health insurance program for the poor and disabled and a central tenet
of Obamacare.
If successful, Kentucky would provide a roadmap for other states who are
worried about paying an increasing share for people on Medicaid.
A new Republican health law that passed the U.S. House of
Representatives on Thursday, along with state initiatives like
Kentucky's, would dramatically change the national healthcare system and
cut more than $800 billion from Medicaid over the next 10 years.
The Republican bill still faces a long road ahead in the U.S. Senate and
its final passage is far from assured, making initiatives like
Kentucky's all the more important.
Kentucky has proposed to lessen its financial burden before it grows by
reducing the number of residents on Medicaid by nearly 86,000 within
five years, saving more than $330 million in the process. (For a graphic
click http://tmsnrt.rs/2on0HVK)
Kentucky's plan also calls for new work requirements for able-bodied
adults to get insurance. Plus, it would establish new fees for all
members based on income and lock out some people who miss a payment or
fail to re-enroll.
By following these proposed rules, Kentucky believes Medicaid enrollees
will over time graduate from Medicaid to private and employer insurance
plans.
“One of the most remarkable lies that has perpetrated in recent years in
the healthcare community in America is that expanded Medicaid was
working well in Kentucky,” Republican Governor Matt Bevin, who is
leading the state effort, told Reuters from the governor’s mansion in
Frankfort, Kentucky.
That view is in line with President Donald Trump’s administration, which
has criticized Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion and urged states to pursue
similar Medicaid reforms to what Kentucky is now attempting.
"If Kentucky is successful, you’ll see this spread through the more
conservative-leaning states. It’s possible even a Democratic blue state
could do it,” said George Huang, director and senior municipal
healthcare research analyst at Wells Fargo Securities. “It’s the
flexibility that some states are seeking.”
INSURING THE POOR AT A PRICE
Kentucky, a state Trump won handily last November, has been devastated
by the loss of coal mining jobs and an opioid epidemic. The state sits
near the bottom of health rankings for smoking rates, cancer deaths and
diabetes.
“To me, morally, it was the right thing to expand Medicaid, but I had a
responsibility to not to do something that would bankrupt the state,”
said former Governor Steve Beshear, a Democrat, referring to the
increased costs of caring for a larger population with Medicaid
insurance.
More than 30 states, about a dozen of which are led by Republican
governors, expanded Medicaid under Obamacare. In Kentucky, more than
400,000 people gained health insurance through the program, the highest
growth rate of Medicaid coverage of any state.
Beshear commissioned independent studies by PricewaterhouseCoopers and
Deloitte on the financial and health impacts of expanding Medicaid. Both
studies found health and economic gains. Deloitte reported that 90,000
newly covered residents received cholesterol screening and 80,000 got
preventative dental care within a year. It estimated Kentucky would see
an economic boost of $30 billion and 40,000 new jobs by 2021.
Beshear’s successor, Republican Governor Bevin, was elected in 2015 on a
promise to repeal and replace the healthcare law on the view that
thousands of Kentuckians had unaffordable premiums and only one health
insurer to choose from.
He dismissed the projections in the Beshear-commissioned studies as
“preposterous,” and says the state’s share of expanded Medicaid - $74
million in 2017 and totaling $1.2 billion over five years - was too
expensive and unsustainable.
[to top of second column] |
Vice President Mike Pence, sitting with Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin
(L), discusses the American Health Care Act during a meeting with
local business leaders at the Harshaw-Trane Parts and Distribution
Center in Louisville, Kentucky, U.S. on March 11, 2017.
REUTERS/Bryan Woolston/File Photo
“We want this to be a helping hand for people at a time when they
need it, but then be able to return to the commercial marketplace,”
Bevin said.
Last year, Bevin submitted the waiver to restrict Medicaid
eligibility by requiring enrollees to work or volunteer at least 20
hours per week and to pay monthly premiums based on income. He's
still awaiting approval.
Bevin said he has spoken with several governors about the waiver and
has had extensive conversations with Health and Human Services
Secretary Tom Price about fast-tracking the approval process in
order for other states to quickly adopt similar programs. Such
conversations are occurring across the country in response to
encouragement from the new administration to reform state Medicaid
programs, said Alleigh Marre, a Health and Human Services
spokeswoman.
Louisiana and Wisconsin are considering work requirements for
Medicaid enrollees. The Obama administration rejected previous
attempts by other states, including Ohio and Arizona, to require
work programs and monthly premiums for Medicaid, historically a free
program for those eligible.
"Every state is watching this to see what happens,” said Bevin of
Kentucky’s waiver. “It’s the first one in the queue.”
SIGNS POINT TO “YES” FOR KENTUCKY WAIVER
The odds look good for Kentucky to get the waiver in the coming
months, based on the track records of health officials that Trump
named after his inauguration.
Seema Verma, the new head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, which approves Medicaid waivers, said during congressional
testimony that the agency will usher in “a new era of state
flexibility and leadership.”
Verma helped craft Kentucky’s waiver, but said she will recuse
herself from the approval process to avoid conflicts of interest.
She and Tom Price wrote a letter to governors in March encouraging
Medicaid reforms that more closely resemble commercial insurance
plans. In the letter, they suggested features such as premium fees,
health savings accounts, and emergency room co-payments that
encourage the use of primary care.
CMS declined to comment on Kentucky’s waiver and said it does not
speculate on the process while ongoing.
Under federal law, waivers must promote Medicaid’s objective of
delivering healthcare services to vulnerable populations who cannot
otherwise afford them.
“Waivers have never been used to cut people from the rolls,” said
Emily Parento, associate professor at the University of the
Pacific’s law school and the former executive director of Kentucky’s
Office of Health Policy.
But Verma’s office is encouraging changes to Medicaid that make the
government program look more like private insurance policies - goals
that are similar to Bevin’s in Kentucky.
“I think what will happen is that other states will look at it and
go, ‘We want everything they got,’” Bevin said.
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
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