Trump
administration issues rule further watering down
Obamacare
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[April 10, 2018] WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - The Trump administration took additional steps to weaken
Obamacare on Monday, allowing U.S. states to relax the rules on what
insurers must cover and giving states more power to regulate their
individual insurance markets.
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The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued a final rule
that allows states to select essential health benefits that must be
covered by individual insurance plans sold under former President
Barack Obama's healthcare law. The 2010 Affordable Care Act requires
coverage of 10 benefits, including maternity and newborn care and
prescription drugs. Under the new rule, states can select from a
much larger list which benefits insurers must cover.
That could lead to less generous coverage in some states, according
to Avalere Health, a research and consulting firm.
President Donald Trump's administration has used its regulatory
power to undermine Obamacare after the Republican-controlled
Congress last year failed to repeal and replace the law. About 20
million people have received health insurance coverage through the
program.
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The new CMS rule also allows states the possibility of modifying the
medical loss ratio (MLR) formula, the amount an insurer spends on
medical claims compared with income from premiums that is also a key
performance metric. A state can request "reasonable adjustments" to
the medical loss ratio standard if it shows that it could help
stabilize its individual market.
Insurers could also have an easier time raising their rates under
the new rule. Obamacare mandated that premium rate increases of 10
percent or more in the individual market be scrutinized by state
regulators to ensure that they are necessary and reasonable. The new
CMS rule raises that threshold to 15 percent.
(Reporting By Yasmeen Abutaleb; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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