Insurers warn of rising premiums after
Trump axes Obamacare payments again
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[July 09, 2018]
By Amanda Becker and Carl O'Donnell
WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Health
insurers warned that a move by the Trump administration on Saturday to
temporarily suspend a program that was set to pay out $10.4 billion to
insurers for covering high-risk individuals last year could drive up
premium costs and create marketplace uncertainty.
The Affordable Care Act's (ACA) "risk adjustment" program is intended to
incentivize health insurers to cover individuals with pre-existing and
chronic conditions by collecting money from insurers with relatively
healthy enrollees to offset the costs of other insurers with sicker
ones.
President Donald Trump's administration has used its regulatory powers
to undermine the ACA on multiple fronts after the Republican-controlled
Congress last year failed to repeal and replace the law propelled by
Democratic President Barack Obama. About 20 million Americans have
received health insurance coverage through the program known as
Obamacare.
America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), a trade group representing
insurers offering plans via employers, through government programs and
in the individual marketplace, said the CMS suspension would create a
"new market disruption" at a "critical time" when insurers are setting
premiums for next year.
"It will create more market uncertainty and increase premiums for many
health plans - putting a heavier burden on small businesses and
consumers, and reducing coverage options. And costs for taxpayers will
rise as the federal government spends more on premium subsidies," AHIP
said in a statement.
It could also encourage more insurers to bow out of Obamacare.
"This is occurring right at the time of year that people (insurers) are
making decisions about whether to participate in the exchanges and what
premiums to charge if they do," said Eric Hillenbrand, a managing
director at consultancy AlixPartners. "This will affect their thinking
on both of those decisions."
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which administers
ACA programs, said on Saturday that months-old conflicting court rulings
related to the risk adjustment formula prevent them from making
payments.
CMS was referring to a February ruling from a federal court in New
Mexico that invalidated the risk adjustment formula, and a January
ruling from a federal court in Massachusetts that upheld it.
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A man fills out an information card during an Affordable Care Act
outreach event hosted by Planned Parenthood for the Latino community
in Los Angeles, California September 28, 2013. REUTERS/Jonathan
Alcorn/File Photo
CMS administrator Seema Verma said in a statement the administration
was "disappointed" in the February ruling and that CMS has asked the
court to reconsider and "hopes for a prompt resolution that allows
CMS to prevent more adverse impacts on Americans."
But supporters of the ACA criticized the CMS announcement as the
latest move by the Trump administration to undermine Obamacare.
"We urge the Trump administration to back off of this dangerous and
destabilizing plan, and instead begin working on bipartisan
solutions to make coverage more affordable," said Brad Woodhouse,
the executive director of Protect Our Care, a progressive group that
supports Obamacare.
The administration has made several other moves in recent years to
scale back or halt implementation of certain aspects of the ACA.
Late last year, it said it would halt so-called cost-sharing
payments, which offset some out-of-pocket healthcare costs for
low-income patients.
It has also scaled back the advertising budget for Obamacare
healthcare plans during the open-enrollment period by about 90
percent.
"What you are effectively doing is dismantling pieces of [the ACA]
without replacing them," Hillenbrand said. "It moves us back to some
extent to the status quo where people with pre-existing conditions
found it very difficult to get insurance."
(Additional reporting by Yasmeen Abutaleb in Washington; Editing by
Mary Milliken and James Dalgleish)
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