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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, May 31 2017

Full Issue

Dirt-Cheap 'Junk Insurance' Plans, Wiped Out By ACA, Could Reappear Under GOP Health Bill

The Congressional Budget Office says the plans are so low-quality that it considers people who have them to be uninsured. In other news on the Republican health care plan, former patients speak out against the high-risk pools central to the legislation, Democrats criticize the Medicaid cuts they say will hurt rural Americans and a look at preexisting condition coverage.

McClatchy: Obamacare Repeal Legislation Could Bring "Junk Insurance" To Millions 

If certain parts of the House Republican health care bill become law, states that opt out of Obamacare protections could see an explosion of “junk insurance” in their individual markets – which could leave millions of people with very little coverage. Such plans often can be dirt-cheap, but they offer so few benefits that the recent Congressional Budget Office score on the Republicans’ American Health Care Act said such coverage basically amounted to no coverage at all. (Pugh, 5/30)

KCUR: Former Patients Wary As Republicans Tout Risk Pools In New Health Plan 

Back when insurance companies could still deny coverage to people with pre-existing conditions, 35 states, including Missouri, had a public plan to subsidize people who couldn’t buy coverage anywhere else: the high-risk pool. Often expensive and underfunded, the programs were phased out by the Affordable Care Act, which forbids insurance companies from denying coverage or charging higher premiums to individuals based on their health status. The Republican’s plan to repeal major parts of the ACA chips away at these rules. (Bouscaren, 5/31)

McClatchy: Democrats Say They’ll Protect Rural Americans From AHCA Medicaid Cuts

As the Senate works to craft its own version of the House GOP’s American Health Care Act and polls show increasing skepticism about the Republicans’ plan, some Democrats continue to highlight the pain they say the legislation would cause rural Americans, including more than half a million Pennsylvanians living on Medicaid. Nearly 1 of out of every 5 rural Pennsylvanians uses Medicaid following the program’s expansion under the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare. (Maake, 5/30)

The Fiscal Times: The $6 Trillion Health Care Blow Out Over Pre-Existing Conditions 

Nearly 60 percent of the population – or 190 million Americans – suffer from one or more chronic diseases, and they are creating a major drain on the U.S. healthcare system, according to new research. If current trends continue unabated, the cost of treating people with multiple chronic problems will total more than a staggering $42 trillion between now and 2030. (Pianin, 5/30)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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