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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Jul 22 2019

Full Issue

Federal Judge Rules 'Undeniable' Benefits Of Expanding Short-Term Plans Outweigh 'Minimal' Negative Impact

The Trump administration issued a regulation last year allowing short-term health care plans to last up to 12 months instead of three. The plans don't have to adhere to the health law's strict regulations, so critics blast them as being "junk insurance." U.S. District Judge Richard Leon, however, ruled that the plans aims to "minimize the harm and expense" for individuals who might otherwise decide not to purchase insurance because of high premiums.

The Wall Street Journal: Judge Backs Non-ACA-Compliant Short-Term Health Plans

The Trump administration can continue to move ahead with its expansion of certain health plans that don’t comply with the Affordable Care Act, under a decision Friday by a federal judge. The ruling in Washington by U.S. District Judge Richard Leon dismissed a lawsuit by a plaintiff who had argued a Trump administration expansion of the so-called short-term health plans undermined the ACA. The plans are generally lower priced but can deny coverage based on consumers’ pre-existing health conditions. They also don’t have to cover the same benefits as ACA-compliant plans. (Armour, 7/19)

The Hill: Federal Judge Upholds Trump's Expansion Of Non-ObamaCare Plans

"Not only is any potential negative impact from the 2018 rule minimal, but its benefits are undeniable," Leon wrote about the regulations. The plans aims to "minimize the harm and expense" for individuals who might otherwise decide not to purchase insurance because of high premiums, Leon added.  (Hellmann, 7/19)

Modern Healthcare: Judge OKs Trump's Expansion Of Short-Term Plans

He said Congress' effective axing of Obamacare's individual mandate penalty for the uninsured makes the option for cheaper plans more desirable, since more people would likely forgo insurance rather than pay for expensive premiums in the Affordable Care Act's exchanges. Leon acknowledged that the ACA established "interdependent" reforms designed to work together throughout the individual market. But he also pointed out that the law exempted many types of health insurance and grandfathered in certain state-specific risk pools. (Luthi, 7/19)

CNN: Obamacare Alternative Upheld By Federal Judge

The ruling represents a win for the administration, which recently has suffered a string of setbacks in court over its efforts to chip away at the Affordable Care Act and to reduce health care costs. Short-term plans, which have been available for years and were originally designed to fill a temporary gap in coverage, are typically cheaper than Obamacare policies. But that's because they are allowed to exclude those with pre-existing conditions and base rates on an applicant's medical history, unlike Obamacare plans. (Luhby, 7/19)

Bloomberg: Trump Win On Health Plans Advances Effort To Undo Obamacare

One of the plaintiffs, the Association for Community Affiliated Plans, said it plans to appeal the ruling. “We think this is arbitrary and capricious on the part of the administration, and that it does not comply with Congress’s intent in the Affordable Care Act,” said Meg Murray, chief executive officer of ACAP, which represents nonprofit safety-net health plans. (Harris and Tozzi, 7/19)

CQ: Federal Judge Upholds Trump's Short-Term Health Plan Rule

The development came after other courts struck down several Trump administration health policy actions. Those include expanding association health plans that do not have to comply with the 2010 law, requiring some Medicaid enrollees to work and, most recently, telling pharmaceutical companies to include the list prices of certain drugs in television advertisements. (McIntire, 7/19)

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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