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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Jan 25 2018

Full Issue

Idaho Invites Insurers To Sell Plans That Don't Adhere To ACA's Rules, In Move Experts Call Legally Dubious

Under Idaho's guidelines, insurers can offer plans that deny coverage for pre-existing conditions for up to 12 months unless the customer had continuous prior coverage. And insurers would no longer be required to cover pediatric dental or vision care, and though they would have to offer at least one plan with maternity and newborn coverage, other plans could exclude those benefits.

The Associated Press: Idaho Says No Obamacare Needed For Some New Insurance Plans

Concerned about soaring health care costs, Idaho on Wednesday revealed a plan that will allow insurance companies to sell cheap policies that ditch key provisions of the Affordable Care Act. It's believed to be the first state to take formal steps without prior federal approval for creating policies that do not comply with the Obama-era health care law. Health care experts say the move is legally dubious, a concern supported by internal records obtained by The Associated Press. (Boone, 1/24)

In other health law news —

The Washington Post: Trump Administration Seeks New Ways To Allow People To Dodge Obamacare’s Individual Mandate

The Trump administration is exploring ways to excuse more Americans from the requirement that they prove they’re insured in the remaining months before the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate is laid to rest. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is working on guidance expanding the “hardship” exemptions from the 2010 health-care law’s mandate that people purchase health plans, according to two people familiar with the effort. Agency officials haven’t yet finalized the guidance, but aim to increase the number of reasons people could cite as justifications for not showing they’re insured when they file their tax returns. (Winfield Cunningham and Eilperin, 1/24)

Politico Pro: Pro-Obamacare Forces Pivot To Midterm Elections

Democrats and activists fought off Obamacare repeal last year by stoking public outrage and stirring protests. Now they want to make the health law the defining issue in 2018 races at the congressional, state and local levels. The grassroots groups at the forefront of the Obamacare fight are expanding their focus to rally opposition to virtually all Republican efforts to alter the health care system, hoping to capitalize on the backlash to repeal and turn it into a wave of victories come November. (Cancryn, 1/24)

The Hill: Cruz Pushes To Revisit ObamaCare Repeal This Year 

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) said Wednesday that he is pushing to revisit the repeal of ObamaCare this year. Cruz told reporters that he thinks GOP leadership is interested "if we can get 50 votes." "We have to bring the conference together to be able to move forward," he added. (Sullivan, 1/24)

Boston Globe: Study Finds Affordable Care Act Resulted In Better Surgical Care

Harvard researchers have found that the Affordable Care Act was linked to better access to surgery and higher quality care, the university said. ... The study, which was published Wednesday in JAMA Surgery, looked at five years of data from nearly 300,000 patients in 42 states who were admitted to the hospital for five common surgical conditions, such as appendicitis, diverticulitis, or gallbladder inflammation. (Finucane, 1/24)

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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