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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, Jan 26 2018

Full Issue

States Becoming Battleground For Health Law As Some Seek To Bolster It While Others Unravel It Further

Blue states are taking steps to protect certain guarantees created under the health law to protect patients, while Idaho just told insurers they don't need to follow some of the regulations stipulated through the Affordable Care Act.

Stateline: As Trump Attacks The Federal Health Law, Some States Try To Shore It Up

This year, a handful of Democratic-led states are gearing up to curb further rate hikes by enacting laws and adopting insurance regulations designed to shore up the traditional insurance industry and restore parts of the ACA, known as Obamacare. At the same time, at least one Republican-leaning state has moved to further unravel the federal health law by encouraging insurance companies to offer cheap policies with fewer benefits. Others are expected to follow. (Vestal, 1/26)

The Hill: Idaho Seeks To Roll Back ObamaCare Insurance Protections 

Idaho officials will allow insurers in the state to sell health plans that don’t comply with rules set up under ObamaCare — a move that could test how committed the Trump administration is to enforcing the law. Under the new guidelines, insurers will be allowed to offer “state-based plans” to consumers that won’t be required to meet some of the basic rules of ObamaCare plans, such as the essential health benefits that plans must cover. (Weixel, 1/25)

The Wall Street Journal: Idaho To Allow New Insurance Plans Outside Of Federal Health Law

In a bulletin issued Wednesday, the Idaho Department of Insurance said that it would allow insurers in the state to begin offering “state-based plans” to consumers. These products could leave out some of the benefits mandated by the ACA for individual coverage. Insurers would be able to consider enrollees’ medical history in setting their premiums, a practice known as underwriting, which isn’t authorized under the ACA. The new state-based plans could also include dollar limits on total benefit payouts, which the ACA banned. (Wilde Mathews, 1/25)

Meanwhile, on Capitol Hill —

The Hill: Warren: Time To 'Go On Offense' On Health Care 

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on Thursday said it was time to go on “offense” on health care after a year of defending ObamaCare against repeal efforts. In a speech to a conference hosted by Families USA, a leading liberal health-care advocacy group, Warren laid out a range of ways to build on the Affordable Care Act, and attacked health insurance companies for how they treat consumers. (Sullivan, 1/25)

Modern Healthcare: Rival Reinsurance Provisions Gain Steam In Congress 

GOP leaders from both chambers of Congress want reinsurance. But they want it in different ways. And with two different Republican measures on the table, each handling the mechanics differently, the big question is: Which one will win out if congressional Republicans go through with their plan to address stabilization in an upcoming spending bill. The GOP-only House iteration sponsored by Rep. Ryan Costello (R-Pa.) allocates $30 billion over three years at the full discretion of the HHS secretary.  It would also consolidate a federal reinsurance program as the House GOP leadership tried to do through their failed attempt to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. It also includes retroactive funding of cost-sharing reduction payments for the rest of 2017 and future funding for 2019. (Luthi, 1/25)

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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