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Health premiums to leap for many Californians under GOP plan

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Health insurance premiums would leap substantially for many Californians, especially lower-income people living in high-cost cities, under the House Republican plan to replace Obamacare, according to an analysis released Tuesday.

Californians purchasing insurance through the state’s Obamacare program... Reported by L.A. Times 6 hours ago.

Ryancare's Fatal Logical Flaw

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Ryancare's Fatal Logical Flaw Authored by Hunter Lewis via The Mises Institute,

The Congressional Budget office yesterday reported that 24 million people would lose health insurance coverage under the Ryancare bill. *Mainstream Republicans were not pleased to hear that.*

But let’s look at this figure a bit more closely. When we do, it becomes apparent that* the Republicans have created their own problem*. They are *trying to keep Obama’s definition of healthcare policies while repealing Obamacare.* That is not only an exercise in illogic.* It is an exercise in futility.*

*The problem here is obvious.*

Ryancare keeps a one-size-fits-all definition of health insurance, a policy that includes all but the kitchen sink, for example, mandating pregnancy benefits for single men and retired couples. If you keep government in the business of mandating every detail of the health insurance policy, that is what you get: a swollen policy that nobody wants and almost nobody can afford.

*Eliminating the mandate to buy is important.*

But eliminating the mandate restricting what you can buy is at least as important.

*If consumers could choose the policy they wanted and felt they could afford, 24 million would not lose their coverage. We might even see an increase in coverage.* More importantly, with consumers in charge, providers might start competing for their business, which is the only way to increase supply, improve supply, and by doing so bring costs down.

Newt Gingrich, who is a very smart fellow, also writes an op-ed today saying that Ryancare is the best the GOP can do because the Democrats will vote against and (in the Senate) filibuster anything better. As a result, any changes must be done under the budgetary “Reconciliation” process, which means that it must Impact the federal budget and also cannot increase the deficit.

This limits options. For example, one cannot permit insurance companies to offer policies nationally through this process.

*For Gingrich to take this position is puzzling to say the least. *As you may recall, he is the one who crafted the “contract with America” which Republicans used to reclaim control of the House in 1994 after so many decades in the minority. *Does he actually think that Republicans will try to explain “Reconciliation” limitations to the voters in 2018 as part of thirty second ads?* I think not.

What they ought to do instead is to craft a real Obamacare Repeal and Replace bill, fill it full of logical improvements such as allowing insurance companies to offer policies nationally, then *stand back and let the Democrats vote it down and filibuster it. *Having got the Democrats on record, they could then go back to bills based on Reconciliation, having put their best ideas forward. *That would be easy for voters to understand.*

  Reported by Zero Hedge 6 hours ago.

GOP Senators Say House Obamacare Bill Has To Change

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WASHINGTON ― A harsh Congressional Budget Office assessment of the Republican House bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act had GOP senators on Tuesday calling for changes, including more financial assistance for low-income Americans.

Senate leaders did their best to dismiss the nonpartisan CBO review of the legislation, which found it would increase the number of people without insurance by 14 million in the first year, and by 24 million within a decade ― nearly double the estimate for Obamacare. Still, some GOP senators said they were concerned with the House legislation’s potential effects on low-income people, seniors and Medicaid patients.

Of particular concern to these senators was the way the GOP bill would redirect health insurance tax credits, leaving the poorest consumers with less money than they get under the Affordable Care Act.

“I do think there are things that we can do to tailor the tax credit in a way that makes it more attractive to people, and more helpful to people on the lower end, and with a phase-out that is a little less steep than what the House” proposes, Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.) told reporters Tuesday.

Thune said “it’d be nice” if House Republicans made the tax credits available in the legislation more generous for older Americans before it comes to the Senate, but said he was already working on a potential amendment. Two top Republicans ― Sens. Lamar Alexander (Tenn.) and Roy Blunt (Mo.) ― agreed changes to help lower-income people were needed.

Other senators raised complaints at the weekly caucus meeting, which also included Vice President Mike Pence and Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, and key House Republicans Greg Walden (Ore.), chair of the Energy and Commerce Committee, and Kevin Brady (Texas), chair of the Ways and Means Committee.

Senators found an array of faults with the legislation, raising a challenge for GOP leaders trying to craft a cohesive message.

“There are multiple different points that are brought up and I guess the difficulty is keeping everybody in the basket as they make an attempt to address issues,” Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), said after the caucus meeting. “The [states that didn’t expand Medicaid] have different issues than the expansion states.The states with older populations have different issues than those with younger populations.”  

While senators criticized the CBO ― Blunt said its analysts are “notoriously bad at anticipating what’s going to happen in a marketplace” ― they were happy to hype CBO findings they liked. That included a projection that the bill would reduce the deficit by $337 billion over 10 years, mostly because of those big cuts to Medicaid. Republicans also highlighted the prediction that premiums would fall 10 percent by 2026, compared with what they would be under Obamacare. 

But the CBO estimates came with two important caveats that Senate leaders neglected to mention. One was that premiums would be lower, in part, because the insurance would cover less ― leaving people with higher out-of-pocket costs. The other is that older people may face sky-high premiums under the GOP measure and may drop coverage altogether. That’s because insurers would have more flexibility to vary prices by age.

AARP has been slamming the legislation since it was introduced, and Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) made clear the CBO findings on the subject weighed on his mind. “Folks who are over 60 earning $20,000 a year would have a hard time affording insurance, and that’s not good,” Cassidy said.

Cassidy, who has co-sponsored an alternative proposal, stopped well short of declaring that higher premiums for seniors were a deal-breaker. But he did say the Senate needed time to consider whether changes would improve the legislation.

“There needs to certainly be deliberation and something that ameliorates people’s concerns,” Cassidy said.

Sen. John Boozman (R-Ark.) said he worried about the estimated 300,000 people who signed up for Medicaid after his state expanded the program under Obamacare. That helped lower the number of uninsured people in the state by more than 50 percent, according to statistics at healthinsurance.org.

“I’m concerned about Medicaid expansion and making sure people are taken care of, and again, that’s why I’m going to figure out what’s going on,” Boozman said.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), wasn’t worried about Medicaid ― perhaps because Texas hasn’t expanded the program. Cruz said he feared leaving some Obamacare regulations in place would keep premiums high. 

“Under the CBO report, they don’t ever go down,” Cruz said. “They simply increase a little bit slower than they would increase under Obamacare. That is not the mandate that we were elected to fulfill.”

The House bill “as drafted” won’t pass in the Senate, Cruz added.

Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) and Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.), also raised objections.

House GOP leaders plan a floor vote next week, less than a month after the measure was introduced. That’s breakneck speed for any legislation, not just a bill of this magnitude.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has said he intends to bring whatever the House passes directly to the Senate floor, bypassing committees. He said on Tuesday that the bill “would be open to amendment” when it reaches the Senate.

Boozman noted that Republicans were taking on a big challenge, with a lot of potential to get something wrong.

“This is difficult,” Boozman said. “It’s 18 percent of economy. My concern is not with the timeline. My concern is with doing it right. We don’t need to do something, we need to do the right thing.”

 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 6 hours ago.

‘The most optimistic guy in the Donner party’: Colbert ridicules Ryan’s glee at millions losing health insurance

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Late Show host Stephen Colbert was both stunned and amused at House Speaker Paul Ryan’s gleeful response to a CBO report stating up to 24 million Americans would lose their health insurance under his replacement for Obamacare. First describing Ryan as the “most optimistic man in D.C.,... Reported by Raw Story 4 hours ago.

Medibank skips health insurance grilling

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The biggest private health insurer in the market says it can't attend a Senate inquiry hearing to give evidence about soaring premiums. Reported by SBS 4 hours ago.

Seema Verma sworn-in as head of top US health care agency

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Seema Verma has been sworn-in as the head of a key US health care agency that oversees health insurance programmes for 130 million Americans, becoming the second Indian-American to be inducted into the Trump administration. Reported by Zee News 15 minutes ago.

Every single false Republican criticism of Obamacare applies perfectly to Trumpcare

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The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office on Monday released its analysis of the House GOP’s plan to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. The result is about as damning as it gets. According to the CBO, 24 million people will lose health insurance over the next decade under the Republican... Reported by L.A. Times 20 hours ago.

House GOP working on companion bill to Obamacare replacement to attract skeptics

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The second measure would ease cross-state sale of health insurance and limit jury awards for pain and suffering in malpractice lawsuits Reported by CBS News 20 hours ago.

Figo to Keynote as Digital Disruptor at InsurTech Silicon Valley Summit

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Recognized by A.M Best’s Reviews as the number one InsurTech company in pet insurance, Figo will be sharing the key to their success and innovation on March 30th.

CHICAGO, IL (PRWEB) March 15, 2017

Join Figo CEO Rusty Sproat on March 30th at the Silicon Valley Insurance Accelerator (SVIA) Summit as he lays out his technology architecture and digital customer transformation, which is disrupting the insurance industry.

At their core, Figo is about making life easier for people and their pets. They accomplish this through their products, which are technology and pet health insurance. Born in a Google Tech Hub, Figo is an InsurTech company, whose modular approach has accelerated innovation, allowing them to serve to change customer engagement needs by leveraging the newest technologies agilely. As one of the top 35 tech startups in the world, they were featured in 2016 at Dreamforce Startup Valley.

“Insurance is behind the times, and technology is changing our industry at a faster pace than it did with Fintech. We’re super excited to be part of the disruptors and innovators that are redefining how we perceive and engage with insurance,” said Sproat.

For those who have never heard of the InsurTech industry, here’s the crash course.

InsurTech is a growing global market made of enterprising startups like Figo, whose foundation and DNA are about digitally transforming insurance. InsurTech has often been called the “next FinTech,” and consequently, investments have been pouring into these innovative companies. Last year alone, over $1.4 billion was invested in InsurTech.

“Pet insurance was complicated, expensive, and ripe for a makeover,” explains Sproat. “Through our all-encompassing Figo Pet Cloud, we have created a company that is more than just insurance. We built our platform that can be carried over to other lines of insurance. This will allow us to continue our vision with more insurance products,” describes Sproat.

The Figo Pet Cloud app makes it easier for owners to submit claims and view medical records. Customers can easily manage their pets’ ongoing health needs as well as find local vets, pet hotels, parks, and more. Additionally, Pet Cloud features socially connecting pet parents and leverage existing API’s for location based services and reviews.

To learn more about Figo Pet Insurance and how they’re disrupting the industry, stop by the conference on Wednesday, March 30th at 8:45 a.m. or consider scheduling Rusty Sproat for an interview.

Sproat, a licensed property, casualty, and health insurance professional, was inspired by his loyal 11-year old Boston Terrier to dive into this brave new world. Reported by PRWeb 18 hours ago.

Kaiser Poll: Nearly Half Say AHCA Would Cover Fewer People, Raise Costs

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Almost half of Americans believe the American Health Care Act would cover fewer people and raise the cost of healthcare for those who buy their own health insurance, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation poll. Reported by Newsmax 16 hours ago.

Americans like the Republican Obamacare replacement in theory — but they don't like what it does

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Americans like the Republican Obamacare replacement in theory — but they don't like what it does The American public is warm to the American Health Care Act — Republicans' plan to repeal and replace Obamacare — but they don't like the actual changes in the law, two new polls suggested.

A poll from Morning Consult/Politico found that 46% of Americans approve of the new AHCA, while only 35% disapprove.

But respondents were not as keen on the legislation's proposed policies.

Morning Consult/Politico found that the most popular parts of the new healthcare bill are actually holdover elements from the Affordable Care Act. The provision that insurers can't deny coverage based on a preexisting condition — an ACA holdover — was the most popular element, with 71% of those surveyed approving of the idea.

Second-most popular was allowing children to stay on their parents' insurance until they turn 26 — also an ACA provision — with 68% support.

The major changes in the AHCA, on the other hand, had lower support, with the elimination of the individual mandate to purchase health insurance and the increase in allowances for health-savings accounts coming in as the most popular new provisions (50% approval for each).

Below 50% support was the rollback of Medicaid expansion funding after 2020 (48%), replacing income-based tax credits with flat, age-based tax credits (39%), and prohibiting states from using federal funding for Planned Parenthood (38%).

The least popular element: the provision to encourage people to maintain health coverage, a 30% increase in premiums if they allow their insurance to lapse the year before. That had only 18% support. The Individual mandate from the ACA, in which people paid a tax for not having insurance, received 37% support.

At the same time, the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan think tank focused on health policy, found that Americans generally think the outcomes from the AHCA would be negative.

Kaiser found that 48% of people surveyed thought the costs for those buying their own insurance would increase under the AHCA, against just 23% of people expected costs to decrease. Additionally, the poll found more people thought the AHCA would increase costs rather than decrease them for every group — young, elderly, urban, rural, and low-income — except high-income Americans.

The survey was conducted before the Congressional Budget Office released an unflattering report on the AHCA on Monday.

The Kaiser poll found that Obamacare had a 49% approval rating to a 44% disapproval mark, the second month in a row the law was above water in terms of approval and its highest rating since 2010. Also, 51% of people surveyed by Kaiser said lawmakers should not vote to repeal the ACA, while 45% supported some sort of repeal vote.

*SEE ALSO: Here are the biggest winners and losers from 'Trumpcare'*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Obama's White House photographer has been trolling Trump on Instagram Reported by Business Insider 16 hours ago.

The workplace wellness program scam strikes again: employers could demand your genetic information

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We’ve reported before on the scam that is the workplace “wellness” program. These are ostensibly voluntary initiatives that aim to goad employees into healthier lifestyles — say through diet, exercise and smoking cessation — by offering them a discount on their health insurance premiums or some... Reported by L.A. Times 16 hours ago.

Audit: MassHealth spent $17.6M on fraudulent payments

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Massachusetts State Auditor Suzanne Bump said that there has been $17.6 million in fraudulent MassHealth billings in the last year alone, a state audit has uncovered. The report, which summarizes audits conducted over the past year, says there are several processing deficiencies at the state-sponsored health insurance, including payments to providers who have been kicked out of MassHealth, duplicative payments to individuals who receive adult foster care and group adult foster care payments, payments… Reported by bizjournals 9 hours ago.

Trumpcare Raids Medicare To Enrich The Wealthy And Plant A Bomb

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Trumpcare is Robin Hood in reverse. It robs from the elderly, people with disabilities, and poor children to give massive tax giveaways to millionaires and billionaires.

Trumpcare slashes health-care spending by a whopping $1.2 trillion and tax revenues by an also whopping $883 billion. It robs 24 million Americans of their health insurance in order to give supersized tax breaks to the wealthiest among us. The nation’s top 400 earners have average annual incomes of $300 million. Trumpcare makes these 400 plutocrats richer, by lavishing on them average tax cuts of $7 million.

And those $7 million tax giveaways are just down payments. Trumpcare holds back $337 billion in spending cuts that can be used to offset more tax cuts for the ultra-rich, when tax “reform” is taken up later in the year.

With that formula — huge reductions in spending on Americans’ health in exchange for enormous tax cuts for the wealthy — it is not surprising that 24 million Americans will lose their health insurance, and with it, lifesaving health care. The media has focused some attention on those 24 million. It has also shined some light on Trumpcare’s devastation of Medicaid, which includes cutting Medicaid funding by $880 billion along the way to ending it as we know it.


Trumpcare plants the bomb, where it will remain until the Republicans detonate it later this year and blow up Medicare.

Some light has also been shed on Trumpcare’s impact on those seniors desperately holding on until they turn 65 and go on Medicare. A 64-year-old who earns $26,500, for example, now pays $1,700 annually for her health insurance. Trumpcare – or, for people in their early sixties, the cat food proposal — would force her to pay $14,600 for the exact same coverage. That is more than half of her income! And that is just the cost of the annual premium. It doesn’t include the cost of medication, co-pays, deductibles, or non-covered items like glasses. That doesn’t leave a whole lot left over for housing and food.

While the media has highlighted the impact on Medicaid and on seniors not yet on Medicare, few have spotlighted the roadmap of destruction obviously in the works for Medicare itself. Trumpcare plants the bomb, where it will remain until the Republicans detonate it later this year and blow up Medicare.

The Republicans have certainly telegraphed their ultimate plans. Speaker Paul Ryan has been advocating the dismantling of Medicare for years. Consistent with that, as soon as the election ended, Ryan announced his intention to enact 2017 legislation ending Medicare. Ryan’s plan would force all seniors and people with disabilities onto the private market, arming them only with inadequate voucher coupons. So, that 64-year-old spending more than half her income on her premium will get no reprieve from her cat-food diet when she turns age 65.

Trump’s Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), Tom Price, has also been clear about the Republicans’ plans. Against all evidence, Price claims that “nothing has had a greater negative effect on the delivery of health care than the federal government’s intrusion into medicine through Medicare.” Of course, the exact opposite is true. Medicare saves lives. It allows seniors and people with disabilities, those with the greatest health needs, to obtain life-saving health care.

With true radical zeal, Price has said, “We will not rest until we make certain that government-run health care [e.g., Medicare] is ended.” Shortly after the election, Price, like Ryan, announced that the Republicans planned to enact Medicare privatization in the first six to eight months of the Trump administration.


While Ryan and Trump’s HHS Secretary have been open about their destructive Medicare plans, they have been quiet about the Trumpcare bomb.

While Ryan and Trump’s HHS Secretary have been open about their destructive Medicare plans, they have been quiet about the Trumpcare bomb. To be able to recognize the bomb, it is important to know that Ryan is using two lies to get at Medicare. First, he falsely claims that “because of Obamacare, Medicare is going broke,” when in fact the Affordable Care Act strengthened Medicare’s financing. Second, as he does with Social Security, Ryan falsely claims that, because Medicare is going broke, it’s necessary to “reform” it in order to “save” it. (He apparently is using “save,” in the same Orwellian way it was used during the Vietnam war, when a U.S. military officer explained, “It became necessary to destroy the town to save it.”)

Now here’s the ticking time bomb: Trumpcare raids Medicare of $117 billion and puts it into the pockets of the rich. That raiding of Medicare, along with a provision that increases Medicare’s hospital payments by $43 billion, paves the way for further destructive action later in the year.

Most people would argue that the problem with Medicare is that it does not cover basic health care needs like dental care and huge expenses like long-term care. In contrast, Ryan lies that the problem with Medicare is that it’s going broke. So, what is his Trumpcare bomb…I mean… solution? Cut Medicare’s dedicated revenue to give a tax break to the rich and increase its costs.


Trumpcare raids Medicare of $117 billion and puts it into the pockets of the rich.

The lead-up to the actual destruction is not hard to foresee: Ryan, Price, and their co-conspirators will claim that they have to “save” Medicare because it is going broke even faster than before Trumpcare was enacted. They are like a banker who robs a homeowner-client, and then forecloses because the money the homeowner was planning to use to pay the mortgage was stolen.

Like the banker throwing the robbed homeowner out on the street, Ryan’s plan is to replace Medicare’s guarantee with wholly inadequate vouchers. The Ryan -Trump plan would force the Medicare beneficiaries with the greatest health care needs to shoulder higher premiums and higher out-of-pocket costs, if they could afford insurance at all.

Contrary to Ryan’s characterization of Medicare as a problem, it is a solution. Roughly 1 in 5 Americans receives health care coverage through Medicare, including 46.3 million seniors and 9 million Americans with disabilities. These are benefits that beneficiaries have earned, paid for, and deserve. Despite the fact that Medicare covers those in the population with the highest health care needs, it is far more efficient than its private sector counterparts. In 2015, administrative expenses accounted for just 1.4 percent of all Medicare expenditures — compared to private insurers’ combined administrative expenses and profits that eat up 20 percent of customers’ premium payments.

Indeed, the private insurance that Medicare beneficiaries have the option to purchase through Medicare Advantage — a Republican enactment that offers a privately run alternative to Medicare — is more expensive than traditional Medicare. Indeed, the federal government pays 14 percent more per beneficiary for Medicare Advantage enrollees than for those in traditional Medicare. Even so, fewer than one-third of Medicare beneficiaries choose to purchase Medicare Advantage plans, because traditional Medicare is better.

Given Medicare’s proven track record of success and its overwhelming popularity, why do Ryan and his fellow Republicans want to destroy it? First, he has made clear he wants to find room in the budget for further tax cuts. Providing beneficiaries with vouchers opens up that room by shifting costs from the government balance sheets to the shoulders of seniors and people with disabilities who will not be able to absorb them and could wind up with no insurance whatsoever.

The second reason is more fundamental. It is ideological. Medicare, together with Social Security, disproves Ryan’s and his fellow Republicans’ seemingly religious belief that everything the private sector does is better than when it is done collectively through the government. Medicare’s health insurance, like Social Security’s wage insurance, puts the lie to that claim. Those are two programs that work better than their private sector counterparts. Pragmatists, concerned only about what works best, favor expanding both Social Security and Medicare. Ideologues, like Ryan, want to end them. 

The best replacement for the Affordable Care Act would be Medicare for All. Covering all Americans under Medicare would reduce overall health-care costs, streamline the fragmented and complex public-private healthcare system that Americans are forced to navigate today, and ensure that limited incomes and pre-existing conditions do not prevent individuals from obtaining vital and medically necessary care.

If Republicans want to repeal and replace Obamacare, while lowering costs and ensuring that everyone is covered, they should propose Medicare for All. That would get Democratic support and, more importantly, the support of the American people. But, instead, their plan is to blow up this popular and important institution. It is up to all of us to stop them.

*Nancy J. Altman is founding co-director of Social Security Works.* Email wavering Republican Senators today and tell them to vote NO on Trumpcare!type=type=RelatedArticlesblockTitle=Related... + articlesList=58bf49dce4b054a0ea65f198,58b44ec3e4b060480e0a4308,5888bd3be4b04251e621faa8,58c6b690e4b0c3276fb78758

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 9 hours ago.

Reichert mum on estimate that 24 million fewer will be insured under GOP health care bill

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U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert has promised the Republican replacement for the Affordable Care Act will not toss anyone off of health insurance. But he's remained silent since the Congressional Budget Office issued a report projecting 14 million fewer people would have health coverage next near -- growing to 24 million by 2026 -- under the House Republican legislation. Reported by Seattle Times 8 hours ago.

Reichert mum on estimate that 24 million will lose coverage under GOP healthcare bill

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U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert recently promised the Republican replacement for the Affordable Care Act will not toss anyone off of health insurance. “No one is gonna lose coverage. Let me just make that clear again. No one will lose coverage,” Reichert said during a Feb. 23 interview with KCTS-9’s Enrique Cerna. But he’s remained silent […] Reported by Seattle Times 12 hours ago.

Uninsured under GOP plan would soar above pre-Obamacare levels: State study

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One million Washingtonians would lack or lose health insurance under Republicans' American Health Care Act, according to a study unveiled by Gov. Jay Inslee and Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler. Reported by SeattlePI.com 12 hours ago.

4 Ways The Republican Health Care Plan Uniquely Screws Older People

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Social Security ― often called the third rail of American politics ― is getting some competition for that title from another issue: health care for seniors.

The American Health Care Act, the Republican Party’s Obamacare replacement, causes disproportionate pain to older Americans ― a demographic that few sane politicians have ever wanted to intentionally annoy. Older people? They vote.

The denouncement of key parts of the AHCA measure that target older people came swiftly after it was released a week ago, most notably from AARP, which argued that it was an “age tax.”

AARP said the new plan will shorten the life of Medicare, hike premiums for older workers, and risk seniors’ ability to live independently ― all the while giving tax breaks to big drug companies and health insurers. The GOP has countered by insisting that Obamacare is failing and going to collapse.

And while the AHCA disproportionately affects older Americans, people of all ages should be concerned, because those older Americans are our parents and grandparents, and will be us one day.

Here are four of the ways the AHCA targets the 55+ crowd: 

*1. Premiums will go up significantly for older people.*

Medicare kicks in at age 65. Those who are in their 50s and early 60s are the bologna in the sandwich when it comes to health coverage. They are too young to be eligible for Medicare and too old to be considered young and healthy ― which makes them less attractive to private insurers. Older people are more prone to illness and require more medical care.

Currently, the most an insurance company can charge an older worker is three times whatever younger workers are being charged in a scale that is age-rated. Under Trumpcare, that ceiling jumps to five times. 

The bipartisan Congressional Budget Office weighed in on Monday about what the AHCA would cost older people, and the ensuing shudder could be felt across the nation. The CBO projected that older people with lower incomes will likely opt out of securing coverage for themselves because the proposed regulation allows insurers to charge them higher rates than they do now ― and the financial assistance provided doesn’t sufficiently offset that.


the olds get slammed at literally every turn pic.twitter.com/YAol4C7Rox

— Simon Maloy (@SimonMaloy) March 13, 2017


*2. Nursing home assistance will no longer be a sure thing.*

Medicare ― the federal health coverage plan for those 65 and older ― does not cover long-term nursing home stays. Those who need nursing home care most often enter a facility as a private pay patient.

The average nursing home in California costs $91,250 a year for a shared room, according to Genworth. Once in the nursing home, the patient must spend down his or her assets to the level where Medicaid ― the federal health plan for low-income people ― kicks in to subsidize the stay.

While Obamacare gives states the money to pay for all those who are eligible for Medicaid services, Trumpcare does not. The GOP plan instead will give states a block grant ― a lump sum per person ― and allow each state to decide how to spend it. This means that states will have to choose who they want to help between the most costly consumers of health care: older people and children. 

That’s where younger adults come in: Who will care for the elderly when they can no longer care for themselves? Family caregivers, that’s who.

*3. Companies will no longer be mandated to offer health insurance to workers.*

Under Obamacare, companies with 50 or more full-time employees must provide those workers with health coverage or face a penalty for not doing so. That mandate is being lifted, which leads to this question: Will corporate America voluntarily continue to be the portal for most Americans’ health coverage? The consensus is divided, but a lot of smart minds are saying no.

Untethering health insurance from our jobs may not be the worst thing that could happen ― if meaningful safeguards are in place. But that’s a big caveat.

The ACA protected people with pre-existing conditions. Under the GOP’s replacement plan, insurers still have to cover pre-existing conditions, but they can charge more for people who are recently uninsured. 

*4. Early retirement could become a thing of the past.*

People retire early  ― before they reach full retirement age as defined by Social Security ― for many reasons that include having to take care of an elderly parent or sick spouse, having health issues themselves, or simply losing their jobs and not being able to find another one.

The ability to find affordable health insurance under the ACA has made retiring early a possibility for those who need to. The Republican plan could shut the door on that.

For now, all eyes are on the House budget committee, which will combine the two individual bills pending into one piece of legislation that will eventually go on to a full vote on the House floor. This is scheduled for Thursday.
The budget committee cannot make substantive changes to the legislation’s content but can recommend amendments for the House rules committee to consider. 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 11 hours ago.

If Apple's Serious About The Car, It Should Buy GM (And A Health Insurance Company Too)

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Reported by SeekingAlpha 10 hours ago.

Trump heads out on a 'Trumpcare' tour

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Trump heads out on a 'Trumpcare' tour President Donald Trump is hitting the road starting Wednesday to drum up support for the GOP's replacement of Obamacare, with strategic visits to states in the southern part of the US.

The two campaign-like stops will try and win over two different audiences that need to come onboard for Trump and Republicans to pass the the American Health Care Act — the bill that would repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

With strong opposition from both parties, think tanks, and industry groups, Trump's ability as a campaigner — and a salesman — will be on full display during his visits.

*Nashville, Tennessee*

The first stop on the "Trumpcare" tour comes in Nashville, Tennessee, on Wednesday.

The state is a perfect place for Trump to make his dual-pronged case that Obamacare is collapsing, and that his base should support the GOP's alternative.

For one thing, experiences in Tennessee highlight the increasing premium costs faced by some Americans under Obamacare. In 2017, the average benchmark silver plan offered on the individual health insurance exchanges in Tennessee increased by 63%, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.

Secondly, the decrease in choice that Trump and Republicans bring up so often is also an issue in the state. Four of the state's exchange regions have just one insurer offering plans.

Even Tennessee's state insurance commissioner Julie Mix McPeak said in August that the exchanges in the state are "very near collapse."

"I'm doing everything I can to prevent a situation where that turns to zero," she said at the time.

The statistics provide ample opportunity for Trump to hammer at the negatives of Obamacare, countering the rise in popularity for the ACA, which has been hitting its highest approval ratings ever in numerous polls.

*Louisville, Kentucky*

The other scheduled stop on Trump's tour will come Monday in Louisville, Kentucky.

This presents a different challenge for Trump, because the ACA was generally a positive for many Kentuckians. It forces the president to build a case for why the AHCA is a better alternative.

After the passage of the ACA, former Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear embraced the ACA by taking on both the Medicaid expansion offered by the ACA and creating the state-based individual health insurance market called Kynect.

Compared to the broader ACA, Kynect was relatively popular with those in Kentucky, and the percentage of the people without health insurance fell the most of any state between 2013 and 2016, declining from 20.4% of Kentuckians uninsured to 7.8%, a 12.6 percentage point fall.

The stats will force Trump to not only have to make the case for why the ACA is collapsing, but also why the AHCA would be better. This will prove more difficult, since analysis from the Congressional Budget Office and health policy experts have shown that support in the form of tax credits will decrease for recipients in Kentucky on average.

The visit is also about a single politician as well: Sen. Rand Paul, a fellow Republican. Paul has been one of the loudest critics of the AHCA and criticized the GOP's plans to repeal and replace Obamacare even before the introduction of the law.

The visit to Paul's home state will be a chance for Trump to push back on his criticism that the AHCA does not go far enough in its repeal of the ACA, and that there needs to be a bigger overhaul of the healthcare market. Trump even tweeted at Paul that the senator would "come along with the new and great healthcare program."

*SEE ALSO: Americans like the Republican Obamacare replacement in theory — but they don't like what it does*

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