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How 22 million more Americans would end up without health insurance under the GOP healthcare bill

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How 22 million more Americans would end up without health insurance under the GOP healthcare bill The Congressional Budget Office on Monday released its report on the Senate Republican healthcare bill.

The CBO estimated that the bill, Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA), would result in the 22 million fewer people with health insurance by 2026 compared to the current system. That would bring the total uninsured population in the US to 49 million people.

So, where do these coverage losses come from?

Most, according to the CBO, would come from people rolling off Medicaid. The combination of repealing the Affordable Care Act's Medicaid expansion and lower federal funding for Medicaid would result in low-income Americans dropping off the rolls.

According to the CBO, 15 million fewer people would be on Medicaid in 2026 compared to the current baseline.

In 2026, the CBO also estimated that seven million fewer people who did not have access to coverage through their employer or a program like Medicaid would be without insurance.

House Speaker Paul Ryan and other Republicans have suggested that would come from fewer people choosing to purchase insurance due to the elimination of the Obamacare's individual mandate.

But while some, especially younger and more affluent people, would choose not to purchase insurance, the CBO estimated that many older and low-income Americans would not get coverage because it would be too expensive. Lower tax credits and a drop in the amount of costs insurers would be required to cover under the BCRA would leave poorer and elderly Americans with higher costs that could be prohibitive in buying insurance.

The CBO also estimated that the repeal of the employer mandate under the BCRA would lead to businesses dropping healthcare benefits from employees and some employees forgoing healthcare benefits, leading to an increase in the uninsured population in the first few years the law would be enacted. A tighter labor market could reduce that predicted drop as employers increase their benefit packages to lure workers.

*SEE ALSO: The Senate Republican healthcare bill is collapsing*

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NOW WATCH: Ivanka Trump's Instagram put her at the center of a controversy over her lavish art collection Reported by Business Insider 4 hours ago.

Governors in Both Parties Attack G.O.P. Health Plan: ‘This Bill Is Unacceptable’

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The Republican effort to overhaul the health insurance system has inspired extensive bipartisan cooperation — in an attempt to defeat it. Reported by NYTimes.com 3 hours ago.

A key GOP senator gave an ominous warning for the future of the Senate Republican healthcare bill

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A key GOP senator gave an ominous warning for the future of the Senate Republican healthcare bill Senate GOP leaders decided to delay a vote on the party's healthcare bill on Tuesday until after the week-long July 4 recess. But the immediate reaction from one key senator made any change in fortune seem less than likely.

Sen. Susan Collins, a moderate from Maine, told reporters that it would take more than just a few "tweaks" to get her on board with the bill.

"I will say I have so many fundamental problems with the bill, that have been confirmed by the CBO report, that it's difficult for me to see how any tinkering is going to satisfy my fundamental and deep concerns about the impact of the bill," Collins said.

The Congressional Budget Office projected that 22 million more Americans would be without health insurance under the bill, Better Care Reconciliation Act, than the current baseline. Additionally, low-income and older Americans would end up paying more for insurance, the CBO projected.

For Senate Republican leaders, the worrying aspect of the Collins statement is that she wants structural changes to bill, which would be more likely to move it in a more moderate direction. But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell moves the bill in that direction, he risks losing conservative members of his conference.

On the other hand, if leaders try to court conservatives, they could lose other moderates. Sen. Dean Heller of Nevada, for instance, has already said he would oppose the bill in its current form.

McConnell can only lose two votes for the bill to pass.

The CBO score did contain one piece of good news for the leadership. The report projected that the bill would reduce the deficit by $331 billion over 10 years, over $200 billion more in savings than the House version. Since the Senate bill only has to save the same amount of the House bill for it to qualify under Senate rules, McConnell could use that difference to include incentives for individual senators.

In addition to reiterating her opposition to the bill, Collins also criticized President Donald Trump's approach to the healthcare debate.

"This president is the first president in our history who has had neither political nor military experience," Collins said. "Thus, it has been a challenge to him to learn how to interact with Congress and how to push his agenda forward. I also believe it would have been better had the president started with infrastructure, which has bipartisan support, rather than tackling a political divisive and technically complicated issue like healthcare."

Collins said she would go to the White House along with the rest on the Senate GOP conference for a meeting with Trump on healthcare at 4 p.m. ET on Tuesday.

*SEE ALSO: The 9 GOP senators who will decide the fate of the Republican healthcare bill*

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NOW WATCH: 'I'll ask it one more time': Kellyanne Conway won't say whether Trump thinks climate change is a hoax Reported by Business Insider 1 hour ago.

The GOP healthcare fight is creating a lot of uncertainty around health startups that flourished under Obamacare

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The GOP healthcare fight is creating a lot of uncertainty around health startups that flourished under Obamacare Senate Republicans released their version of a plan to repeal and replace Obamacare last week, and it, like the one passed by the House of Representatives, could have a major effect on health tech companies started in recent years.

The Senate's plan, like the one passed by the House in May, dismantles many of the provisions of Obamacare, as well cutting funding to the Medicaid program.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that the plan — titled the Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA) — would result in 22 million fewer people insured by 2026 than the current healthcare system.

A number of health-tech startups established their businesses under the healthcare rules and environment created by the Affordable Care Act, the law otherwise known as Obamacare. If either the Senate or the House bills pass, it could drastically affect how they operate.

**Here's what's at stake**

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*Healthify, *a startup that works with people on Medicaid and Medicare, got its start in 2015 and now works in 30 states. The company uses technology to identify social determinants of health and works with Accountable Care Organizations (networks of doctors and hospitals that share responsibility for your healthcare) to connect patients to everything from housing and food to day care and transportation to improve overall health. ACOs are an integral part of the ACA.

Healthify CEO Manik Bhat told Business Insider that the healthcare reform will put undue pressure on vulnerable people as well as the states to fund these programs that connect people to healthcare.

Medicaid, which Healthify works extensively with, covers more than 74 million Americans, including low-income people, families, and kids, as well as pregnant women, people with disabilities, and the elderly. CBO estimates project cuts up to $772 billion over the next decade for the Senate bill and $880 billion for the House bill. That would leave states — which also fund the program — with fewer resources to cover those populations.

*Quartet Health* is* *a behavioral health startup founded in 2014 that uses data to connect a patient's primary care doctors with his or her mental health professionals to identify co-occurring or related issues.

CEO Arun Gupta, told Business Insider that the ACA helped create an environment based around the healthcare outcomes patients actually get that helped the company flourish.

The ACA, and a predecessor piece of legislation, the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008, provided the foundation that the company is built on. The two laws established that health plans must provide equal benefits for mental health conditions that they do for other medical conditions.

Both the AHCA and the BCRA provide states the opportunity to waive some of the "essential health benefits" that healthcare plans must cover, of which mental health coverage is one. However, that would only affect plans in the individual market and Medicaid, not group insurance, which is covered under the 2008 law. 

Because of that, the GOP's healthcare efforts will likely not have a direct impact on Quartet, Gupta said, though changes to the EHBs, which would happen on state-by-state basis, would affect many of the patients that Quartet works with.

"The train's left the station on this movement to integrate behavioral healthcare and to reconnect the body and mind and all that, but I think it'd be very sad for people," Gupta said. "They're called essential health benefits for a reason."

Not covering preventative healthcare, according to Gupta, ends up costing patients and society as a whole a lot more in the long run. 

The uncertainty around the national policy, Gupta added, has also led to a standstill for health insurers and providers, which leads to indecision in an already slow-moving sector when it comes to adopting new healthcare programs and technologies.

*Oscar Health*, the $2.7 billion health insurance startup founded in 2012 by Jared Kushner's brother, Joshua, is perhaps the health-tech startup most directly intertwined with the ACA. It was created to sell individual market plans under Obamacare. If either the House or Senate bills become law, it could drastically upend the individual exchanges where Oscar derives most of its customers from.

But instead of shying away, the company has been doubling down by expanding its coverage areas in the past few weeks. Alan Warren, Oscar's chief technology officer told Business Insider in June that the company's been seeing positive signals. "We’re seeing things stabilize," he said. 

"We're confident that when the dust settles, the market for health insurance will stabilize in time for 2018," Oscar CEO Mario Schlosser said in a blog post around the same time. 

*SEE ALSO: Medicaid cuts in the Senate healthcare bill are going to hit some states hard – here's who will feel it*

*DON'T MISS: Senate Republicans just released a significant change to their healthcare bill*

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NOW WATCH: Harvard Business School professor explains the most important problem we have in finance today and how to fix it Reported by Business Insider 22 minutes ago.

CBO to consumers: You'll pay more for health insurance

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Experts fear stingier subsidies tied to stingier health care plans could add up to significantly higher out-of-pocket costs Reported by CBS News 14 minutes ago.

Health Insurance Will Cost Women More; Goodwin Fire; Serena: Patch Morning Briefing

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Health Insurance Will Cost Women More; Goodwin Fire; Serena: Patch Morning Briefing Patch Mauldin, SC -- Chicago cops indicted, safe driving: a matter of perspective, and a raccoon rides the subway. Reported by Patch 11 hours ago.

AIS Health’s New Medicare and Medicaid Database Provides Current Enrollment and Premium Rate Information for All Public-Sector Health Plans

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AIS’s Medicare and Medicaid Market Data offers convenient access to current data about enrollment, premium rates, benefit designs and strategies of Medicare Advantage plans, Part D plans, Medicaid HMOs and other public-sector health plans.

Washington, DC (PRWEB) June 28, 2017

AIS Health is pleased to announce publication of AIS’s Medicare and Medicaid Market Data, an easy-to-use, continually updated subscription website that allows users to view all public-sector health plans, programs and operators in a single, convenient database.

AIS's Medicare and Medicaid Market Data provides a quick and easy way to track the enrollment trends, plan design information and market share statistics that are required for an effective strategic planning process. It includes:· Data on Medicare Advantage (MA) and Medicare managed care, Medicare Part D, managed Medicaid and dual eligibles enrollment, and market share by state and by company.
· Directories, with contact information, of MA, Medicaid, Part D, duals and special needs plans, and national, regional and state regulators.
· Enrollment data for MA plans by county and by region, as well as details on product offerings and enrollees by type of product.
· Reports highlighting the hottest trends in the managed Medicare and Medicaid space.

And the latest news on events and trends in the industry, including:· Market expansion, and merger and acquisition activity
· Payment rate changes
· Provider-sponsored MA plans
· Star ratings
· Dual-eligibles demos
· Recovery audit contractors
· Value-based insurance design
· Employer group waiver plans
· Physician and pharmacy network adequacy
· States’ Medicaid initiatives

For 20 years, AIS published AIS's Medicare and Medicaid Market Data as an annual book, but this interactive website was developed to keep up with the pace of change in the industry. With monthly enrollment updates for Medicare Advantage plans, Part D plans, special needs plans and other programs serving Medicare-Medicaid dual eligibles, plus quarterly reports from the states on managed Medicaid, and other updates throughout the year, subscribers always have access to the most current data and news.

For more information, including an interactive demo of the features of the website, visit https://aishealth.com/marketplace/managed-medicare-and-medicaid-market-data.

About AIS Health    
AIS Health is a publishing and information company that has served the health care industry for more than 30 years. AIS Health’s mission is to provide objective and relevant business and strategic information for health care executives, by developing highly targeted news, data and analysis for managers at health insurance companies, pharmaceutical organizations, providers, purchasers and other health care industry stakeholders. AIS Health, which maintains journalistic independence from its parent company, MMIT, is committed to integrity in reporting and bringing transparency to health industry data. Learn more at http://AISHealth.com and http://AISHealthData.com. Reported by PRWeb 9 hours ago.

Senate health care bill 'unacceptable,' bishop says after budget office report

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Washington D.C., Jun 28, 2017 / 06:36 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The Senate’s health care bill remains “unacceptable,” one U.S. bishop insisted after a non-partisan government office estimated it would result in millions more uninsured.

“This moment cannot pass without comment,” said Bishop Frank Dewane, chair of the U.S. bishops’ domestic justice and human development committee, in response to the scoring of the draft Senate health care bill by the Congressional Budget Office on Monday.  

“As the USCCB has consistently said, the loss of affordable access for millions of people is simply unacceptable,” he said of the office’s estimate that the number of uninsured could increase by 22 million by 2026. “These are real families who need and deserve health care.”  

The Congressional Budget Office released its scoring of the Senate health care bill on Monday, H.R. 1628, the Better Care Reconciliation Act of 2017.

The bill eliminates the individual and employer mandates of the Affordable Care Act, replacing the individual mandate with a six-month waiting period for new insurance in non-group plans if one goes without insurance for more than 63 days.

Also, the bill makes it easier for states to waive essential health benefits, or the list of benefits like emergency services and maternity care that was mandatory in health plans under the Affordable Care Act. The elderly can be charged up to five times more than younger persons in their premiums by insurers, as opposed to the limit being three times more than younger people.

The bill could reduce the federal deficit by over $320 billion over 10 years, according to the CBO, largely because of cuts to the rate of increased spending on Medicaid over that time (almost $800 billion in cuts) and cuts in the amount of federal subsidies for health plans.

The Medicaid cuts would take place through “per capita” caps on federal Medicaid funding of states. Thus, the funding in the future would be dependent upon the populations of the states.

An estimated 22 million more people would also be uninsured by 2026, increasing the projected number of uninsured from 28 million to 49 million.

Some of those uninsured would be persons who voluntarily forego having health insurance because of the removal of the individual mandate, which levies heavy fines on those without health insurance.

Instead, the new bill would fine persons with a gap in coverage once they sign up for insurance again, at a rate of 30 percent of their new premium.

In the short-term, this would be the “primary” reason behind the increase in the number of uninsured, the CBO said. However, after several years, other policies could increase the number of uninsured, like the cuts to Medicaid spending and federal subsidies.

For instance, for persons under the age of 65 by the year 2026, Medicaid enrollment would be down 16 percent, the office estimated.

The White House panned the CBO estimates in a statement released on Monday evening.

“The CBO has consistently proven it cannot accurately predict how healthcare legislation will impact insurance coverage,” the White House stated. “In 2013, the CBO estimated that 24 million people would have coverage under Obamacare by 2016.  It was off by an astounding 13 million people – more than half – as less than 11 million were actually covered.”

“To date, we have seen average individual market premiums more than double and insurers across the country opting out of healthcare exchanges,” the White House continued, urging action to be taken to reform health care.

Bishop Dewane, meanwhile, promised to pray for the Senate “to keep the good aspects of current health care proposals, to add missing elements where needed, and to not place our sisters and brothers who struggle every day into so great a peril on so basic a right.”

Last week, the bishop had outlined his serious concerns with the draft legislation. The bill, he said, in some ways made the problems with the House health care bill on health coverage for low-income persons worse.

“It is precisely the detrimental impact on the poor and vulnerable that makes the Senate draft unacceptable as written,” he said on Thursday. The cuts to Medicaid funding in particular would “wreak havoc on low-income families and struggling communities, and must not be supported,” he insisted.

Bishop Dewane also noted the lack of language protecting “conscience rights” of those in the health care industry from mandates that they perform morally objectionable procedures like abortions or gender-transition surgeries.

He did praise the language protecting tax credits from being used to pay for abortions, but showed caution in warning that the language could very well be removed by the chamber’s parliamentarian because it could be ruled as not pertaining to the budget.

Other parts of the health care bill that the CBO scored included changes to premiums for persons in non-group plans.  

The average premiums for these plans would increase in the short-term, the CBO estimated, but by 2020 would drop to 30 percent lower than the premium estimates under the current health care law.

However, some could still see their health care costs rise because their benefits might be cut and their out-of-pocket health costs could be higher, especially those living in states which choose to waive the essential health benefits.

The marketplaces for non-group health insurance would still be stable in the coming years, the CBO estimated, but in certain areas for “a small fraction of the population,” insurers might not participate in non-group coverage.

This would be because fewer people would sign up for health plans due to fewer available subsidies, or even if the insurers participate in marketplaces, the plans themselves might be more expensive.

When asked on Monday if the White House would take CBO scores into account to the extent that they would go “back to the drawing board” on the bill if necessary, press secretary Sean Spicer answered that the White House would continue its current plan on health care reform.

“We feel very confident with where the bill is,” he stated. “And he [President Donald Trump] is going to continue to listen to senators who have ideas about how to strengthen it. But it's going to follow the same plan as we have.”

  Reported by CNA 7 hours ago.

Wellthie Announces Partnership with Conference Associates

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Partnership with Leading New York General Agency to Grant Brokers First Access to Pioneering Health Insurance Sales Technology

New York, NY (PRWEB) June 28, 2017

Wellthie – an insurance technology company offering leading broker and carrier sales technology that simplifies insurance distribution for small businesses – has announced a partnership with Conference Associates (CAI), one of New York’s first and largest group insurance administrators. The partnership will provide all of Conference Associates’ brokers with access to the industry’s latest technology to help support their small business clients with a modern insurance shopping experience.

Wellthie’s innovative quoting and selling platform allows brokers to close more sales faster across multiple product lines and channels. With Wellthie, CAI’s brokers have their own digital storefront to streamline insurance decisions for small businesses, tout their benefits expertise, save valuable time and generate more sales.

This partnership represents CAI’s continued commitment to innovation and strengthened broker partnerships in New York. With Wellthie, CAI’s brokers will be able to exponentially grow their business, distinguish themselves from the competition, and solidify their position as a trusted strategic partner to their clients.

Key features of Wellthie’s platform include:·     Unlimited, live quoting for all New York carriers in one platform
·     Instant contribution modeling, either by percentage or dollar amount
·     Professional custom-branded proposals, generated in less than 2 seconds
·     Easy enrollments, including quick access to carrier requirements to complete an enrollment
·     Comprehensive broker dashboard, allowing brokers to track their book of business in a single CRM system
·     Shareable employer shopping links, including the ability to generate new leads

“We are excited to partner with such an innovative general agency as Conference Associates,” said Sally Poblete, CEO, Wellthie. With Wellthie’s, CAI is providing brokers a way to address the ever-changing needs of small businesses who are seeking simple, fast, and more transparent shopping experiences, including insurance.”

“In addition to developing a great new technology, Wellthie is responding to the feedback of CAI and our brokers to refine their platform,” says Raymond Collins, Director of Marketing at Conference Associates. Add Robert Cohen, Chief Operating Officer, “They have developed a modern, professional, and easy to understand quote for clients, and have simplified the entire process for the broker. We’re proud to help introduce Wellthie to the NY market, and excited to see the platform grow and improve in the near future.”

About Wellthie
Wellthie is a leading provider of next-generation technology solutions to help brokers and carriers thrive in the retail age. The company’s cloud-based e-commerce platform modernizes the way brokers sell insurance to small businesses and individuals.  http://www.wellthie.com. Reported by PRWeb 7 hours ago.

Goldman No Longer Believes Republicans Can Repeal Obamacare: Here's Why

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Goldman No Longer Believes Republicans Can Repeal Obamacare: Here's Why One month after Goldman gave up on Trump being able to pass any major (or minor) tax package in 2017, overnight - in the aftermath of Senate GOP's deplorable failure to find the needed 51 votes to " repeal and replace" Obamacare- Goldman's Washington analyst Alec Phillips throws up his hands, and no longer believes that passage of Obamacare is possible.

In a note that looks at the current state of health legislation, titled appropriately enough "Nearing the End", Goldman summarizes that Senate Republican leaders have postponed the vote on health legislation that had been tentatively scheduled this week. A vote is possible in two weeks, but further delays are possible. 

Phillips does note that there are still some arguments in favor of eventual enactment: Republicans will be under pressure to follow through on a long-standing political commitment, and the estimated deficit reduction and tax cuts in the health bill could be useful in passing tax legislation later. Fixing the existing program for the coming year will also be necessary.

However, he is skeptical and says that "*these factors are likely to be outweighed by the political obstacles. Estimates of the potential increase in the uninsured population seem unlikely to improve substantially even after revisions to the bill. Public support for the effort is also weak, and intraparty divisions appear to pose too many obstacles. At this point, enactment of broad health legislation like the House passed or the Senate is contemplating seems unlikely.*"

That said, Goldman is not too worried about the implications of the Senate's failure, saying that *"the prospects for passage should also be somewhat less important to broader financial markets than they might have been several months ago.* The debate over health legislation is likely to end—either with enactment or a failed vote—by mid- to late July, allowing the rest of the budget process to proceed, eventually leading to consideration of tax legislation. In the less likely scenario that broad health legislation is enacted, there would be few near-term economic effects as most of the changes do not take effect until 2020."

Goldman's full note:

*Health Legislation: Nearing the End *Markets are once again focused on the potential for a congressional vote on health legislation, this time regarding the Senate’s Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA). This is presumably due to the need to move beyond the health bill before tax legislation can be addressed, as discussed below, and because of the broader signal that passage of a health bill might send regarding the rest of the Trump agenda.

However, the effort to replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA) has been set back once again with the announcement that no vote will be held for at least another two weeks. At that point, there are three potential options:

· *Passage*: If Senate Republican leaders are able to muster a majority in favor of a health bill, the bill would move back to the House for at least one more vote. The outcome there would depend on the details of the final product, but a bill that can manage to win support of 50 of 52 politically diverse Senate Republicans would probably be able to pass the House and become law.
· *Defeat*: Major legislation is rarely rejected on the House or Senate floor, since congressional leaders usually know whether there is adequate support. However, it is clearly possible that this bill could end in a failed vote; if Senate Republican leaders determine that there is very little chance of ever coming up with an acceptable compromise, they might allow a vote against the bill to provide a more definitive end to the process and, possibly, as a way to pivot to a short-term bipartisan effort to stabilize the individual health insurance market for 2018.
· *Delay*: As of this writing, Senate Republican leaders have opted to delay the vote for at least two weeks, until the week of July 10. A delay could be interpreted as a sign that Republican leaders believe there is a chance of gaining support over the next two weeks for a modified bill. However, it might also simply signal that leaders are not quite ready to give up on the effort, even if they recognize that the odds of eventual enactment are low. Further delays cannot be ruled out, though we would be very surprised if the Senate debate continues past late July.

*The situation is fluid but at this point our expectation is that the Senate will ultimately fail to pass broad health legislation similar to the House-passed bill or the recently introduced Senate legislation. *While we see this as a fairly close call, our view is based on the following considerations:

· *Coverage estimates: *While it is certainly possible that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) will estimate that the next iteration of the Senate proposal will increase the projected uninsured population by less than the 22 million increase it estimated would result under the most recent proposal, this seems unlikely to change substantially. Repeal of the individual mandate alone has been estimated to reduce coverage by 15 million, and the repeal of the Medicaid expansion and the cap on the future growth rate of the program would reduce coverage further.
· *Public support: *The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is much more popular than the pending legislation, and even among Republican voters views are mixed (Exhibit 1). One problem congressional Republicans face is that public sentiment regarding the ACA has shifted since the debate began, possibly because the public has become more aware of the coverage expansion under the ACA.
· *Thin margins: *Even with Vice President Pence casting the tie-breaking vote, 50 of 52 Republicans would need to support the bill. This means bridging the gap between the most conservative senators (shown at the top of Exhibit 2) and centrist Republicans (toward the bottom of Exhibit 2) and those representing swing states (to the left of Exhibit 2).
· *Medicaid politics: *20 Republican senators represent states that have expanded Medicaid under the ACA. While many of them appear likely to support the bill, the proposed cuts have been difficult for some expansion-state Republicans to support, including Senators Capito, Heller, Murkowski and Portman.

*Exhibit 1: The ACA has become more popular recently *Source: Real Clear Politics, Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research

*Exhibit 2: Opposition at both ends of the political spectrum
*

Source: Federal Election Commission, Voteview, Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research
 

*Of course, there are arguments in favor of eventual passage. These include:*

*Campaign commitments: *After House Republican leaders postponed a long-awaited vote on their health legislation earlier this year, it had appeared that debate might turn to other issues on the agenda. However, the health effort was of such political consequence that Republican leaders ultimately returned to the issue. It is possible that congressional Republicans will continue to press the issue until health legislation is enacted, even if it takes a while longer. That said, our sense is that Senate Republican leaders like Sen. McConnell have a limited appetite for further debate on health care, as discussed below.

*Fiscal benefits: *The Senate health legislation has two potential benefits for the rest of the fiscal agenda. First, CBO estimates that the bill would reduce the deficit by $321 billion over the next ten years. These savings could potentially be redirected toward other legislative efforts, like tax reform. Second, the bill repeals the taxes enacted in the ACA, reducing revenues by $563 billion over ten years. By offsetting these tax cuts with the spending cuts in the health legislation, this would relieve pressure on congressional Republicans to address the repeal of ACA taxes in tax reform legislation later. That said, our expectation is that the final Senate bill, if it passed, would probably not save more than the $119bn the House bill was estimated to save. While helpful, this would not meaningfully change the outlook for tax reform.

*Fixing the existing program: *The Senate legislation includes $50bn over the next four years for this purpose, as well as explicit funding for cost-sharing reduction (CSR) payments (the uncertainty surrounding the Trump Administration’s willingness to continue making CSR payments had led some insurers to increase their proposed premiums for 2018). If the Senate does not approve the pending legislation or something similar, congressional Republicans may attempt to pass a more narrowly focused package to stabilize the individual insurance market which includes the subsidized plans offered through “exchanges”.

While the health debate is clearly relevant, in our view it is becoming less important to the broader agenda, for a few reasons:

· The debate on the current health bill will end soon, one way or the other: Market participants have focused on the health vote in large part because it is seen as a prerequisite to passing tax reform. The health bill is being considered under the 2017 budget cycle, through the “reconciliation” process that allows for Senate passage with a simple majority (i.e., potentially only Republican votes). Since Congress can consider only one reconciliation bill for tax and spending per budget cycle, and budget cycles cannot overlap, Congress must conclude its debate on the healthcare bill before it can formally begin considering tax reform. If the Senate passes the bill in the next few weeks, the process could then turn to the FY18 budget resolution, followed by tax reform. But it seems unlikely that the Senate will debate health legislation after July, so whether it passes or whether it fails, health legislation seems unlikely to delay tax legislation much further.
· There isn’t much signaling value left: Earlier this year, the health debate was seen as a signal of how successful the Trump Administration and congressional Republicans might be in getting other aspects of the agenda through Congress. However, at this stage, it seems fairly clear that intraparty disputes and a thin margin in the Senate have made sweeping reforms difficult. As a result, eventual Senate passage of the health legislation wouldn’t meaningfully change our expectation of what might be possible regarding tax reform, for example.
· Health legislation is unlikely to have substantial economic effects in the near-term. While the current legislative debate on health care could have important consequences for those enrolled in subsidized benefits and, to a lesser extent, enrollees in the individual market more generally, it seems unlikely to meaningfully affect the economic outlook, for two main reasons. First, most of the reduction in benefits would take place in 2020 and beyond. In 2018 and 2019, the bill would actually increase the deficit by about $30bn each year, as the value of the tax cuts starting in 2018 more than offsets the spending cuts. Second, the ACA’s disinflationary effect is unlikely to reverse as a result of this legislation. We previously estimated that two policies accounted for most of the policy-related slowdown in medical inflation over the last couple of years: the cuts to the growth rate of Medicare reimbursements and the shift of the uninsured into the Medicaid program, which pays less for a given service than most other sources of coverage. The legislation would not reverse the Medicare cuts. If legislation is enacted it might result in a gradual reversal of the coverage effect but probably only in 2020 and beyond.

Over coming days, we expect to hear more regarding potential modifications to the original Senate proposal. If progress is made during the remainder of the week, it is possible that a revised CBO estimate could be produced not long after the Senate returns from recess on July 11. A vote looks possible anytime between late in the week of July 10 and the end of July, though at this point the odds seem stacked against Senate passage. Reported by Zero Hedge 6 hours ago.

WellCare’s former top lawyer pleads guilty in fraud case

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Thaddeus Bereday, former general counsel for WellCare Health Plans Inc., faces up to five years in federal prison after pleading guilty to one count of making a false statement to the Florida Medicaid program. Bereday’s guilty plea closes one more chapter in a case that transformed WellCare (NYSE: WCG), a health insurance company headquartered in Tampa that provides managed care for government-sponsored programs including Medicaid and Medicare. The company, which paid more than $200 million in… Reported by bizjournals 3 hours ago.

NJ Gov. Christie Wants To Seize ‘Surplus’ Funds From Private, Non-Profit Health Insurer

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*(CNSNews.com)* - New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a Republican, has given his support to a bill that would allow the state government to take money from the reserve fund of Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield, a private, not-for-profit health insurance provider that is the largest in the state.

-- Reported by CNSNews.com 2 hours ago.

Rand Paul released a list of demands for the Senate healthcare bill, and it shows why it might be impossible to pass

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Rand Paul released a list of demands for the Senate healthcare bill, and it shows why it might be impossible to pass Sen. Rand Paul on Wednesday sent a letter to Majority Leader Mitch McConnell outlining requests for changes to the GOP healthcare bill.

Taken together, they are a prime example of why the bill will be so hard to pass even as leaders try to placate divided factions of the party and amend the legislation by Friday.

Paul announced that he would not support the current Senate bill, the Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA), soon after it was released because it did not go far enough in its repeal of Obamacare.

Here's a quick rundown of the four key changes Paul is seeking in the bill:

1. *Create association health plans:* This would allow groups of people to band together and create their own risk pool to access health insurance coverage. The current bill allows self-employed people to sign onto small business plans — Paul wants this expanded.
2. *Reduce spending on "insurance company bail outs":* The Senate bill currently includes funding that would help insurers offset costs for low-income Americans in the individual insurance market and a state stability fund that can be used to reduce premiums and expand coverage. Paul said these merely help to grow insurance companies' profits.
3. *Eliminate premium tax credits:* The current BCRA would give people making between 100% and 350% of the federal poverty line money to buy insurance. In the letter, Paul asked McConnell "to reconsider the advanced, refundable nature of this entitlement."
4. *Eliminate the continuous coverage requirement:* The BCRA includes a provision that says anyone who goes without insurance for more than 63 consecutive days in a year must wait six months in the following year before they can get access to coverage again. Paul said this constituted another version of Obamacare's individual mandate and asked McConnell to "simply allow insurance companies to impose a waiting period."

Paul's policy goals are consistent with the conservative message he has touted since the release of the House's version of healthcare reform.

Politically, however, none of the requests are likely tenable if McConnell wants to get the needed 50 votes to pass the BCRA.

More moderate senators, like Dean Heller of Nevada, Susan Collins of Maine, Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, and Rob Portman of Ohio have publicly said they would not support the current iteration of the bill because it goes too far in some of its changes to the current healthcare system. The Medicaid cuts are too deep, and the spending to help people get access to care is not enough, these senators have said.

If McConnell meets Paul's demands, that would likely solidify those four members opposition, killing the bill.

But attempting to pick up the moderate wing also poses a problem. Losing Paul could mean that conservative senators like Mike Lee of Utah, Ted Cruz of Texas, and Ron Johnson of Wisconsin would follow. McConnell can only afford two defections for the bill to pass.

McConnell is reportedly aiming to get a deal done by Friday in order to get a vote on the revised bill as soon as the Senate returns from its week-long July 4 recess.

*SEE ALSO: 'Trump doesn't bring us any votes': Trump appears to be losing influence on healthcare*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 'Do you even understand what you're asking?': Putin and Megyn Kelly have a heated exchange over Trump-Russia ties Reported by Business Insider 1 hour ago.

Dispatches From the Conservative Bubble: GOP Health-Care Edition

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Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call via AP Images

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell meets with HHS Secretary Tom Price in his office in the Capitol. 

Poll after poll finds that a majority of Republicans disapprove of the GOP’s effort to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA). But given that every analysis of the Republicans’ bills comes to the same broad conclusion—that it will result in millions of Americans losing coverage, won’t reduce premiums for anyone but young, healthy people, and will bestow a massive tax cut skewed toward those who don’t need the extra cash—one has to wonder what those 30-40 percent who approve of the legislation are thinking.

The simplest explanation is that they’re not. Most of us rely heavily on partisan cues to form a position on policy issues, especially when they’re complicated. Influencers—pundits, wonks, and politicians you like—play an important role.

One such pundit is Joel Pollak, a rigidly ideological editor at Breitbart. On Saturday, he published a piece entitled, “In Health Care Attacks, Democrats Risk Inciting Further Violence.” In it, he wrote, “Democrats have settled on a grisly theme in their attacks on the Republicans’ new legislation to repeal and replace Obamacare: death.”

That alarmist rhetoric is spreading throughout the party, from the top down, as if last week’s shooting attack against Republicans, in which House Majority Whip Steve Scalise was critically injured, never happened.

Democrats seem not to care that telling Americans that Republicans are trying to kill them might prompt others to act violently in what they may perceive to be their own self-defense.

Setting aside his simplistic view of the causes of political violence, and the brazenness with which Pollak waves the bloody shirt, it’s remarkable how he reduces an accurate assessment of the real-world consequences of the GOP’s efforts to strip insurance coverage from millions of people to mere political rhetoric.

Pollak is not alone. Across the right, a new theme has emerged: One can criticize the Republican bill, but discussing its inevitable consequences is a bridge too far, which might inspire another unbalanced person to resort to violence, as James Hodgkinson did in Alexandria two weeks ago. 

On Twitter, I pointed out that a meta-analysis of high-quality, peer-reviewed studies by Harvard researchers published in The New England Journal of Medicine found that stripping coverage from millions of Americans would indeed lead to “excess mortality” over the baseline established by the ACA. In plain language, that means the claim that passing the Republican bill would “kill people” is the judgment of the medical establishment, not a talking point conjured up by Democrats.

Pollak’s response: The New England Journal of Medicine has a liberal bias and it’s all fake news:

I was impressed—and, to be honest, just a bit envious—of Pollak’s ability to blithely dismiss information that conflicts with his worldview, even when it comes from the leading researchers in their field.

Besides, even if you do believe that all those egghead scientists are hard-core lefties bent on undercutting Republican reform efforts, the relationship between going without health insurance and mortality is pretty intuitive. If tens of millions lose coverage, some number among them won’t be able to afford to pay out-of-pocket and will inevitably put off care, including preventive care—think cancer screenings and the like—and as a result will have bad outcomes. 

On Monday, the much-anticipated Congressional Budget Office’s analysis of Senate Republicans’ health-care bill was released, and found that if passed, by 2026, 22 million fewer Americans would be covered than under current law. The bill includes deep reductions in spending on Medicaid—a program that serves some of the sickest and most vulnerable Americans. According to an analysis “using estimates of mortality rates from Massachusetts’s experience with health reform” conducted by The Center for American Progress, those reductions would result in around 26,500 additional deaths in 2026 alone.

In a 2014 interview, Stephen Bezruchka, a professor of public health at the University of Washington, told me that economic and health-care insecurity also lead to increased stress, which he called “our 21st century tobacco.” He said that an increasing body of literature strongly suggests that the secretion of stress hormones probably shortens lifespans. But that argument seemed too quixotic for a Breitbart writer, so I sent Pollak links to four other peer-reviewed studies investigating the relationship between insurance coverage and premature death.

He parried with a conservative talking point, apparently unaware of the difference between some folks on the individual market having to switch policies and the overall coverage rate.

I pointed out the obvious, courtesy of the Congressional Budget Office and the Census Bureau (via a graphic from The Washington Post), and our exchange came to a close.

Perhaps I shouldn’t pick on Pollak, who’s just a cog in a larger disinformation machine—one that revved up this weekend as senior GOP officials apparently concluded that the only way to defend their bill was to blatantly misrepresent what it would do.



.@KellyannePolls on Senate GOP health bill: "These are not cuts to Medicaid" https://t.co/HKRI6JgJhg #ThisWeek pic.twitter.com/efwam9RaIF

— This Week (@ThisWeekABC) June 25, 2017





HHS Secretary Tom Price making a bold delararion to @DanaBashCNN: "We would not have individuals lose coverage."

— Manu Raju (@mkraju) June 25, 2017





On CBS, @SenToomey claims that GOP bill will “make permanent” the Medicaid expansion and “no one loses coverage.” pic.twitter.com/fqsPMtsbmA

— Dan Diamond (@ddiamond) June 25, 2017



The point of all of this mendacity was to muddy the waters by creating an alternative set of “facts” that the GOP base can embrace. Motivated reasoning, or motivated cognition—the process of embracing certain information that conforms to one’s beliefs and rejects what conflicts with them—is something we all do. But it requires some minimally credible claims to latch onto. Nobody would have believed that smoking wasn’t bad for you 30 years ago—or would believe that climate change is a hoax today—if Big Tobacco and the fossil-fuels industry didn’t fund contrarian scientists who made those arguments.

And defending a package of high-end tax cuts financed by stripping health insurance from millions of Americans, some of whom will die as a result, the Republicans who did the rounds on the Sunday talk-shows telling people that nobody would lose coverage under their bill—and Joel Pollak telling his followers that studies published in journals like The New England Journal of Medicine are fake news—were just serving the same purpose.   Reported by The American Prospect 57 minutes ago.

Ohio, Missouri have biggest bare spots for 2018 ACA individual health coverage

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Ohio is second only to Missouri for the most counties with potentially no available subsidized plans for sale next year on the federal Health Insurance Marketplace, the Kaiser Family Foundation reports. Reported by bizjournals 46 minutes ago.

GOP touts lower premiums, but other insurance costs to rise

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans are touting lower premiums under their health care legislation, but that reflects insurance that would cover a smaller share of the cost of medical bills. Insurers will be able to charge older adults up to five times more, compared with a three-fold difference under current law, the health care overhaul passed under former President Barack Obama. Lower-income people get less assistance with premiums in the Senate bill and the GOP would also phase out extra help that many receive with deductibles and copayments. Industry consultant and blogger Robert Laszewski says lawmakers should start from scratch and try to design a system along the lines of the Medicare prescription drug benefit, a collaboration between the government and insurers that has solid bipartisan support, even if its cost to taxpayers is a problem. What's gotten most attention is the CBO's projection that at least 22 million fewer Americans would have health insurance under either Republican bill, the one that passed the House or the Senate version. Premium subsidies would reduce the net premium to $1,700. Because of extra subsidies for deductibles and copayments, the plan would cover 87 percent of expected medical costs. Reported by SeattlePI.com 21 hours ago.

Health insurance expansion may be linked to fewer cardiac arrest deaths, OHSU researcher says

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Sudden cardiac arrest is responsible for about 350,000 deaths each year, more than any other single disease. Recently, though, an OHSU researcher led a study that found a strong connection between Medicare expansion and a reduction in sudden cardiac arrests among middle aged adults. Eric Stecker, a cardiology professor at OHSU's Knight Cardiovascular Institute, also said this improvement could be reversed if the Senate health care bill, which the CBO estimates would increase the number of uninsured… Reported by bizjournals 21 hours ago.

Chris Christie’s attack on a health insurer could help the Kushner family

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New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has taken up a crusade against his state’s largest health insurer in his final year in office, perplexing observers and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. His campaign against Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield could benefit a health insurance provider linked to Joshua ... Reported by Raw Story 21 hours ago.

2 insurers to pull out of health exchange in rural Nevada

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CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) — Thousands of residents will be left uninsured in 14 of Nevada’s 17 counties after two insurance companies exit the government-run but privately administered health insurance exchange next year, in what state officials called a health crisis Wednesday. Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield said in a Wednesday statement it will […] Reported by Seattle Times 19 hours ago.

Little progress evident as GOP hunts health bill votes

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is exploring options for salvaging the battered Republican health care bill, even as he confronts an expanding chorus of GOP detractors. Some senators emerged from a party lunch saying potential amendments were beyond cosmetic, with changes to Medicaid and Obama's consumer-friendly insurance coverage requirements among the items in play. The GOP's health care slog has highlighted discord between moderates who say the bill cuts Medicaid and federal health care subsidies too deeply, and conservatives eager to reduce government spending and shrink premiums by letting insurers sell policies with less coverage than Obama's law allows. GOP support for the measure sagged this week after a report by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that it would produce 22 million fewer insured people by 2026 while making coverage less affordable for many, especially older and poorer Americans. Centrists from states that expanded Medicaid health insurance for the poor under Obama's law are battling to ease the bill's cutoff of that expansion, and to make the measure's federal subsidies more generous for people losing Medicaid coverage. Some would further trim Medicaid spending and the health care tax credits, with Paul seeking to erase the package's billions to help insurers contain costs for lower-earning customers and protect the companies against potential losses. Reported by SeattlePI.com 10 hours ago.
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