The Delaware Gazette

Coverage for most Americans, a scramble for states

RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

Asso­ci­ated Press

WASHINGTON — Pres­i­dent Barack Obama’s health care over­haul is on the way to its ulti­mate jury: the fam­i­lies, doc­tors, busi­ness peo­ple and state offi­cials who’ll have to grap­ple with the con­fus­ing details while striv­ing to ful­fill its promise.

With the Supreme Court hur­dle cleared, open enroll­ment for mil­lions now unin­sured is sched­uled to begin in just 16 months, in Octo­ber 2013. Much of the health care indus­try is ready. Peo­ple who do have insur­ance won’t have to worry about the loss of pop­u­lar new ben­e­fits, such as cov­er­age for young adult chil­dren or improve­ments to Medicare’s pre­scrip­tion plan.

And, start­ing in 2014, insur­ance com­pa­nies will no longer be able to turn away peo­ple with a his­tory of med­ical prob­lems, or charge them more.

But car­ry­ing out the law will be a mad scram­ble for states, espe­cially Republican-led ones where offi­cials had hoped this day wouldn’t come. And the court added a new com­pli­ca­tion by giv­ing indi­vid­ual states more lee­way to turn down the law’s expan­sion of Med­ic­aid, expected to pro­vide cov­er­age to about 16 mil­lion unin­sured people.

After the rul­ing, chances of repeal­ing the entire law appear much slim­mer for Repub­li­cans, although they will again make it an elec­tion ral­ly­ing cry. How­ever, a tar­geted repeal strat­egy aimed at indi­vid­ual com­po­nents of the law includ­ing cost con­trols, taxes and spend­ing cuts, may still work.

Vicki McCuis­tion of Drift­wood, Texas, who shut­tles between two part-time jobs and is unin­sured, said the Supreme Court rul­ing has given her new hope. Her hus­band Dan has back prob­lems so bad he can’t go to work some days, and with a fam­ily his­tory of skin can­cer she is wor­ried about a mole that she hasn’t been able to get checked by doctors.

“Hav­ing access to health insur­ance that we can actu­ally afford would allow us to improve our lives,” McCuis­tion said Thursday.

At the White House, Obama repeated his promise that the Afford­able Care Act will both deliver health insur­ance and help get a han­dle on grow­ing costs. But the glow of vic­tory may be brief. Even some sup­port­ers of the law can­didly admit it’s only a first install­ment — a way to get most of the pop­u­la­tion cov­ered before tack­ling costs force­fully. Wrench­ing choices about Medicare and Med­ic­aid cuts could come as early as next year.

Thursday’s deci­sion moves the United States closer to other eco­nom­i­cally advanced coun­tries that for years have guar­an­teed health insur­ance to their citizens.

The law’s con­tro­ver­sial man­date that indi­vid­u­als have health insur­ance or pay a fee — upheld by the court on Thurs­day — will affect rel­a­tively few peo­ple, because more than eight in 10 Amer­i­cans already have cov­er­age. But employ­ers with 50 or more work­ers will face fines if they don’t pro­vide insur­ance for employees.

The law is expected to extend cov­er­age to about 30 mil­lion of the esti­mated 50 mil­lion unin­sured. Ille­gal immi­grants will rep­re­sent a large share of those still with­out cov­er­age, but 90 per­cent of cit­i­zens and legal res­i­dents will have insurance.

The focus now quickly shifts from Wash­ing­ton to the states.

While health insur­ers, big hos­pi­tals and major employ­ers have spent the last two years plan­ning and car­ry­ing out the law, states are all over the lot.

Although they are expected to play a cru­cial role in deliv­er­ing insur­ance to their res­i­dents, only 14 states, plus Wash­ing­ton D.C., have actu­ally adopted a plan for doing so. Hop­ing the law would be over­turned, Repub­li­can gov­er­nors and leg­is­la­tures have resisted set­ting up new insur­ance mar­kets that are a linch­pin of the leg­is­la­tion, and that could turn into a prob­lem for the whole country.

The National Asso­ci­a­tion of Insur­ance Com­mis­sion­ers expects only about half the states to be ready to set up new health insur­ance mar­kets, slated to open for busi­ness on Jan. 1, 2014.

If states aren’t ready, the law calls for Wash­ing­ton to step in and run things. Health and Human Ser­vices Sec­re­tary Kath­leen Sebe­lius says the feds are ready to do that.

State plans for the mar­kets — called exchanges — are due to the fed­eral gov­ern­ment this fall. Wash­ing­ton will run the exchanges in states that lag behind. The new Internet-based mar­kets are sup­posed to pro­vide one-stop shop­ping for health insur­ance, steer­ing middle-class house­holds to pri­vate plans and low-income peo­ple to an expanded ver­sion of Med­ic­aid, the federal-state pro­gram for the poor and disabled.

But the court added a new wrin­kle, rul­ing that states can­not be threat­ened with the loss of their entire Med­ic­aid allot­ments if they refuse to carry out the expan­sion, which is geared largely to help­ing unin­sured low-income adults. Under the law, the fed­eral gov­ern­ment will pick up all of the cost for the first three years, even­tu­ally drop­ping to a 90 per­cent share.

Matt Salo, head of the National Asso­ci­a­tion of Med­ic­aid Direc­tors, said it’s too early to tell what states will do.

“This opens up what was a man­date into a state option, and states are going to have to think very, very care­fully as they weigh all the polit­i­cal, pol­icy and fis­cal ram­i­fi­ca­tions of the deci­sion,” Salo said.

States that turn down the money will still be stuck with the cost of treat­ing unin­sured patients in hos­pi­tal emer­gency rooms. States that accept the money may be on the hook if Wash­ing­ton later decides to reduce the gen­er­ous fed­eral match­ing funds for the expansion.

“What this really means is the deci­sions are going to be made after the elec­tions this year,” said Wisconsin’s health sec­re­tary, Den­nis G. Smith, whose state has not moved to put the law in place. “This is going to go back to Con­gress. We had always thought (the law) was unwork­able, and today’s rul­ing proves the point even more.”

Admin­is­tra­tion offi­cials pre­dict states will par­tic­i­pate, even if some take time to decide. They point out it took three or four years for all states to join the orig­i­nal Med­ic­aid program.

Aside from help for low-income and unin­sured peo­ple, the Supreme Court deci­sion also means an expanded safety net for all Amer­i­cans. Start­ing in 2014, insur­ance com­pa­nies will not be able to deny cov­er­age for med­ical rea­sons, nor can they charge more to peo­ple with health prob­lems. Those pro­tec­tions, now stan­dard in most big-employer plans, will be avail­able to all, includ­ing peo­ple who get laid off, or leave a cor­po­rate job to launch their own small business.

Seniors stand to receive bet­ter Medicare cov­er­age for those with high pre­scrip­tion costs, and no copay­ments for pre­ven­tive care. But hos­pi­tals, nurs­ing homes, and many other ser­vice providers may strug­gle once the Medicare cuts used to finance the law really start to bite.

The health insur­ance industry’s top lob­by­ist said the rul­ing relieved one big con­cern for insur­ers — that the man­date would be struck down, allow­ing peo­ple to buy cov­er­age lit­er­ally on the way to the hos­pi­tal. But the com­pa­nies are still wor­ried about costs.

“With­out uni­ver­sal par­tic­i­pa­tion you have no incen­tive to pur­chase cov­er­age until you are sick, and that is not an insur­ance sys­tem,” said Karen Ignagni, pres­i­dent of America’s Health Insur­ance Plans. “Now it’s time to turn all the atten­tion toward afford­abil­ity.” The indus­try con­tin­ues to fight taxes and other require­ments in the law.

In con­trast to the states, the nation’s vast health care indus­try is bet­ter pre­pared. When the law passed in 2010, insur­ers, hos­pi­tals and major employ­ers imme­di­ately went to work to carry it out. Some of the changes in the law were already being demanded by employ­ers try­ing to get bet­ter health insur­ance value.

“The fac­tors dri­ving health care reform are not new, and they are not going to go away,” said Dr. Toby Cos­grove, CEO of the Cleve­land Clinic. “We know we have to take costs out of the sys­tem and improve quality.”

AP News Posted by on Jun 28 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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