February 22, 2012

Many Americans Incorrectly Believe Health Law Has Been Repealed

poll released Thursday found extensive public confusion about the health care law, with 22 percent of Americans incorrectly believing it has been repealed and another 26 percent unsure or unwilling to say.

The results come after the Republican-controlled House of Representatives voted to repeal the law last month, and two federal judges ruled the law was unconstitutional. After extensive media coverage of these events, only 52 percent of Americans accurately said the health care law, which passed last year, remained intact, according to the poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation.  (KHN is a program of the foundation.)

The poll found that unfavorable views of the law among the elderly have risen to 59 percent, up from 40 percent in December. Republican opposition has grown over recent months, to 84 percent, while 66 percent of Democrats remain supportive and independents are divided. Republicans are more passionate in their opposition than Democrats are enthusiastic about the law.

There remains no consensus about whether to keep, expand, replace or repeal the law. Forty-eight percent are opposed to the law, while 43 percent favor it. Sixty-one percent of those polled oppose Congress cutting off funding of the law in order to block it, as many Republican lawmakers are considering.

A majority of the public has not tired of the debate, but there is much more interest in Congress focusing on the economy, jobs and the budget deficit than on the law. Still, 19 percent of voters want to repeal the law and replace it with a Republican alternative, and 20 percent want to get rid of it.

Several of the individual provisions of the law, including subsidies to help the poor buy insurance and  eventual elimination of the Medicare “doughnut hole” where seniors don’t have coverage for prescription drugs, remain popular with the majority of the public, regardless of their party affiliation. Sixty-seven percent of Americans want to repeal the requirement that everyone hold insurance.

Nearly one in three Republicans thought the law had been repealed. One in four independents and one in eight Democrats thought the same. People with higher incomes as well as those with college degrees were more likely to have an accurate view of the status of the law.

Though the House has voted for repeal, getting rid of the law still requires the approval of the Democrat-controlled Senate and President Barack Obama – something that is unimaginable to political observers.

The public had a better understanding of the status of implementation of the law, with 62 percent saying that some but not all of its provisions had been put into place. Only a minority believe the law has affected them, with 14 percent saying they have benefited and 17 percent saying they had experienced a negative impact.

The public isn’t particularly optimistic about the law’s eventual impact: a minority believe the law will make things better for the country, middle class Americans, the elderly, Medicare, the economy or their own family.

The foundation conducted the survey of 1,202 adults between Feb. 8 and Feb. 13. The margin of error was +/- 3 percentage points.

This article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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Repeal and Replace, But Replace With What?

The Republicans insist they want not just to repeal the Affordable Care Act but also to replace it. But replace it with what, exactly? It’s not an easy question to answer.

Republicans have yet to embrace a specific proposal and, rhetorically, they have made contradictory arguments about what they want. They have, for example, criticized the new law for reducing Medicare spending. But they’ve also applauded proposals, like the one offered by House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan, R- Wis., which would reduce spending far more dramatically.

Still, there are a few key ideas that virtually all Republicans endorse. One in particular tells you everything you need to know about the GOP‘s vision of health care reform — for better and, mostly, for worse.

The idea is to allow the purchase of health insurance across state lines. Today, if you buy coverage on your own, you can only buy a policy from within your state. The Republicans would change that rule, so that somebody in Minnesota could buy a policy from, say, Alabama. Republicans like this idea because, they maintain, it would help move health care toward a truly free market. As individuals shopped more aggressively for policies, the argument goes, they’d force insurers and, eventually, the whole health care system, to provide better quality and lower prices.

But cross-state purchasing would do more than merely unleash consumer power, the Republicans claim. It would also prevent regulations from driving up the cost of insurance. Right now, states have rules about what insurance plans must cover and how insurers must behave. And the rules vary by state. States like New Jersey have lots of them — states like Utah or Iowa, not so much. On the whole, regulations, where they exist, tend to make health insurance more expensive. The more insurers must cover, the more it’s going to cost consumers. Cross-state purchasing would allow people to buy coverage from the states with the least regulations. Those who take advantage of it could save a lot of money on their premiums.

It all sounds very sensible, until you start to think through the implications. Many people can’t even get insurance on the individual market, because of pre-existing conditions. And many of those who do get insurance end up with coverage that is, frankly, just plain lousy. The policies may be cheap, but they also have huge gaps in coverage, in the form of services not covered or out-of-pocket payments that all but the very wealthiest families would find unaffordable. The people with these policies are known as the “under-insured.” Many if not most of them believed they were getting insurance when they purchased the policies. They discover the gaps only when they file claims and it is too late.

The main reason this problem isn’t worse right now is that some states have regulations forcing insurers to make insurance available to at least some people with pre-existing conditions and to cover at least some services. (The health overhaul strengthens these standards substantially, making insurance effectively available to all, and imposes them nationally.) But the Republican proposal on cross-state purchases would decimate those regulations, opening the door for young, healthy people — whom insurers covet and who are frequently willing to risk flimsy coverage — to start buying the most minimal policies sold from the states with the least regulations. Eventually the insurers would likely move, as well — congregating in those states in much the same way the credit card industry migrated to low-regulation states like Delaware and South Dakota. Offering more comprehensive insurance or making coverage available to people with serious medical conditions would become financially untenable, since there wouldn’t be enough premiums from healthy people to offset the costs of the sick.

You don’t have to take my word for it. When John McCain embraced this idea as part of his 2008 presidential campaign, the Urban Institute‘s Linda Blumberg analyzed it and concluded that it would leave “many more people with health problems unable to purchase private coverage at any price … . The typical coverage would become less comprehensive as well, with benefit exclusions and limitations becoming the norm across the country.” Other experts have reached similar conclusions.

To be sure, allowing the purchase of insurance across state lines is just one part of the Republican agenda. But it reflects the same basic impulse as the other ideas Republicans frequently embrace. Ending the tax break that encourages employers to provide insurance, offering inducements for individuals to buy high-deductible coverage, turning Medicare into a voucher scheme that doesn’t guarantee comprehensive benefits — all of these ideas would make health care expenses less of a collective responsibility and more of an individual one. It’s a lousy deal for people who are sick, many of whom would have to forgo medical care or face financial ruin. The only ones who benefit are the relatively young and healthy — well, at least until they get old and unhealthy, as everybody inevitably does.

Earlier this week, Republican aides told Politico that they plan, after the repeal vote, to start hearings on crafting a formal alternative to the health law — but that the work might, um, take some time.  ”They won’t be rushing to push their own vision of health care through the House anytime soon,” the article explained. Given what that vision looks like, is it any wonder why?

This column is a collaboration between KHN and The New Republic.

This article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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Rebranding “Obamacare”

Puh-pack-uh? Is that some kind of llama?

In fact, it’s the ungainly acronym of the new health-care law – PPACA, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Many people who support the law, or are neutral toward it, call it “puh-pack-uh” or “pee-pack-uh.” Others call it the Affordable Care Act or plain old health-care reform.

But those less-than-inspiring monikers aren’t much help to Democrats trying to convince the public that “Obamacare” – the Republicans’ pejorative name for the law – is worth keeping, said Robert J. Blendon, a professor of health policy and political analysis at the Harvard School of Public Health.

Democratic pollsters concede that there is a problem.

“We do need a common narrative that includes a name,” said Celinda Lake, president of Lake Research Partners. “When Obama’s job performance improves, it will be fine to call it Obamacare. Now, it is polarizing.”

Mark Mellman, another Democratic pollster, says that the title Patient Protection and Accountable Care Act highlights important aspects of the law, but that “it’s wonky, clunky language.”

Names of legislation, he said, should “summarize something important for people to organize their thinking.”

Indeed, constructing catchy-sounding acronyms for legislation, as well as other things, is a long tradition on Capitol Hill.

In the early 1990s, Sen. John Chafee (R-R.I.) announced his health-care bill would be called the HEART Act. Asked by a reporter what HEART stood for, Chafee said he would figure it out later; the important thing was getting people to start using the warm-and-fuzzy acronym. In 1999, Sen. James M. Jeffords (R-Vt.) gave the Education and Labor Committee a new name – the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, or HELP.

These days, White House officials generally refer to the new health-care law as the Affordable Care Act. Blendon says that doesn’t help Democrats much because “people don’t believe the law will make health care more affordable.”

Mellman agrees that there is a widespread view that costs are on the rise because of the law – even though supporters say that view is inaccurate.

“Members of Congress are hearing it right and left,” he said. “People’s premiums went up last year and [Democrats] said it had nothing to do with the bill. When they went up this year, people said, ‘Hah!’ and they linked it [to the law], even though there probably was no connection.”

So how, exactly, did the law end up with a handle like “puh-pack-uh”? Creators of the law did pay some attention to its name, Mellman said, but in the end, it was designed by committee. To satisfy more people, the name became long and inclusive, giving it less of a chance to catch on and be used, he added. And that opened the door to “puh-pack-uh,” health-care reform and the Affordable Care Act.

“This was a missed opportunity,” said Lake, noting that the name problem is symptomatic of a broader problem among Democrats on health-care overhaul.

“There wasn’t nearly enough branding of health-care reform,” she said. “Because of that, we paid the price throughout the whole debate.”

Now, the branding “has to be done through the prism of repeal and replace,” she said. “It’s a Republican message, and we have to do our message through the prism of that.”

Republicans, for their part, are satisfied with their “Obamacare” branding. GOP pollster Bill McInturff, partner at Public Opinion Strategies, asked voters in September whether the term “Obamacare” was a net negative, and 10 percent said that it was somewhat negative; 37 percent said that it was very negative.

Rep. Michael C. Burgess (R-Tex.), who is pushing for repeal of the law, said that calling it the Affordable Care Act is a misnomer.

“I even had an amendment to strike the word affordable from the bill’s title, but I didn’t get anywhere with it,” he said.

As for “puh-pack-uh”? That, he said, “kind of reminds me of those people who invested heavily in those llama-like animals.”

This article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

This story was produced in collaboration with The Washington Post.

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The Long Road To A Supreme Court Decision On Health Law’s Mandate

The HCLSC – health care litigation spin cycle – is in overdrive now that a Reagan-appointed federal judge has strongly signaled in court that he is very likely to follow a George W. Bush appointee who struck down the individual mandate at the heart of the new health care law.

Republican critics of the law were saying that “several” (that is, two) judges had found unconstitutional the requirement that Americans obtain insurance or pay penalties. Meanwhile, President Obama was saying: “We’ve got 12 federal courts who have dismissed similar lawsuits. So the majority of courts who looked at this issue so far are absolutely convinced that the health care bill is [constitutional].” Twelve! Sounds convincing. But Obama neglected to note that 10 of those lawsuits were mostly beside the point because they were not aimed at the individual mandate or were dismissed on grounds that did not uphold its constitutionality.

If counting judicial noses at this early stage were a reliable guide to the likely fate of the health care law on appeal, the score would stand at two Clinton-appointed judges, George Steeh and Norman Moon, upholding the individual mandate; Bush-appointed Henry Hudson striking it down Dec. 13, and Reagan-appointed Roger Vinson sounding during an oral argument on Dec. 16 like he would do the same. The four sit in Detroit; Lynchburg and Richmond, Va., and Tallahassee, Fla., respectively.

But district judges’ rulings tell us little or nothing about what the federal appeals courts and the Supreme Court will ultimately do with these cases. Below is an overview of the litigation, what it’s about, and how it’s likely to unfold.
How many health care lawsuits are there? More than 20 have been filed around the country, some going to the heart of the law and some peripheral.

Why is one provision of the massive law getting so much attention? First, it’s widely seen as a lynchpin of the Democrats’ goal — that just about every American have affordable insurance regardless of their health. Without the mandate, many people might go without insurance – thus driving up premiums for everyone else – because they would know that whenever they need coverage they could easily get it. Second, as a constitutional matter, the mandate is the law’s most vulnerable major provision because it is the first ever to require millions of Americans, in the name of regulating interstate commerce, to buy a commercial product that they  may not want to pay for. Since the New Deal, the Supreme Court has allowed Congress extremely broad powers to regulate commerce. But the Court has never said that that power is unlimited and has left room for questions such as one that Vinson asked: Could Congress “mandate that everybody has to buy a certain amount of broccoli?”

But if it’s necessary to pay for near universal coverage, it must be constitutional, right? The Obama administration and many others essentially say that. Critics say that market-based incentives would work better. One irony is that Congress could without fear of constitutional invalidation have created the kind of single-payer system that conservatives call socialism. Hudson stressed that as a matter of law, good policy is not necessarily constitutional, nor bad policy unconstitutional. But it’s pretty clear that he and Vinson think this law is bad both ways. And that Steeh and Moon think it’s good both ways.

Why do people keep saying the Supreme Court will decide the fate of the law in June 2012 or June 2013? June is when the Court issues most of its big decisions, with some notable exceptions, whether they are argued in April or the previous October. That’s because big decisions tend to generate long opinions, dissents, and concurrences, which circulate back and forth as the justices trade debating points in footnotes. Decisions are almost never issued in July, August or September because the justices cherish their three-month summer vacations.

What has to happen before the Supreme Court gets the case? While lots of cases are pending around the country, the four mentioned above seem to be on the fastest tracks. The Detroit and Lynchburg cases are already before or headed for the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the 6th and 4th Circuits, respectively. Hudson’s decision will also go to the 4th Circuit. Vinson’s will go to the 11th Circuit no matter how he rules. And it often takes 14 months to two years for a case to move from the final ruling of a district judge such as Hudson to any decision by the Supreme Court.

Why does it take so long? Judges and lawyers move very slowly. Allow four to five months for filing of initial briefs and responses in the appeals court. Three to eight more months for the three-judge panel to rule. Another four to six months for the losing side to seek and obtain (in a small percentage of cases) a Supreme Court decision to review the case. More than three additional months of briefing before the justices hear arguments. But this timetable could slip by a year if the losing party in a regional appeals court panel obtains a rehearing before the full appellate court, or if the justices choose to await conflicting appeals court rulings rather than taking up the first case that comes along.

What’s likely to happen? Lawyers in the Tallahassee case appear to have chosen Florida for a reason: The appeal of Vinson’s decision will go to the 11-judge U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, one of the most conservative in the country. Chances are good that a typical 11th Circuit panel will move fast, by judicial standards, to strike down the individual mandate. Other cases may move fast, too. That would tee the issue up for a Supreme Court argument by the spring of 2012 and a ruling likely to fall between June 25 and 28 of that year.

Who will win? The four justices will vote to uphold the law. Can they get to five? All eyes will be on their best bets: swing-voting Anthony Kennedy and Chief Justice John Roberts.

Taylor is a contributing editor for Newsweek and National Journal.

This article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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Health Care Reform Myths and Facts

This story was produced in collaboration with wapo

The debate that preceded passage of the health-care overhaul resumed as a heated issue in the midterm elections. Politicians and advocacy groups seeking repeal of the law are making dramatic claims about its cost and effects. How valid are they? We evaluate some of the most common criticisms.

The Claim: The law amounts to a “government takeover” of health insurance and health care.

SAYS WHO?

Some GOP politicians, including Rep. Wally Herger, R-Calif., the ranking member of the Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health, who says the law is a “government takeover of health care” and should be repealed.

HOW TRUE IS IT?

The law signals a sharp expansion of the federal government’s involvement in health care. It requires most Americans to have insurance and imposes a raft of federal rules on insurers. It also vastly increases the number of people who will qualify for Medicaid, the federal-state program for the poor, and offers subsidies to others who can’t afford private coverage. Still, it falls far short of a government takeover.

Most people under 65 will continue to receive health insurance coverage through private employers and insurance companies. Medical care will be provided by private hospitals and doctors. Drug companies and device makers will continue to develop and sell their products. Prices in the private market will be determined by competition and negotiations; fees paid to doctors and hospitals by Medicare will continue to be set by the government.

Insurers will be barred from rejecting applicants with health problems and will be required to use a certain percentage of the premiums they collect on medical care — as opposed to administrative expenses or profits, for example. Premium increases will get more scrutiny but won’t be directly regulated by the federal government.

The law doesn’t create government-run insurance plans. But states (or the federal government) will run “exchanges” — marketplaces — where private insurers will sell insurance to individuals and small businesses.

The law also promotes the creation of consumer co-op plans, which would be member-run, nonprofit insurers. The government’s share of the nation’s health-care tab will continue to grow as more people sign up for Medicaid and the baby-boom generation hits Medicare age. By 2012, Medicare actuaries estimate, the government will be paying for slightly more than half the nation’s health-care bill, up from 48 percent in 2008.

The Claim: The law will gut Medicare by cutting more than $500 billion from the program over 10 years; seniors will lose benefits and won’t be able to keep their doctors.

SAYS WHO?

Most notably the 60 Plus Association, a conservative seniors group, and Crossroads GPS, another conservative advocacy group, in campaign ads targeting Democratic incumbents in Congress. Some Republican candidates also have made the claim.

HOW TRUE IS IT?

The gutting of Medicare claim goes too far. The new law slows the growth of Medicare spending over the next decade. But it doesn’t actually cut spending from one year to the next.

Medicare’s chief actuary, Rick Foster, estimated that the law could reduce projected Medicare spending by more than $575 billion over 10 years. The savings — which will help pay for the expansion of coverage to the under-65 uninsured — come from slowing the growth of fees paid to hospitals, home health agencies and other providers, and reducing payments to private Medicare Advantage insurance plans.

What this means for seniors is a bit murkier. None of the basic benefits provided under traditional Medicare will be eliminated; in fact, some new benefits have been added. But Democrats have downplayed the potential impact on seniors who have Medicare Advantage plans. Foster says the lower reimbursement to insurers means such seniors may pay hundreds of dollars more per year in out-of-pocket costs. The cuts, which begin in 2012, may well prompt the private plans to trim or eliminate extra benefits, which sometimes include vision and dental care and gym memberships. About 24 percent of seniors in Medicare are enrolled in private plans.

Some Medicare Advantage plans might shut down altogether. That would force enrollees to go back to traditional Medicare or switch to another private plan, which could also mean changing doctors. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that, because of the law, Medicare Advantage plans by 2019 might cover 4.8 million fewer people than the 13.9 million projected without the health-care overhaul law.

Some seniors have expressed concern that they won’t be able to keep their doctors or find new ones if they have to. And it’s true that some doctors are declining to accept new Medicare patients, saying the program doesn’t pay enough, a complaint that predates the new law. The doctors’ biggest headache is a 1997 law that will reduce doctors’ Medicare payments by 23 percent on Dec. 1 unless Congress postpones the cut, an action that most lawmakers believe is likely. Under the overhaul law, some primary-care doctors will also get 10 percent bonus payments in Medicare from 2011 to 2015.

The law also adds some new benefits to Medicare, including free preventive screenings and $250 rebates this year to seniors who hit the prescription-drug coverage gap called the “doughnut hole.” That means that the net Medicare savings generated by the law total less than the 10-year estimate of $575 billion.

Still, the savings mean the Medicare hospital trust fund will remain solvent until 2029, a dozen years longer than projected without the law, according to the latest Medicare trustees’ report. On the other hand, not all the savings may materialize, because Congress may tinker with the formula over time if enough medical providers have trouble getting by on the slower-growing payments.

The Claim: The law will cause 87 million Americans to lose their current coverage.

SAYS WHO?

Republican House members asserted this in the “Pledge to America” governing plan they released last month, adding that it contradicts President Obama’s assurance during the health-care debate that “if you like your health plan, you can keep it.”

HOW TRUE IS IT?

Partly, at best. But evidence is limited.

Obama was certainly obscuring the picture. The law exempts plans in existence before its adoption from key requirements such as offering free preventive services, raising annual dollar limits on benefits and improving access to out-of-network emergency care.

But insurers can lose this “grandfathered status” by making such changes as restricting the coverage of particular conditions or raising plan members’ deductibles or other out-of-pocket costs 15 percent above medical inflation. The same goes for employers that switch insurance carriers or reduce the share of the premiums they cover by more than 5 percentage points. As a result, the administration estimates that by 2013, plans covering millions of workers will have fallen out of grandfathered status — not 87 million but 78 million workers according to the most recent figures.

Still, the Republican assertion that these workers will be forced to “drop their current coverage” implies the workers will be left with a worse plan or none at all.There’s little evidence for that. Many currently grandfathered plans already offer some or even all of the consumer protections required of new plans. So losing grandfathered status wouldn’t necessarily require them to raise premiums or make other changes. What portion of plans fall into this category? There are not enough data to say.

The research is also limited when it comes to assessing the impact on the share of plans that will need to add consumer protections as a result of losing grandfathered status. Republicans argue that the requirements could prove expensive and that many insurers or employers will be forced to pass the cost on to consumers or cancel the plans altogether.

However, government estimates suggest that the problem is not likely to be widespread. For instance, including coverage of preventive services generally increases a plan’s costs by less than 2 percent.

The Claim: The law is driving up costs and premiums and will continue to do so over the next several years.

SAYS WHO?

Republican Ron Johnson, challenger to Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, in an advertisement targeting Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., and Revere America, a group chaired by former New York governor George Pataki.

HOW TRUE IS IT?

There may be very small increases initially. In the long term, any prediction is speculative. Figuring out how the new law will affect health-care costs — and therefore premiums — is among the trickiest issues surrounding the statute. Not many people think costs will decline; the question is whether costs and premiums would go up faster with or without the law.

In the short term, state insurance commissioners say some providers of individual and small-group coverage are raising rates for next year by up to 9 percent. These insurers and Republican critics say that the law’s consumer protection provisions, such as the prohibition on lifetime caps, are forcing them to raise premiums.

But the Obama administration, citing estimates from the Urban Institute, the human resources consulting company Mercer and others, says the law isn’t responsible for any increase greater than 1 to 2 percent. That assertion is supported by one of the first major surveys to forecast what might happen next year. Hewitt, a consulting firm, said that large companies’ premiums are expected to rise 8.8 percent in 2011 — 1 to 2 percent due to the law, the rest due to higher medical costs.

It’s almost impossible to predict the long term. Last November the Congressional Budget Office analyzed the Senate bill, which is not much different from the law that eventually was passed. It found that premiums for small and large employers would likely not be much higher in 2016 than they would be absent the law — and might actually be lower.

But the CBO projections are based on assumptions about how the law might help constrain costs, and it’s hard to know whether those assumptions are correct. Premium rates are driven by many factors, including what doctors and drugmakers charge, how many people need care (spending goes up during flu outbreaks), how much insurers spend on administration or keep in profits.

Many of the provisions aimed at restraining those factors, such as those devised to reduce a unnecessary hospital readmissions, may not pay off for years.

The law also requires insurers to spend at least 80 percent of revenue on direct medical care. And the consumer exchanges that will open in 2014 — essentially, lists of private plans available in a region and their premiums — may also foster competition. But it’s unclear how effective these steps will be at restraining costs.

What about people who buy their own insurance? The CBO projects that policies bought on the individual market will be 10 percent to 13 percent higher in 2016 than they would have been without the law, mainly because the coverage will be more comprehensive than what is often purchased on the individual market today. It estimates that about half of those buying their own coverage will probably qualify for government subsidies.

The Claim: The law’s expansion of Medicaid will put massive pressure on state budgets at a time when many are already in crisis.

SAYS WHO?

Twenty states are challenging the law’s constitutionality in federal court, arguing that the Medicaid changes effectively require many of them to spend billions of dollars in “an unprecedented encroachment on the sovereignty of the states.” Similar concerns have been raised by politicians including Pam Bondi, the Republican candidate for attorney general of Florida, and Rory Reid, the Democratic candidate for governor of Nevada.

HOW TRUE IS IT?

The impact will probably be small, but it’s hard to say for sure. Technically, Medicaid is a voluntary partnership, with the federal government covering most of the cost and states paying a remaining share calculated according to their wealth. In practice, states would be loath to pull out of Medicaid because they would be giving up billions in federal assistance for their poorest citizens.

Until now, there has been wide diversity among the states on the question of who should be eligible for Medicaid. Some states limit assistance for adults to those who are disabled or truly indigent. Others have devoted extra money to cover, for instance, parents who earn up to at least 150 percent of the poverty level, or about $33,000 for a family of four.

Starting in 2014, the new law will require participating states to cover everyone earning 133 percent of the poverty level or less. It is estimated that this will bring 16 million to 23 million more people into Medicaid. The federal government will pick up nearly all the cost of these newly eligible beneficiaries, starting at 100 percent from 2014 to 2016 and gradually decreasing its share to 90 percent from 2020 onward.

The impact of this mandate could vary considerably. States such as Texas and Alabama that have had narrow eligibility rules will add far more people to their rolls. But they will also get a lot more federal dollars to cover the extra cost. States such as Massachusetts and New York, whose current rules are more expansive, may see fewer new enrollees, but initially they’ll get less federal help to cover them.

Such states could also see savings because many people they have been helping will be eligible for federal subsidies to buy insurance on state-based exchanges.

So what’s the bottom line? Estimates vary widely.

In a study for the Kaiser Family Foundation, the Urban Institute estimated that, not counting offsetting savings, between 2014 and 2019, total state spending on Medicaid will increase by $21 billion, 1.4 percent more than they would have spent in the absence of the new law. But that masks considerable differences across states. Four will spend less than they would have otherwise. Nine will increase their spending by 3 or even 4 percent.

While the Urban Institute’s analysis tracks with Congressional Budget Office estimates, several states have come up with substantially higher projections.

The Claim: The new law uses tax dollars to pay for abortions.

SAYS WHO?

Groups including the Susan B. Anthony List and Americans United for Life have spent at least $2 million on television ads, radio spots and billboards describing the law as the largest expansion of taxpayer-funded abortions in decades. In their “Pledge to America,” Republican House leaders assert that the law and an accompanying executive order issued by President Barack Obama are “inadequate to ensure that taxpayer funds are not used” to pay for abortions.

HOW TRUE IS IT?

Open to interpretation. Under the Hyde Amendment, which Congress has attached to yearly spending bills since 1977, federal dollars cannot be used to directly fund abortions, except in cases of rape or incest, or where the mother’s life is in danger.

This prevents abortions from being covered by insurance plans for federal employees, the Tricare plans for military families and the federally funded portion of Medicaid, the health program for the poor.

But the insurance system created by the new law does not lend itself to a straightforward segregation of federal funds in other plans.

In the state-based exchanges that the law creates, people without employer-based coverage will be able to buy private insurance using a combination of their own money and federal subsidies that most will receive based on their income level. Drafters of the law attempted to assuage both sides of the abortion debate through a compromise that ended up pleasing neither.

Insurers are allowed to include abortion coverage in their exchange plans, but everyone who buys such a plan must make two separate premium payments: one covering the bulk of the policy and another, far smaller one, as little as $1 per month, for the plan’s abortion coverage. Any federal subsidies can only be applied to the first payment.

Anti-abortion groups complain that the arrangement amounts to little more than an accounting gimmick. Unless plans that accept federally subsidized customers are barred from covering abortion, they say, the government will effectively be using at least some tax dollars to fund abortions.

To reassure them, Obama issued an executive order immediately after the law’s passage affirming his commitment to prevent federal funds from being used to pay for abortions. But the advocates complain that the order merely calls for compliance with the two-payment rule and is an “empty gesture.” Meanwhile, abortion-rights supporters worry that in practice few if any plans on the exchanges will end up offering abortion coverage because insurers will find the two-payment rule cumbersome and consumers will consider it bizarre and objectionable. They also note that the law allows states to prohibit plans on their exchanges from offering abortion coverage, an exception that could affect large numbers of women.

By Julie Appleby, Kaiser Health News and N.C. Aizenman, The Washington Post
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This article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.