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How HHS Secretary Price’s plan could change ACA forever

What Does President-elect Trump’s pick for HHS foretell?

Throughout his presidential campaign, President-elect Donald Trump criticized President Obama’s Affordable Care Act. Now, Trump has chosen Tom Price to head the Department of Health and Human Services and he will be charged with repealing or replacing the ACA. Price, a six-term Congressman and orthopedic surgeon, has introduced legislation every year since 2009 to replace the ACA. Price’s proposal, called the “Empowering Patients First Act,” provides some clues regarding the future of the ACA under the incoming administration.

tom-price-hhs
HHS Secretary Tom Price

Repeal of the Individual Mandate
Unlike the ACA, the Empowering Patients First Act does not include a requirement that all Americans purchase health insurance or pay a tax penalty. Instead, under Price’s plan, the government would encourage people to purchase health insurance on the individual market by rewarding such a purchase with a refundable tax credit. Tax credits are “refundable” when the taxpayer is entitled to the entire amount of the credit regardless of the taxpayer’s income or tax liability. The amount of the tax credit would range from $900 to $3,000 per individual depending on the individual’s age. The credit would not be available to those receiving federal or other benefits, including Medicare and Medicaid, nor would it be available to individuals in employer-subsidized group plans for health insurance.

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Reduce pre-existing condition protections
Another change that would result from the implementation of the Empowering Patients First Act would come to the ACA’s rules regarding pre-existing conditions. Under the ACA, insurance companies cannot refuse to sell coverage to an individual with a pre-existing condition, they cannot sell a policy that excludes coverage of a pre-existing condition, and they cannot charge more for a policy sold to an individual with a pre-existing condition. Under Price’s legislation, a health insurance company could sell a plan that excludes coverage of an individual’s pre-existing condition if the individual has not had continuous coverage of that condition for at least 18 months prior to enrollment in the new insurance plan.

In addition, the insurance company could charge the individual a higher premium — up to 50% higher — for up to two years after initial enrollment in the health plan. Or, if the insurance company chooses to sell a plan that covers the individual’s pre-existing condition even though that person did not have 18 months of continuous coverage prior to the enrollment date, it could charge up to 50% more than the standard premium for up to three years.

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Promote health-savings accounts
Finally, Price’s proposed healthcare legislation would expand and provide an incentive for the use of health savings accounts. If, an individual receives a refundable tax credit as a “reward” for purchasing health coverage on the individual market, he or she could direct the government to directly deposit into his or her HSA any money remaining from the tax credit after payment of the individual’s insurance premiums. In addition, Price’s bill would provide a one-time $1,000 HSA contribution from the government to incentivize people to establish HSAs.

These are just a few of the ways in which the ACA would be significantly changed by the passage of the healthcare legislation Rep. Price has repeatedly proposed. Federal healthcare law under the Trump administration is also likely to be heavily influenced by Trump’s recently-announced pick to head the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Seema Verma. Her impact on the new administration will be addressed in Part 2 of this series.

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Law and regulation Obamacare Healthcare-related legislation HSAs HHS
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