Catastrophic
Plans
During
his private-sector career Donald Trump floated many dubious business ventures,
and now as president he is pushing his biggest bait-and-switch scheme yet.
Having
run for office on promises that he would improve healthcare and protect safety
net programs such as Medicaid, he is now embracing and promoting a Republican
replacement for the Affordable Care Act that would do exactly the opposite.
Throughout
the campaign, Trump made it abundantly clear that he wanted to repeal the ACA,
which he repeatedly described as a disaster, and with his typical hyperbole promised voters: “You’re going to have
such great healthcare at a tiny fraction of the cost, and it is going to be so
easy.”
During
the transition he said that the replacement plan would
seek to provide “insurance for everybody.”
Trump
exploited the real frustrations of many people with the ACA — frustrations that
were largely the result of Republican intransigence that prevented the inclusion
of a public option, blocked any legislative fixes and precluded Medicaid
expansion in many states. He implicitly promised that a replacement plan would
do more.
When
Trump stated on February 27 that “nobody
knew health care could be so complicated,” he was in effect signaling that the
bait phase of his con was over and he was moving on to the switch.
Now
he has dropped the extravagant promises and has joined the House Republican
rush to enact a repeal and replace plan supposedly made urgent by the imminent
collapse of Obamacare.
Yet
there is another issue that is receiving less attention: the quality of
coverage for those who remain in the individual marketplace.
For
now, the Republican plan retains the ACA’s list of essential benefits
(preventive care, etc.) that must be included in any individual or small group
plan, but it is possible that could be bargained away to placate social
conservatives who don’t like the provisions relating to reproductive health.
Trumpcare
does not, however, include the ACA’s cost-sharing provisions that cap
out-of-pocket expenses in plans obtained through the exchanges by persons with
income below 250 percent of the federal poverty line.
As
a result, these people could very well be subjected to sharply higher
deductibles and co-pays.
This
points to the little-acknowledged aspect of the assault on the ACA: at the
heart of the Republican “solution” to rising premiums is giving people the
ability to purchase lower-cost but substandard coverage.
In
other words, they want to return to the pre-ACA situation in which insurers
could sell bare-bones policies that provided little or no cost reimbursement
except in cases of major illnesses or accidents — and might be skimpy in those
situations as well.
It
is significant that Republicans keep quoting Aetna CEO Mark Bertolini in
perpetuating the bogus claim that the ACA is in a “death spiral.”
Bertolini
is hardly an objective observer.
He
used misleading negative comments about the
ACA to try to deter the Obama Administration from its opposition to Aetna’s
anti-competitive acquisition of its rival Humana, which was recently blocked by
a federal judge who accused the company of dropping out of
the ACA marketplace in several states to “improve its litigation position” in
the merger dispute.
Aetna
is also the company that was one of the biggest
promoters of bare-bones policies in the pre-ACA period.
It
got into the business, also known as junk health insurance, two decades ago
through the purchase of U.S. Healthcare, an HMO whose bare-knuckles practices
Aetna adopted in full and thus found itself the target of a series of class-action
lawsuits brought by patients as well as providers.
The
substandard policies sold by Aetna made up a substantial portion of the plans
that were banned by the ACA. The people who had to give up that “coverage”
became symbols of the supposed oppression of Obamacare.
Although
they try hard to hide the fact, Republicans — and now Trump — are setting the
stage for a resurgence of the bare-bones policies under the banner of
affordability. That will be catastrophic coverage in every sense of the word.