CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE:
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D.
ELIAS
"DUMPING OBAMACARE WOULD AFFECT MILLIONS IN STATE"
President-elect Donald Trump probably
does not lose much sleep over it, but millions of Californians have spent
wakeful nights since his election wondering what will happen to their health
care if he follows through on his promise to “eliminate Obamacare on Day 1.”
That day is just weeks away now. If
the promise is kept (and Trump so far shows signs of ignoring some promises he
made during the election season while carrying out others), it could affect
about 4.6 million Californians whose health insurance is at least partly funded
by outgoing President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act (ACA).
They either buy insurance plans under
the Covered California exchange or they’ve joined the federally-subsidized
Medi-Cal, the state’s low-income health care plan, since Obamacare began
subsidizing expansion of the program in 2014.
Of course, unless Congress has acted
prior to Trump’s inauguration, he won’t be able to do away with all this on Day
1. Most analysts say it would take an act of Congress to undo state exchanges
and the Medicaid expansion of which Medi-Cal’s growth was a part.
But even if it doesn’t happen on
Trump’s first day, when he’s also promised to reverse many Obama executive
orders in areas like immigration, oil drilling and environmental regulation,
changes will come.
House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin
has in the last couple of weeks unveiled the general outlines of a Republican
plan to “replace” the ACA, which now provides health care to about 20 million
Americans who couldn’t get it before.
Ryan’s plan, almost certain to be
adopted by Trump with only small changes, would offer tax credits rather than
direct subsidies to help people pay for insurance. It would keep Obamacare’s
protections for persons with pre-existing conditions. Trump has also said he
wants to keep Obama’s rule allowing young people to retain coverage under their
parents’ policies up to age 26.
But Ryan’s blueprint would not force
anyone to buy insurance, nor would it impose fines on individuals who don’t buy
into the system, as the ACA does. That means less money will be coming into the
insurance system, which in the Ryan plan translates to much higher deductibles
and higher premiums as policy-holders age.
Ryan would also add a high-risk pool
to the insurance picture, much as high-priced auto insurance is available to
high-risk drivers. This would mean high-premiums for persons with cancer and
chronic conditions that are expensive to treat. So much for that pre-existing
condition protection.
These provisions, of course, will be
subject to tweaking and to input from Trump’s new secretary of Health and Human
Services, current Georgia Rep. Tom Price, who has long sought to dump all of
Obamacare.
The bottom line on all this that most
individuals now covered under Obamacare will likely see premiums rise and
coverage drop, in spite of Trump’s oft-repeated promise to replace Obamacare
with better insurance at lower prices.
In California, that will likely affect
about 3 million persons now on Medi-Cal that’s subsidized by the ACA, and many
of the almost 1.4 million who buy policies from companies selling plans in the
Covered California exchange.
Most affected of all will be young
people: The share of children covered by Medi-Cal or the state’s Healthy
Families program grew from 32.8 percent in 2009 to 40.3 percent in the most recent
figures reported by UCLA’s Center for Health Policy Research.
That helps explain the several protest
rallies involving nurses, doctors, patients and healthy senior citizens that have been held around the state in the
last month.
“The actions threatened by Trump and
the Republican Congress are a direct attack on health care for the most
vulnerable,” said one doctor at a Los Angeles rally. “California has done more
to expand health care access than any other state. We need a massive effort to
protect California’s…progress toward health care for all.”
Unless similar rallies spread far
beyond California and draw huge crowds, don’t expect much sympathy for those
views from Republicans in Congress. Most have wanted to axe Obamacare since
before it took effect, and with the backing of the President-elect, there’s
nothing to stop them from moving now against those who benefit most from
Obama’s law: the poor, the very young and the legal immigrants.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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