05.03.2017 03.25 CST
People on Medicare should pay attention to the ongoing debate over a TrumpRyanCare proposal - your prescription drug costs could be affected.
ACA Repeal and Medicare Beneficiaries
People who have prescription drug coverage under Medicare may, once again, fall into the "donut hole" if Obamacare is repealed.
Efforts to replace and repeal the Affordable Care Act will have the greatest effect on those under 65 - but may also have a significant impact of people covered by Medicare. Specifically, if the AC is repealed your cost of prescription drugs may go up. Here how Medicare beneficiaries may be impacted by an ACA repeal.
02.03.2017 02.35 CST
Those promoting Trump/RyanCare will focus their message on accessibility rather than affordability. To the extent they discuss affordability, they will focus on the aspirational goal of making health care more affordable in the long term.
Access to Healthcare Under TrumpRyanCare
Those who rely on financial support under ACA are likely to find themselves entering new terrain.
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) sought to provide increased access to health insurance with two different sets of provisions – those impacting “market” access (“If I apply for a policy, can I get one?”) and others focused on “financial” access (“Can I afford a policy?”). This blog post will describe how Trump/RyanCare is likely to treat the market access provisions of ACA differently than the financial access provisions - and how different groups will be affected.
23.02.2017 04.49 CST
In the post-ACA world carriers will be given more latitude to identify who they are willing to cover and how they will underwrite and price those coverages.
After Obamacare—What’s Next for Insurance Companies?
The future is full of possibilities for insurance companies.
I have described the likelihood that, in a post-ACA world, the federal government will step back and the states will have more flexibility and responsibility. The next key player in this equation is the insurance industry.
23.02.2017 04.10 CST
The largest increases in Health Care Insurance changes involve the role/autonomy that will go to individual states and insurance companies.
After Obamacare—What’s Next for the States?
What’s Next for the States? It's foggy out here.
In my previous post I discussed how the federal role in U.S. healthcare markets is likely to shrink in a post-ACA environment. So, who picks up the slack?
It is likely that the largest increases in role/autonomy will go to individual states and insurance companies. This blog post focuses on a potential increase in states’ roles; my next post discusses increased control that may flow to insurance companies.
Here’s how this may play out:
22.02.2017 12.29 CST
Bottom line: under the ACA the federal government became a much more active player in the U.S. healthcare markets. Whatever else occurs in the looming political firefight, it is safe to say that this active role is going to shrink.
After Obamacare – What’s Next for Uncle Sam?
Choppy waters ahead for U.S. Healthcare, but there is a path forward.
As efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare) take shape, it is too early to make specific predictions. But, based on previous proposals and public statements made by some of the key players—and some recently leaked documents - it is reasonable to anticipate some of the broader policy directions that are likely to emerge. This blog post is the first in a series that will discuss some of the shifts likely to emerge in the post-ACA environment.