The reflection paper is based on three videos and several journal articles and has its own Assignments and due date. The videos t
The reflection paper is based on three videos and several journal articles and has its own Assignments and due date.
The videos to watch are Sicko (available on Vimeo and other sites for free viewing), and two more on PBS Frontline entitled 'Sick Around America' and 'Sick Around the World', also free viewing. Links are in D2L contents. These videos document healthcare in the U.S. before the Affordable Care Act and contrasts the U.S to other developed countries.
Also read the three journal articles in contents Module 5 authored by Dr. Moore. They are entitled:
a. 'Determining the Effects of the Trump Administration's Erosion of the Affordable Care Act on Americans Needing Healthcare' (2020)
b. 'Why Universal Healthcare is a Trend in the U.S.' (2018); and
c. 'Teaching the Affordable Care Act to Aspiring Healthcare Administrators' (2016).
Two other links in Module 5 lead to other articles available on the Kaiser Family Foundation website. These offer additional background regarding current constitutional threats to the Affordable Care Act from the Trump administration.
Your assignment is to write a paper documenting your reflections on healthcare reform in the U.S. after viewing the videos and reading the articles. What is your assessment of healthcare in America relative to other developed nations? What trends do you see in the U.S. healthcare system? What would you like to see happen? What policy or legal changes would facilitate your vision becoming reality? Use and cite the articles and videos to support your assessment and observations. Be sure to title your paper and state in the beginning its purpose and the questions you will address. The paper should be about 3-5 pages, double spaced, and be submitted into the Assignments designated 'Module 5 Reflections on Healthcare Reform Paper' by its due date
2
Determining the Effect of the Trump Administration’s Erosion of the Affordable Care Act on Americans Needing Healthcare
Gregory A. Moore
Professor, Health and Human Performance
Austin Peay State University
Clarksville, TN 37040
March 8, 2020
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to determine the legal and economic effects on the Affordable Care Act (ACA) from recent attempts by the Trump administration to undermine the law. After failing to repeal the law and seeming to lack the patience to see if it will unravel on its own, the Trump administration has used executive orders and administrative agency rules to take steps designed to reduce consumers’ ability to benefit from the law. The enrollment period was cut in half and the marketing budget to promote enrollment cut 90%. Trump cancelled Cost-Sharing Reduction subsidies for those lower-income buyers in the healthcare insurance exchanges. Insurers are being allowed to sell short-term and Association policies that do not meet the ACA regulations for minimum benefits. The Republican controlled Congress repealed the tax penalty for those not having insurance beginning 2019. (Center for American Progress, 2018). The projected net effect of these acts means millions will forego or not be able to afford insurance (Beaton, 2018: Levitz, 2018). Insurers can circumvent ACA rules regarding pre-existing conditions and sell plans without minimum benefits. The young and healthy will leave the insurance market, causing premium prices and costs to rise for those needing insurance and healthcare. (Beezley-Smith, 2018) All but the repeal of the tax penalty mandate can be changed immediately by the next presidential administration and its administrative agencies. Those states that did not support the ACA will find this administration helpful in undermining the law. Those states that have supported the ACA, can exercise their state powers to promote the law at their level. The ACA was operating soundly at the time Trump took office. The damage these recent acts might have will depend in part on how long they are in place. One also finds that the acts lack any ideology, appearing to be more disruptive and malicious than attempting to achieve any policy purpose (Dickinson, 2018). Upon learning Trump dismissed a bi-partisan effort Senator Lamar Alexander (R-TN) was working on to fund the subsidies for the exchanges, the Senator asked, “What’s conservative about creating chaos so millions cannot buy health insurance.” (Williams, 2017) Ultimately the effects of the sabotage are not uniform across all states and some consumers will benefit from the continued operation of the ACA.
Introduction, Focus, and Research Question
Although failing to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA) the Trump administration and Republican controlled Congress have continued their efforts to undermine the law. The full frontal attack to repeal the ACA failed, so with the exception of Congressional legislation repealing the tax penalty for not having insurance, the activities being used are executive orders and administrative agency rule changes. The purpose of this paper is to identify what actions have been taken to attempt to undermine or erode the ACA. Next an analysis will be done to determine what damage or benefits there have been to the ACA and those needing healthcare. Finally, we will assess what those needing healthcare can expect from the ACA in the future. The focus will be on the legal, policy, and economic issues. Political and ideological issues will be addressed only as they tangentially relate to our primary focus.
The Trump Administration’s Efforts to Undermine the ACA
The Health of the ACA When Assumed by Trump in 2017
When Trump assumed office the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was operating soundly. Abelson (2017) observed that in the early months of 2017 the insurance markets had been stabilizing and insurers were becoming more profitable. However, in August of 2017 insurance company representatives began to worry about the threats and unknowns from the Trump administration (Abelson, 2017). Sperling and Jennings (2017) reported that the healthcare industry expected to be stable and the Congressional Budget Office agreed. Juan Williams (2017), an author and political analyst for Fox News Channel, remembers Trump promised, “Were going to have insurance for everybody. We’re going to have healthcare that is far less expensive and far better.” Williams says he is still waiting. Williams also notes that a Kaiser Family Foundation survey said 77% of Americans wanted Trump to make the ACA better. Sam Berger, Senior Policy Advisor for the Center for American Progress stated the ACA was not unraveling, as Trump claimed at the time, but was quite strong (Holland, 2017). Holland (2017) said the law was working very well when Trump took office despite Trump’s mantra that the ACA was imploding. Medicaid expansion under the ACA took effect in 2014 and the numbers of uninsured dropped from 18% down to 10.9%, an all time low (Holland, 2017). Since Trump took office, the number of uninsured has risen to 12.3%. The trend to greater coverage and fewer uninsured under Obama has reversed (Holland, 2017). Dickinson (2017) observed that Trump’s self-fulfilling prophecy was that the ACA would fail and Trump has done whatever he can to ensure that.
The Acts of Erosion by the Trump Administration
Holland (2017) says the core of undermining the ACA has been a concerted effort by political appointees in the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services to ensure the ACA doesn't work. The Center for American Progress (2018) has identified a number of acts that are the essence of the effort. The enrollment period to sign up for insurance plans in the healthcare exchanges has been cut in half. The advertising and marketing budget to promote open enrollment has been cut 90%. Other sources have confirmed these acts and listed others. Levitz (2017) cites the fact the Trump Administration openly encouraged Americans not to enroll in exchanges for health insurance as convincing evidence Trump is trying to undermine the ACA.
Other more serious acts of sabotage have been cited by other sources (Benen, 2017; Caldwell, 2017; Copeland, 2018; Holland, 2017; Kaiser Family Foundation, 2018; Levitz, 2018; Levitz, 2017; Norris, 2017; Sperling and Jennings, 2017; Vartorella, 2018; Williams, 2017.) These acts have been implemented by executive order or through changing rules in administrative agencies. The ACA was designed to operate state level health insurance exchanges in order to create a market where insurance plans could be competitively bought and sold at low cost premiums. Insurers who participate are required to offer only approved plans that guarantee to the consumer a standard set essential benefits like free annual physicals and other preventive care exams. Depending on one’s income a buyer may be eligible for government subsidies that offset the cost of the insurance. These Cost-Sharing Reductions (CSR’s) are for the benefit of consumers and paid to insurers by the government. They typically are for those not eligible for Medicaid, but not able to afford the full cost of insurance.
The Trump administration has begun to erode the exchanges at two levels. The Trump administration has approved states who request them, the ability to offer on a regular basis the sale of plans outside the healthcare exchanges, referred to as short term and Association plans. Normally short-term plans are sold only for short duration until open enrollment, but now Trump is allowing these to replace the approved ACA plans that meet minimum benefits. Association plans are stripped down versions also sold with less than ACA approved benefits. The second level of attack on the exchanges has been stopping the Cost-Sharing Reductions (CSR’s). Mistakenly claiming these were illegal and only benefitting insurers, Trump stopped the subsidies. When the Obama administration began the subsidies, Congress had not yet authorized the funding for the CSR’s and Republicans sued claiming they were unconstitutional. While still in appeal, Trump withdrew from the suit. Trump gave no consideration to a bi-partisan legislative effort by Senators Lamar Alexander (R-TN) and Patty Murray (D-WA) who were arranging the funding for the subsidies. This prompted Senator Alexander to say, “I would ask what’s conservative about unaffordable premiums. What’s conservative about creating chaos so millions can’t buy health insurance?” (Holland, 2017). The only act of erosion involving the Republican controlled Congress has been inserting into a tax bill the removal of the ACA penalty tax for not having health insurance. These acts are being tracked by several sources (Beaton, 2018; Center for American Progress, 2018; Norris, 2017).
Analysis of the Sabotage on Healthcare and the ACA
The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation predicts repeal of the tax penalty for not having health insurance will discourage 13 million Americans from participating in the insurance market by 2022. Premiums will grow 20% as insurers hike premiums to offset their losses. Consumer purchases of short-term and Association plans will rise (Beaton, 2018). Copeland (2018) explains consumers will find these plans will not cover the essential benefits an ACA minimum benefits plan covers like mental health coverage, maternity care, drugs, and preventive care. Additionally insurers selling these plans can drop or refuse to cover consumers for pre-existing conditions, as commonly practiced before the ACA. The Center for American Progress (2018) argues the administrative agency policy changes under the Trump administration will interfere with the operation of the healthcare exchanges, scaring insurers away and driving up prices. Cancelling the CSR’s is expected to reduce participation in the exchanges. (Holland, 2017). Hospital admissions will decline (Japsen, 2017).
Republican controlled states will have support from the federal Trump administration working against the survival of the health insurance exchanges and driving up premiums on those who need the exchanges for insurance. Williams (2017) reminds us Steve Bannon, formerly an advisor of Trump’s in the White House had said, “We are going to blow up those exchanges.” Pennsylvania had predicted a hike of only 7.6% in premiums in its exchanges, but now will go to 30% due to Trump’s undermining the marketplace exchanges, especially ending the subsidies for the poor (Williams, 2017). Levitz (2018) projects 5 million will be uninsured by 2019. Analyses by Benen (2017) and Levitz (2018) see the federal government will be paying out more money after discontinuing the subsidies. By ending payments to insurance companies in the exchanges, insurers will be driven from the market, spiking premium costs, and increase the deficit, according to the Congressional Budget Office (Dickinson 2018). The deficit may go as high as $6 billion (Williams, 2017). The young and healthy will leave the health care insurance market with no mandate penalty, leaving premiums to increase for those needing insurance the most (Benen, 2017; Levitz, 2018).
Conclusions Regarding the ACA and Americans Needing Healthcare
Effect on ACA Functions
Others have reached conclusions regarding the ACA following Trump’s sabotage attempts. Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT) has suggested the removal of the tax penalty on the mandate is the beginning of the end of the ACA. On the other hand Jonathan Gruber observes the law is fundamentally in place. The ACA is a shrunken version of what it could be. While having the force of law now, the executive orders and administrative rules can be overturned easily by the next administration and its administrative agencies. Larry Levitt of Kaiser Family Foundation says protection for pre-existing conditions for most insurance plans are still in place. (Beezley-Smith, 2018).
Trump’s assertions the ACA is effectively repealed (Center for American Progress, 2018) is more likely an attempt to convince his supporters he has fulfilled a campaign promise than truly and accurately characterizing the operational status of the ACA. Yet some states that did not support the ACA prior to the Trump administration will cooperate and even facilitate its demise in that state. On the other hand other states have taken steps to promote and support the ACA. States supporting the ACA are running their own exchanges, expanded Medicaid with federal dollars, and are operating soundly. Nine of those states are considering replacing the repealed mandate tax with their own mandate at the state level. The ACA is on the books and operating, but not uniformly across states.
Effect on Americans Needing Healthcare
States control what kind of insurance is sold in that state. Some will avoid allowing proliferation of the short-term and Association plans as not good for consumers. Once the removal of the tax penalty for not having insurance goes into effect in 2019, these alternative plans may not be that appealing, even in states that allow them. A state can offer its own subsidies to replace the loss of federal subsidies in the exchanges, but no state has done that to date. Even without subsidies exchanges promoted by that state may still offer to consumers the best place to find competitively priced plans with essential benefits. On the other hand some consumers in states not supporting the ACA may be confronted with few if any choices in the exchanges. Alternative short-term and Association plans may be available, but will lack essential benefits. These may be the only option for those with pre-existing conditions, but these plans could be exempt from that ACA requirement.
Acts of Erosion and Improving Healthcare
The consequence of Trump’s open rhetoric undermining the ACA and the acts of erosion seem to be more disruptive than uniformly ending the ACA or eliminating all benefits to consumers. However, the long-term effect of these disruptions is unknown. That effect is dependent in part on how the states and consumers respond to the disruption. Further disruptions or promises for better healthcare would be coming from a President who Juan Williams (2017) reminds us once said, “Who knew healthcare could be so complicated.” Some have questioned the purpose of the attacks on the ACA. After close examination it is difficult to see how any of the acts of erosion move our nation any closer to a policy like insuring as many as possible or even reducing expenditures or the deficit. These acts take us no closer to any of those goals. So why was it necessary to attempt to undermine the ACA and move so many away from their affordable insurance coverage? Dickinson (2018) has very direct concerns: “He (Trump) is willing to disrupt businesses, hurt millions of Americans and cost the federal government hundreds of billions of dollars not to achieve any policy purpose but simply out of a malicious drive to avenge the legacy of the first black man to hold the oval office.”
Whatever the intent or motive behind them, Trump’s efforts to undermine the ACA have not had uniformly negatively effect across all states or applicability to all consumers. In summary we have identified the acts of erosion and analyzed the effects of these acts. We determined that while the ACA has been disrupted, it is still in operation. The exchanges function better in some more supportive states than others. We conclude that the reasoning behind the acts is not obvious. Benefits to consumers are limited, but still available. How long is still a question.
References
Abelson, R. (2017, August 26). Trump’s threats on health care law hide an upside: Gains made by some insurers. The New York Times. Retrieved from https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/26/health/obamacare-market- insurance.html?rref=collection%2Fbyline%2Freed- abelson&action=click&contentCollection=undefined®ion=stream&module=st ream_unit&version=latest&contentPlacement=25&pgtype=collection
Beaton, T. (2018). Affordable Care Act changes many bring a rocky 2018 for payers. Health Payer Intelligence. Retrieved from https://healthpayerintelligence.com/news/affordable-care-act-changes-may-bring- a-rocky-2018-for-payers
Beezley-Smith, D. (2018, March 7). Healthcare reform: ACA’s likely future depends on who’s guessing. The National Psychologist. Retrieved from https://nationalpsychologist.com/2018/03/health-care-reform-acas-likely-future- depends-on-whos-guessing/104310.html
Benen, S. (2017, October 12). Trump signs new executive order to sabotage the ACA. The Maddow Blog. Retrieved from http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow- show/trump-signs-new-executive-order-sabotage-the-aca
Brief examines efforts to create health plan options that don’t comply with the Affordable Care Act’s rules (2018, April 18). Kaiser Family Foundation. Retrieved from https://www.kff.org/health-reform/press-release/brief-examines-efforts-to-create- health-plan-options-that-dont-comply-with-the-affordable-care-acts-rules/
Caldwell, P. (2017, July 12). 3 ways Republicans have already sabotaged Obamacare. Retrieved from https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2017/07/republicans- obamacare-trump-csr-medicaid/
Copeland, L. (2018). New threats to the ACA: Administrative changes. Medicare Rights Center. Retrieved from https://blog.medicarerights.org/new-threats-aca- administrative-changes/
Dickinson, T. (2017, October 13). Trump is sabotaging Obamacare. Rolling Stone. Retrieved from https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/features/trump-is- sabotaging-obamacare-w508874
Holland, J. (2017, November 7). Everything Trump is doing to sabotage the Affordable Care Act. The Nation. Retrieved from https://www.thenation.com/article/everything-trump-is-doing-to-sabotage-the- affordable-care-act/
Japsen, B. (2017, August 29). Trump’s threats to Obamacare subsidies could hurt hospital admissions. Forbes. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucejapsen/2017/08/29/trumps-threats-to- obamacare-subsidies-could-hurt-hospital-admissions/#213b5fb512d5
Levitz, E. (2018, September 27). Study: Trump’s Obamacare sabotage will leave millions more uninsured. New York. Retrieved from http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2018/02/study-trumps-aca-sabotage-to- leave-millions-more-uninsured.html
Levitz, E. (2017, September 28). The Trump administration just confirmed that it is sabotaging Obamacare. New York. Retrieved from http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2017/09/white-house-confirms-that-it-is- sabotaging-obamacare.html
Norris, L. (2017, May 17). 10 ways the GOP sabotaged Obamacare. Health Insurance. Retrieved from https://www.healthinsurance.org/blog/2017/05/17/10-ways-the- gop-sabotaged-obamacare/
Sperling, G. & Jennings, C. (2017, March 29). Six ways to tell if Trump is sabotaging Obamacare. The Atlantic. Retrieved from https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/03/trump-sabotaging- obamacare/521256/
Tracking Trump’s sabotage of the ACA. (2018, April 10). Center for American Progress Action. Retrieved from https://www.americanprogressaction.org/issues/healthcare/reports/2018/04/10/167 820/tracking-trumps-sabotage-aca/
Vartorella, L. (2018, January 2). 5 actions Trump can take to undermine the ACA in 2018. Becker’s Hospital Review. Retrieved from https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-management-administration/5- actions-trump-can-take-to-undermine-the-aca-in-2018.html
Williams, Juan. (2017, October 23). Trump’s cynical sabotage of Obamacare. The Hill. Retrieved from http://thehill.com/opinion/white-house/356624-juan-williams- trumps-cynical-sabotage-of-obamacare
,
Teaching the Affordable Care Act to Aspiring Healthcare Administrators
Gregory A. Moore
Professor
Health and Human Performance
Austin Peay State University
Clarksville, TN 37044
Abstract
As the first major healthcare law in half a century the Affordable Care Act of 2010 represents a major change in the healthcare system in the United States. Not since Medicaid and Medicare were enacted in 1965 has any legislation been this comprehensive and far reaching in the healthcare field. University departments of public health, health administration, and related areas have an obligation to students to have been incorporating the teaching of this new legislation into health related courses like healthcare Economics, finance, management, human resources, and law. Like any change, there is a learning curve to mastering the elements and provisions of this legislation. Additionally the controversy related to the politics and ideology of the passage and implementation of the law has created misinformation, uncertainty, and other additional barriers to learning and teaching the law.
The purpose of this manuscript is to determine what the law is and how it should be taught in courses for students aspiring to become healthcare professionals, primarily administrators. The paper addresses the content, elements and provisions of the law. The implications of this legislation for administrators are examined. Resources instructors can use are included. The paper is about teaching the law. It is not about the value of the law or its expected life, having been voted on numerous times for repeal by one branch of Congress. The paper is about how this legislation might change the way managers will need to manage, but not about the efficacy or popularity of the act. However, the nature of the law, how it passed, and its implications serve as opportunities for teaching aspiring managers about the impact this law can have healthcare on management.
Background and Purpose
What is so special about incorporating the teaching of new legislation like the Affordable Care Act into the teaching of healthcare? Is it not like the other legislation we have had in the last fifty years? The Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010 is the first major healthcare legislation in the United States in half a century. It represents a major change in the healthcare system in the United States. Not since Medicaid and Medicare were enacted in 1965 has any legislation been this comprehensive and far reaching in the healthcare field. Teitelbaum and Wilensky (2013) observe that after decades of inactivity the U.S. passed a national health reform law that provides near-universal coverage and has seemingly made health insurance both an obligation and a right.
University departments of public health, health administration, and related areas have an obligation to students to have been incorporating the teaching of this new legislation into health related courses like healthcare Economics, finance, management, human resources, and law. Like any change, there is a learning curve to mastering the elements and provisions of this legislation. Additionally the controversy related to the politics and ideology of the passage and implementation of the law has created misinformation, uncertainty, and other additional barriers to learning and teaching the law.
The purpose of this paper is to determine what the law is and how it should be taught in courses for students aspiring to become healthcare professionals, primarily administrators. The paper addresses the content, elements and provisions of the law. The implications of this legislation for administrators are examined. Resources instructors can use are included. The paper is about how to teach the law. It is not about the value of the law or its expected life, having been voted on 50 times for repeal by one branch of Congress (Walsh, 2014). The paper is about how this legislation might change the way managers will manage, but not about the efficacy or popularity of the act. The nature of the law, its passage, and its implications will serve as opportunities for teaching aspiring managers about the expected trends in healthcare management.
Not all, but substantial portions of the ACA of 2010 will be discussed in this paper. The primary purpose is to discuss how the legislation should be taught, not what is in the law itself. However, websites will be mentioned as sources for teaching and from which students or consumers can learn more about the law itself.
The paper will begin with a discussion of the contents and provisions of the ACA, then discuss the role of the Supreme Court with the law, how the ACA is financed, its impact on the deficit, and end by addressing the implications of these elements and realities for managers.
Provisions and Benefits of the ACA
Teitelbaum and Wilensky (2013) provide us a non-partisan discussion of the content and provisions of the ACA (Teitelbaum and Wilensky, 2013). The ACA neither requires a single payer or government ownership of providers. Nor does the legislation make healthcare a constitutional right. However, it can accurately be described as substantial reform in the insurance industry (Teitelbaum and Wilensky, 2013). Websites to learn more about the ACA include the Kaiser Family Foundation at http://kff.org/health-reform and the federal Department of Health and Human Services at http://hhs.gov/Healthcare . We next address the elements of the law needing special attention from healthcare administrators.
The Individual Mandate or Pay a Penalty
We begin with the requirement that individuals are to have health insurance by 2014 or pay a penalty of $95 or 1% of one’s taxable income as additional tax. This amount grows to $695 or 2.5% of one’s taxable income by 2016. Some lower income individuals are exempt from this penalty. (Feldstein, 2011a; Teitelbaum and Wilensky, 2013)
The State Health Insurance Exchanges
This provision creates in each state a federal or state coordinated market where individuals and businesses can buy health insurance from private insurers. The Secretary of Health and Human Services can ensure the scope of the benefits and set standards for a typical employer plan. Insurers cannot discriminate on the basis of age, disability, or expected life. Plans are layered by premium and deductibles. (Feldstein, 2011a; Teitelbuam and Wilensky, 2013)
Premium and Cost-Sharing Subsidies
The ACA offers, according to Feldstein (2011a) and Teitelbaum and Wilensky (2013), a schedule of tax credits and subsidies to individuals intended to make the cost of health insurance from private insurers more affordable in the state exchanges. The details of these benefits to consumers are outlined in these sources, but are beyond our scope. Their existence is relevant to managers, however.
Employer Mandate
Generally, and with some delay in implementing parts of this provision by the administration, employers with more than 50 employees have three options: (a) providing healthcare insurance to employees and not pay a penalty, or (b) provide health insurance not considered affordable and pay a penalty, or (c) not provide health insurance and pay a penalty. (Feldstein, 2011a; Teitelbaum and Wilensky, 2013) Teitelbaum and Wilensky (2013, pp. 173) provide a detailed quantitative outline of the options and penalties for employers.
Provisions in the Insurance Market
A number of provisions in the insurance market began in 2010 and others have come into place as planned as of 2014. Both Feldstein (2011a) and Teitelbaum and Wilensky (2013) identified these provisions to be planned changes in the insurance market:
a. Guaranteed issue and renewability provides that individual and group plans may not exclude or charge more to individuals based on preexisting conditions or health status.
b. Premium rates may vary based only on age, geographic area, family composition, and tobacco use.
c. No annual dollar limits may be placed on coverage.
d. Prevention services shall be provided at no cost, including some immunizations and assessments.
e. Insurers of small group plans who spend less than 80% of premium dollars and large group plans who spend less than 85% of premium dollars must provide a rebate to enrollees.
f. Dependents up to age 26 may stay on their parent’s plans.
Initiatives to Improve Quality of Care
A number of initiatives designed to improve the delivery and quality of healthcare are being implemented via the ACA. One effort is the National Quality Improvement Strategy and another, the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Other funds are intended to promote prevention, public
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