Patient Advocates & Healthcare Providers: Updated Republican Health Care Bill “Would Make Access To Health Coverage Worse For Those With…
Patient Advocates & Healthcare Providers: Updated Republican Health Care Bill "Would Make Access To Health Coverage Worse For Those With Pre-Existing Conditions"
Date:
Patient Advocates & Healthcare Providers: Updated Republican Health Care Bill "Would Make Access To Health Coverage Worse For Those With Pre-Existing Conditions"
"Under the amendment, insurance companies would be allowed to charge higher premiums to people based on their health status--in addition to opting out of other patient protections in current law, such as the guarantee of essential health benefits and the prohibition on annual and lifetime coverage caps. Separating healthy enrollees from those with pre-existing conditions will also lead to severe instability of the insurance market. This is unacceptable for our patients." [Press Release,
"The latest proposed changes to the
"The
"If enacted,
"This bill may have changed but the results are the same: higher costs and less coverage for older Americans. We urge the
"The changes do nothing to address provisions that would cripple Medicaid and put added financial pressure on state budgets and health care providers. Additionally, allowing insurers to sell plans without meaningful coverage will hurt those with preexisting conditions and further destabilize insurance markets." [Press Release,
"From everything I can see, this would be a huge step backward," said
Medicare Rights Center President
"Today's release of the updated Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA) confirms what we already knew: this broken bill can't be fixed. This tweaked
"As cancer care providers, we are especially concerned with provisions that would erode critical protections for patients with cancer by allowing insurers to sell products that do not meet their needs, including coverage for essential screening services. Additionally, a six-month waiting period for those that fail to obtain continuous coverage could leave many cancer patients and survivors without access to needed care." [Letter,
"While the new bill would add
"Additionally, this bill will harm older Americans who will face significantly higher costs through age rating and undermine protections for people with pre-existing conditions by allowing insurance companies to waive essential health benefits and make coverage for pre-existing conditions unaffordable." [Press Release,
HEAL Trafficking Executive Director
"Medicaid is life-saving for victims of trafficking. Trafficking victims need medical care to treat ailments including opioid addiction, PTSD, HIV and other STDs, malnutrition, broken bones, pregnancy, untreated chronic disease, psychiatric illness, and disability from injuries. Medicaid pays for treatment for all of these conditions, all of which greatly impact health and quality of life. Without the services Medicaid provides, many victims will be unable to heal from their trauma and live healthy and productive lives...We as HEAL Trafficking oppose the BRCA, the
America's Essential Hospitals President
"Making a bad bill worse, the
JUST DAYS AGO, SENATE REPUBLICANS AGREED THAT THE CRUZ AMENDMENT, "WOULD MAKE IT TOO DIFFICULT FOR PEOPLE WITH PRE-EXISTING CONDITIONS TO GET COVERAGE."
Sen.
"I think that reopens an issue that I can't support, that it would make it too difficult for people with pre-existing conditions to get coverage." [Charleston Gazette-Mail,
Sen.
"I have a lot of concerns about
"His proposal would lead to unaffordable rates for people with pre-existing conditions. It would result in the re-imposition of annual caps on how much your insurance will cover, which will be devastating for people who develop or have a chronic, expensive disease to treat. And it would call into question whether someone with preexisting conditions could even buy insurance, so I do not support his plan." [AP,
Sen.
"There's a real feeling that that's subterfuge to get around pre-existing conditions," says Grassley. "If it is subterfuge and it has the effect of annihilating the pre-existing condition requirement that we have in the existing bill, than obviously I would object to that." [



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