Pennsylvania stands to lose $4.5B for Medicaid under Senate health care bill
A group of senators released what they called a discussion draft of a bill that would reduce premium subsidies, weaken consumer protections and scale back and restructure Medicaid while getting rid of the Affordable Care Act's taxes and penalties for not having insurance.
The proposal would give more flexibility to states to structure benefits in Medicaid, a state-federal insurance program, and in employer-sponsored health plans, the type of insurance most people have.
The Medicaid changes would likely reduce federal funding for
Harris said the
"It's worse for Pennsylvanians and would truly hurt children, seniors and people with disabilities," Harris said.
About 716,000 people have enrolled in Medicaid since
For employer-sponsored plans, states would have the option to apply for waivers to let employers reduce benefits, which would help lower premiums. The waivers would free employers from Affordable Care Act requirements that all plans maintain a set of essential health benefits, ranging from mental health coverage and maternity care to prescription drug and hospitalization coverage.
Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner
"We feel strongly they cover benefits that should be provided," she said.
"The plan strengthens Medicaid and reduces Obamacare taxes, but stops short of repealing the root cause of skyrocketing costs -- voluminous mandates," she said. "So it's up to states like
In the individual insurance market, where premiums have sharply increased since 2014, people will need to have lower incomes to qualify for subsidies under the
The proposal would decrease the level of coverage required for baseline plans, shifting the benchmark to higher-deductible plans that cover a smaller percentage of medical bills.
Miller said premium increases have hit hardest the people who buy individual insurance but don't qualify for subsidies.
"We should be looking for ways to bring down costs for everyone, especially those who don't quality for subsidies," she said. "Unfortunately that's not the conversation we're having right now."
The
Details of the discussion draft could change before the
Rep.
"We are going to keep our promise to the American people to rescue and rebuild the collapsing healthcare system to deliver the medical care you need, at a price a price you can afford, from a doctor of your choosing," Murphy said.
The changes in the bill would take place over the next several years. Penalties for not having insurance would go away immediately.
The measure would provide
For the next two years, it would also provide money that insurers use to help lower out-of-pocket costs for millions of lower income people. President
The Associated Press contributed.
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