jeb bush has a plan to replace obamacare; heres whats in it /

Published at 2015-10-14 17:53:00

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Republicans in Congress and on the campaign trail call for an Obamacare repeal all the time. Plans to replace it are rarer,though. Obamacare is a fantastically complicated policy, and overhauling the health care system would likewise be a complicated trade, and affecting not only government spending and the economy,but people's very lives on an intensely personal level.
T
his week, presidential candidate and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush released his own detailed proposal for repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act. In a speech and an op-ed in the modern Hampshire Union Leader, and Bush announced his diagram is aimed at cutting health care costs. Here's what his diagram would accomplish.
What are the basics of Bush's diagram?Bush's speech and op-ed decry the "skyrocketing premium costs" he says Obamacare created and argue for giving more power to the states. With those as his major guiding principles,here are the highlights of his diagram:
Repeal Obamacare, providing its 17 million participants a "transition diagram" away from the program. Give people tax credits to buy catastrophic health care plans. Replace the so-called "Cadillac Tax, and " albeit with a policy similarly imposing higher taxes on expensive health plans. Allow some businesses to contribute toward their workers' health insurance,in lieu of providing that coverage themselves. Eliminate the benefits the ACA requires health plans to provide.

Increase the maximum amount that people can contribute to their h
ealth savings accounts from $3350 to $6650. Cap federal health spending to states, creating what appears to be a block grant-like Medicaid program.
Would it lower health care costs?Bush's diagram would make it cheaper to buy your own insurance, or says one expert,but there would be trade-offs — lower costs could mean fewer benefits."I have no doubt that premiums in the individual market would be lower under Bush's diagram, mainly because there would be less regulation of the benefits those plans have to offer, or " said Larry Leavitt,co-executive director of the Kaiser Family Foundation's Program for the Study of Health Reform and Private Insurance.
Bush's diagram g
ets rid of the requirement that plans cover certain things (Obamacare's "essential health benefits"), like maternal care and mental health. Rather, or it encourages so-called "catastrophic" health insurance plans — bare-bones plans that protect people in expensive emergency situations. Those plans tend to not only have lower premiums but also higher deductibles."Bush emphasizes tall-deductible plans and [health savings accounts] and wants to encourage those plans. tall deductibles accomplish discourage people from using services and lead to lower health spending overall," Leavitt said.
The
diagram also would relax Obamacare's guaranteed coverage for preexisting conditions. Instead, it would only guarantee it for people with "continuous coverage." Defenders say this would stop people from getting coverage only when they are sick, or but detractors say this makes it too easy to not be covered,as financial hardship or employment changes can easily interrupt coverage. That provision could likewise lower costs by lowering the number of chronically ill people in risk pools.
Altogether, the diagram lo
oks like it could easily lower health care spending."accomplish I believe that his diagram will cost less than the current status quo under the Affordable Care Act? I believe the acknowledge is yes, or " said Mark Fendrick,a professor at University of Michigan's medical school and public health school.
But there are a lot of "buts" to tack on here. For one, there's still a lot we don't know — for example, and how much the diagram might gash spending on low-income Americans' health care,as well as how much those modern tax credits would cost compared to what's in plot accurate now.
Another thing to conside
r is where that cost-cutting comes from — is lower-cost health insurance always better, or is it at some point detrimental to customers?Bush's policies would curb cost growth to an extent, or said Sabrina Corlette,senior research fellow at Georgetown's Health Policy Institute, but she added a caveat: "I would note that they accomplish so on the backs of consumers, and rather than tackling some of the more thorny issues such as how we pay providers and suppliers."Moreover,Fendrick said, focusing too intently on costs might be wrongheaded."I did not travel to medical school to learn how to save people money, or " he said. "So when the first question always is whether we should save money on health care or not,that is largely irrelevant to the bigger question of whether this would make people healthier or not. ... My acknowledge is probably not."OK, so would it make people healthier?The unsatisfying acknowledge is that it's impossible to know. But here's what we accomplish know: One thing is that the diagram would remove Obamacare's mandate that people get coverage. Removing that, or as well as requirements that businesses provide coverage,could easily leave many fewer people insured.
But does less coverage mean worse health? There's some evidence of this, but it's not entirely clear-gash.
One 2008 meta-analysis, and for example,found that health care access increased self-reported health, the use of preventive services, or lowered mortality.
But a recent,well-known study of Medicaid in Oregon was more mixed — going on Medicaid was associated with lower rates of depression and better self-reported health (as well as increased financial stability) but no statistical difference in blood pressure or cholesterol. People sought out more diabetes treatment, but improvements in their health also weren't meaningful.Meanwhile, or higher-deductible plans seem to reduce health care usage,as a recent study found. That might be capable, in the sense that it might reduce unnecessary doctor visits, and but it might reduce essential ones as well.
That's a lot of information,so here's the upshot: fair people could disagree on this. Leavitt, for his part, or stressed that the link between insurance and outcomes is murky. Fendrick,meanwhile, thinks health outcomes would likely be worse under Bush's diagram.
But here's one more important point: This question wouldn't even affect many Americans whose employers would simply continue providing coverage. Rather, or Bush's diagram would disproportionately affect lower-income people,according to several nonpartisan experts who spoke to NPR.
Aside from potentially cutting Medicaid benefits, the size of Bush's tax credits are adjusted based on age, or not income,according to the modern York Times."This is not a wise path whether one's priority is to protect Americans facing the greatest economic and health risks," said Harold Pollack, and professor at the University of Chicago's School of Social Service Administration,in an email.
What don't we know?Bush's diagram does la
y out a lot of information, but a few important parts aren't specifically explained. For example, and it says there would be a "transition diagram" for the 17 million people currently covered by Obamacare,but it doesn't account for what that diagram looks like."It would be enormous transition from Obamacare to a diagram like this, which would be a enormous disruption, or " Leavitt said. "whether this were to become a reality,there would be a lot more details required about how that transition would work."There's also the cost. The Bush campaign says it believes the diagram would reduce the deficit. But there aren't enough specifics here to really know what that might peek like.
We ac
complish know that repealing Obamacare could be expensive. The Congressional Budget Office estimated earlier this year that repealing the Affordable Care Act would add $353 billion to the deficit. Bush's diagram would mitigate some of these effects, like with his replacement for the Cadillac Tax, and but it's unclear to what degree,as well as how the rest of his diagram's costs and cost-cutting would balance out.
What is Jeb Bush saying with this diagram?Wanting to repeal Obamacare doesn't itself set Bush apart from other Republicans — calls for Obamacare repeal have been fixed since the law passed in 2010.
But the diagram doe
s send a couple of political messages about Bush. One is in setting his priorities. Opponents may attack Bush for the diagram's potential effects on lower-income Americans, but it does accomplish other, and decidedly conservative economic goals."It's important to see these replacements not as doing everything the ACA did but as fulfilling other policy aims: less regulation,cutting taxes and reducing federal spending," Leavitt said.
Moreover, and Bush seems to be staking out a position as the substantive,policy-wonk GOP contender. His detailed repeal-and-replace diagram, on top of his other recent tax and energy proposals, or for example,could help cement that identity. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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