WHEREAS our complex wholly integrated system of modern health care for all involves the vast range of people, patients, providers, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, state insurance commissioners, insurance companies, state governments, drug stores, treasury revenues, medical equipment manufacturers, state and federal programs, protocols and standards, scientific research, employers, employees and other participants,
WHEREAS PPACA, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, brought health care to many who never had it previously, and it also brought severe strains on some families confronted with unanticipated large increases in insurance premiums, on some small businesses, on some insurance providers, with constrained choices for many participants, and with several other problems,
WHEREAS we see insufficient competition among health insurance providers in some states,
WHEREAS no complex system is without flaws and opportunities for improvements,
WHEREAS an immediate complete repeal of PPACA puts the nation at unnecessary risk of interruption of valuable and essential life services,
We, the Congress, repeal PPACA in logical parts at logical times. The Congress will replace each part of PPACA, in a step-by-step approach with manageable pieces, when we have legislatively defined a suitable successor replacement for that part. Our intention to assure medical care of good quality and feasible cost to all citizens will guide our process. With this act, we repeal PPACA, continuing the individual parts, the sections, rules and regulations of PPACA only until such time as amendments to this act will replace those parts. This act will be known as BetterCare, a process for PPACA repeal and replacement.
WHEREAS PPACA, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, brought health care to many who never had it previously, and it also brought severe strains on some families confronted with unanticipated large increases in insurance premiums, on some small businesses, on some insurance providers, with constrained choices for many participants, and with several other problems,
WHEREAS we see insufficient competition among health insurance providers in some states,
WHEREAS no complex system is without flaws and opportunities for improvements,
WHEREAS an immediate complete repeal of PPACA puts the nation at unnecessary risk of interruption of valuable and essential life services,
We, the Congress, repeal PPACA in logical parts at logical times. The Congress will replace each part of PPACA, in a step-by-step approach with manageable pieces, when we have legislatively defined a suitable successor replacement for that part. Our intention to assure medical care of good quality and feasible cost to all citizens will guide our process. With this act, we repeal PPACA, continuing the individual parts, the sections, rules and regulations of PPACA only until such time as amendments to this act will replace those parts. This act will be known as BetterCare, a process for PPACA repeal and replacement.
Comment:
Many of the Republicans, including President Trump, won their elections promising to repeal Obamacare. Democrats can work with Republicans to provide a kind of simultaneous repeal and replacement. Thereby, Democrats can improve the general structures and features of PPACA, and Republicans can fulfill of the promise to repeal.
BetterCare will give the Republicans language they can use to describe the repeal to their constituents. Some amendments enabling replacement of some parts can be passed in the Congress and presented to the President for signature along with BetterCare, or at some later date, without interrupting the provision and distribution of health services. BetterCare gives President Trump the repeal and replacement he pledged to his supporters.
APPENDIX - SUGGESTED AMENDMENTS TO BETTERCARE
BetterCare repeals and replaces PPACA in parts, each part at a (possibly) different time, by amending the basic BetterCare legislation. Each amendment matches the part of the health care legal system repealed with its replacement, including sources of funding and uses of reduced expenses.
This Appendix contains suggested text of several potential amendments, each followed by commentary.
List of suggested amendments:
#
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Topic
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Idea promoted by
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1
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Interstate Licensing and Transactions
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Trump & Ryan
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2
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Funding and Inflation Adjustment
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3
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Competition, Solvency and BetterCare Trust Fund
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Trump & McConnell
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4
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Limitation on Premium Increases
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Ryan & McConnell
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5
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ESI tax exclusion
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Ryan
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6
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High-Risk Pools
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Ryan
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7
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Congress in the Exchanges
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Suggested amendments:
Amendment 1 to BetterCare - Interstate Licensing and Transactions.
- Interstate Provider Licensing. Licenses to persons to provide health care and granted to persons by any state will be recognized and honored by every other state. Licenses to provide health insurance granted to insurance companies and persons by any state will be recognized and honored by every other state. Insurance commissioners and licensing officers, or equivalent officials, from all the states will meet annually to rectify, to improve and to make more uniform the licensing protocols of the states and to elect their chairperson for the next annual meeting. The Secretary of Health and Human Services will chair the first meeting. The Secretary of Health and Human Services will reimburse each state up to $20,000 (changing annually with inflation) for the itemized expenses of two delegates.
- Interstate Insurance Transactions. Persons purchasing insurance on state exchanges may purchase from the exchange of their state of residence and from the exchanges of the five states geographically nearest their state of residence.
Amendment 1 would enhance competition among insurance providers as described by the new President. “I’d like to see a private insurance system without artificial lines drawn between states. We need to get rid of those lines and let people and companies cross state lines to purchase the best plan for them.” (Trump, “Crippled America”, 2015, ch 7)
Amendment 2 to BetterCare - Funding and Inflation Adjustment.
Each amendment to BetterCare reasonably projected to effect a change of more than $10 billion in federal and state health care expenditures during the next 10 years must include description of the modification of federal revenues that will fully finance the change in BetterCare. The Secretary of Health and Human Services will adjust each amount annually for inflation as measured by the Consumer Price Index, except as specifically provided otherwise.
Amendment 2 requires that BetterCare will be funded and adjusted for inflation.
Amendment 3 to BetterCare - Competition, Solvency and BetterCare Trust Fund.
- Subsidies to buyers. To avoid subsidies to buyers causing price increases, BetterCare will not provide for additional subsidies to persons or businesses buying insurance on the state exchanges.
- Subsidies to insurance providers. To assure reasonable profits to private insurers participating in the state exchanges and to assure satisfactory competition and to moderate insurance premiums, the Secretary of Health and Human Services will pay a subsidy to each insurance company for each person insured by that company via a policy on a state exchange. The insurance company will treat the aggregate of subsidies as a reduction of losses and not as premium income. The amount of the subsidy will be determined for each state exchange. The initial amount of the subsidy will be $1,000 per year per person insured, and this amount will not be adjusted for inflation. The Secretary of Health and Human Services will adjust the subsidy annually according to these rules:
- If the number of insurance companies competing on the exchange is fewer than five, the Secretary will increase the subsidy.
- If the aggregate profits from exchange policies of the insurance companies competing on the exchange is less than five percent of their aggregate revenues from exchange policies, the Secretary will increase the subsidy.
- If the five-company criterion and the 5-percent-profit criterion are met, then the Secretary will decrease the subsidy.
- The amount of the annual increase or decrease in the subsidy will not exceed 10%.
- Subsidies to reinsurers. To assure that extraordinary losses will not disable an insurance company participating in a state exchange, the participating companies may reinsure for individual losses exceeding $2 million per person insured. The Secretary will pay a subsidy of $10 per person insured to each reinsurer of participating companies, treated as a reduction of losses, not adjusted for inflation, adjusted annually according to these rules:
- If the number of reinsurers for the state is fewer than 3, the Secretary will increase the subsidy.
- If the aggregate profits, measured over a 10-year period (or available fraction thereof) of the reinsurance companies is less than 8%, the secretary will increase the subsidy.
- If the 3-company criterion and the 8-percent-profit criterion are met, then the Secretary will decrease the subsidy.
- The amount of the annual increase or decrease in the subsidy will not exceed 10%.
- BetterCare Trust Fund. Reinsurers for the companies participating in a state exchange will reinsure for individual losses exceeding $2 million per person insured and not exceeding $5 million per person insured. Reinsurers will refer the excess amounts of losses exceeding $5 million per person to the Secretary of Health and Human Services or the Secretary’s designee. The Social Security and Medicare Boards of Trustees will oversee the BetterCare Trust Fund to pay for losses referred by the reinsurers. The BetterCare Trust Fund will be fully funded to meet all obligations expected during the next 75 years.
- Seizure events. The Secretary of Health and Human Services or the Secretary’s designee will seize any company participating in an exchange or any reinsurer of such a company in either of the following events.
- If that company or reinsurer is unable to pay its obligations to policyholders.
- To assure that adequate competition among insurance companies exists, if after three or more years of subsidies, there exist insufficiently many companies on an exchange.
- Seizure process. When seizing an insurance company or reinsurer, the Secretary of Health and Human Services or the Secretary’s designee will effect timely and orderly seizure and administration of the largest one or two companies, use structured bankruptcy or call and pay all loans to the company in the Secretary’s discretion, and if there are material remaining assets, divide them into multiple companies, charter them as public stock corporations, and sell the stock to the public at not more than $25 per share on regulated stock exchanges within one year of seizure, and pay the proceeds less expenses of the Department of Health and Human Services to the owners of the company that was seized.
- Funding. To fund the provisions of this amendment, including contributions to the BetterCare Trust Fund, payers of income tax will also pay a surtax of 0.2 percent of taxable income up to $2 million dollars and a surtax of 0.4 percent of taxable income for income exceeding $2 million dollars.
Amendment 3 provides for and enforces regulated competition of private companies on the exchanges. It provides assurances of solvency. It subsidizes providers of insurance to avoid premium increases for individuals and families. Amendment 3 is consistent with and fulfills President Trump’s normative campaign pledge “The government doesn’t belong in health care except as the very last resort. The main way the government should be involved is to make sure the insurance companies are financially strong so that if there is a catastrophic event or they make some kind of miscalculation, they have the resources they’ll need to handle it.” (Trump, “Crippled America”, 2015, ch 7 ; McConnell, Press Release, Jan 11, 2017 http://www.mcconnell.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/2017/1/mcconnell-on-obamacare-we-must-act-quickly-to-bring-relief-to-the-american-people).
Amendment 4 to BetterCare - Limitation on Premium Increases
- The year-to-year change in health insurance premiums for the same class of insurance for individuals and for households will be limited to a maximum increase of 10%, with an absolute cap of $1,000 per month per individual and $2,500 per month per household.
- The year-to-year change in health insurance premiums for the same class of insurance for employers and companies will be limited to a maximum increase of 10%, with an absolute cap of $1,000 per month per individual and $2,500 per month per household.
- Insurers who file with state insurance departments actuarial statements of indicated premium rate increases that exceed the maxima described above will receive a subsidy from the Department of Health and Human Services to compensate for the excess increase, provided the Secretary of Health and Human Services audits and concurs in the actuarial statement.
- If, during the last five years prior to passage of this amendment, a person or household or business has experienced premium rate increases for comparable insurance exceeding the maxima described above in any of the five years will receive a one-time refund of the excess premium on application to the Secretary of Health and Human Services.
- In the year following coverage, the Secretary of Health and Human Services will determine the aggregate excess premium earned by each insurance company and pay that amount to the insurer.
- In the year following the Secretary’s determination, a surtax on the individual and joint income tax will apply sufficient to pay for the subsidy and the one-time refunds. The surtax will not exceed 0.4% for incomes less than $2 million.
Amendment 4 protects households from extremely large increases in premiums. (Ryan, “A Better Way”, Jun 22, 2016 http://abetterway.speaker.gov/_assets/pdf/ABetterWay-HealthCare-PolicyPaper.pdf ; McConnell, Press Release, Jan 11, 2017 http://www.mcconnell.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/2017/1/mcconnell-on-obamacare-we-must-act-quickly-to-bring-relief-to-the-american-people)
Amendment 5 to BetterCare - ESI tax exclusion
WHEREAS the CBO Congressional Budget Office has estimated that the ESI Employer-Sponsored Insurance exclusion increases premiums for employer-based coverage by 10 to 15 percent,
Employers providing ESI may deduct no more than $12,000 per year per adult covered and no more than $6,000 per year per child covered from the employer’s taxable income.
During the first three years of effectiveness of this provision, the Secretary of the Treasury will estimate the aggregate increase income tax resulting and assign these funds to the Medicare Trust Fund.
Amendment 5 reduces insurance premiums. (Ryan, “A Better Way”, Jun 22, 2016 http://abetterway.speaker.gov/_assets/pdf/ABetterWay-HealthCare-PolicyPaper.pdf)
Amendment 6 to BetterCare - High-Risk Pools
The Secretary of Health and Human Services will provide $25 billion annually to fund high-risk pools to give financial support for those persons who find themselves priced out of coverage. State insurance commissioners or equivalent state officers will maintain the actuarial solvency of these programs. Premiums for buyers of insurance in the high-risk pool will not exceed 110% of the premiums of insurance with comparable ordinary coverage on the state exchange. High-risk pool insurance will be issued without delay and without waiting lists. Not more than 10% of the number of persons insured in a state will be covered by a high-risk pool, with excess demand satisfied by issuance of comparable ordinary coverage on the state exchange at the usual rates for that coverage.
Amendment 6 reduces insurance costs for general classes of insurance on state exchanges and limits costs for those requiring coverage in high-risk pools. (Ryan, “A Better Way”, Jun 22, 2016 http://abetterway.speaker.gov/_assets/pdf/ABetterWay-HealthCare-PolicyPaper.pdf)
Amendment 7 to BetterCare - Congress in the Exchanges
WHEREAS members of Congress and their staffs must use the health care system to appreciate the experience of their constituents,
WHEREAS if the state exchanges aren’t good enough for a United States Senator, then they aren’t good enough for the people,
Congress will not provide health care insurance as an employer of the members and their staffs. The members and their staffs must obtain health insurance through state exchanges or as covered under a family member’s plan, other provisions of the health care laws notwithstanding.
Photo: JapanToday.com (Sep 1, 2015)