Losing Obamacare would be a disaster
none of us are prepared for. (Rhona Wiser/Agence France-Presse via Getty
Images)
Now that President Trump is in
the Oval Office, thousands of American lives that were previously protected by
provisions of the Affordable Care Act are in danger. For more than 30 years, we
have studied
how death rates are affected by changes in health-care coverage, and we’re
convinced that an ACA repeal could cause tens of thousands of deaths annually.
The story is in the data: The
biggest and most definitive study of
what happens to death rates when Medicaid coverage is expanded, published in
the New England Journal of Medicine, found that for every 455 people who gained
coverage across several states, one life was saved per year. Applying that
figure to even a conservative estimate of 20 million losing coverage in the
event of an ACA repeal yields an estimate of 43,956 deaths annually.
With Republicans’ efforts to
destroy the ACA now underway, several commentators have expressed something
akin to cautious optimism about the effect of a potential repeal. The
Washington Post’s Glenn Kessler awarded Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) four
Pinocchios for claiming that 36,000 people a year will die if the ACA is
repealed; Brookings Institution fellow Henry Aaron, meanwhile, predicted
that Republicans probably will salvage much of the ACA’s gains, and
conservative writer Grover Norquist argued that the
tax cuts associated with repeal would be a massive boon for the middle
class.
But such optimism is overblown.
The first problem is that
Republicans don’t
have a clear replacement plan. Kessler, for instance, chides Sanders for
assuming that repeal would leave many millions uninsured, because Kessler
presumes that the Republicans would replace the ACA with reforms that preserve
coverage. But while repeal seems highly likely (indeed, it’s already underway
using a legislative vehicle that requires only 50 Senate votes), replacement
(which would require 60 votes) is much less certain.
Moreover, even if a Republican
replacement plan comes together, it’s likely to take a big backward step from
the gains made by the ACA, covering fewer people with much skimpier plans.
Trump signs first executive
order on Affordable Care Act
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President Trump signs his first
executive order in the Oval Office, which will direct agencies to ease the
regulatory burdens associated with the Affordable Care Act, as Vice President
Pence swears in retired Gen. James Mattis and retired Gen. John F. Kelly.
(Reuters)
Although Aaron has a rosy view
of a likely Republican plan, much of what they — notably House Speaker Paul
D. Ryan (R-Wis.) and Rep. Tom
Price (R-Ga.), who is Trump’s nominee to head the Department of Heath and
Human Services, which will be in charge of dismantling the ACA — have advocated
in place of the ACA would hollow out the coverage of many who were unaffected
by the law, harming them and probably raising their death
rates. Abolishing minimum coverage standards for insurance policies would
leave insurers and employers free to cut coverage for preventive and reproduction-related
care. Allowing interstate insurance sales probably would cause a race to
the bottom, with skimpy plans that emanate from lightly regulated states
becoming the norm. Block granting Medicaid would leave poor patients at
the mercy of state officials, many of whom have shown little concern for the
health of the poor. A Medicare voucher program (with the value of the
voucher tied to overall inflation rather than more rapid medical inflation)
would worsen the coverage of millions of seniors, a problem that would be
exacerbated by the proposed ban on full coverage under Medicare supplement
policies. In other words, even if Republicans replace the ACA, the plans
they’ve put on the table would have devastating consequences.
The frightening fact is that Sanders’s
estimate that about 36,000 people will die if the ACA is repealed is consistent
with well-respected studies. The Urban Institute’s estimate, for
instance, predicts that 29.8 million (not just 20 million) will lose
coverage if Republicans repeal the law using the budget reconciliation
process. And that’s exactly what they’ve already begun to do, with no
replacement plan in sight.
No one knows with any certainty
what the Republicans will do, or how many will die as a result. But
Sanders’s suggestion that 36,000 would die is certainly well within the
ballpark of scientific consensus on the likely impact of repeal of the ACA, and
the notion of certain replacement — and the hope that a GOP replacement would
be a serviceable remedy — are each far from certain, and looking worse every
day.
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