WASHINGTON The Trump administration Monday took new steps to broaden the availability of health plans that dont have to cover patients pre-existing medical conditions, signaling that the federal government would support state proposals to promote more sales of these skimpier plans.
Administration officials billed the move as a way to give more choice to consumers who are struggling with expensive health insurance.
Now states will have a clearer sense of how they can take the lead on making available more insurance options, said Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, who has championed a host of efforts to loosen health insurance regulations established through the Affordable Care Act.
But the latest administration proposal to weaken insurance standards comes as President Donald Trump and Republican congressional candidates are intensifying their bid to convince voters that the GOP backs patient protections in the 2010 law, often called Obamacare.
Just last week, Trump claimed on Twitter that all Republicans support people with pre-existing conditions.
And with just two weeks until the midterm elections, GOP lawmakers who voted repeatedly last year to roll back the health care law and its protections are insisting they will preserve pre-existing-conditions rules.
The new proposal from the Department of Health and Human Services and the Treasury Department would not explicitly scrap the laws protections, which bar health plans from denying coverage to people with pre-existing medical conditions.
But the administration plan would dramatically reshape rules established by the 2010 law that were designed to prevent states from weakening these protections.
Republicans failed at repealing and replacing the ACA last year, but this new guidance gives states the flexibility to do much of it themselves, said Larry Levitt, senior vice president at the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation, which studies health insurance markets.
The door is now wide open for states to do an end run around the ACA by creating a parallel market with lower premiums but fewer protections for people with pre-existing conditions.
Under current law, states may apply to the federal government for permission to redesign their insurance markets and keep federal health care aid as long as the redesign does not decrease the number of people with comprehensive health coverage.
This guardrail was intended to prevent states from enacting plans that would leave consumers with inadequate insurance coverage, as frequently happened before the health care law was enacted.
The new plan would change this guardrail by supporting state proposals that could shift people out of comprehensive health plans into skimpier plans that dont cover benefits such as prescription drugs, mental health services and maternity care, and that can deny coverage for pre-existing medical conditions as long as a states residents still have access to a more comprehensive plan.
This guidance focuses on the availability of comprehensive and affordable coverage, the administration notes in the proposal. This … ensures that state residents who wish to retain coverage similar to that provided under the (ACA) can continue to do so, while permitting a state plan to also provide access to other options that may be better suited to consumer needs and more attractive to many individuals.
That means that under this new standard, states could potentially keep federal aid made available through the health care law even if the number of state residents in comprehensive health coverage declines.