House Votes to Repeal and Replace the ACA

— Bill now heads to Senate

MedicalToday

WASHINGTON -- The House of Representatives voted 217-213 here Thursday to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA) with a plan that critics say could throw millions of people off of health insurance and cause premiums to rise steeply for older Americans.

The vote on a revised version of H.R. 1628, the (AHCA), came just before House members headed out of town for a week-long recess. The measure now heads to the Senate, where many observers say it will have a tough time getting through. Reaction to the vote from the healthcare community was swift and negative, with many organizations predicting dire consequences for patients.

Under the original version of the bill, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that 24 million people would lose their health insurance as of 2026 if the bill were passed; it would also reduce the deficit by $337 billion over the same period, CBO said. However, the current bill -- which has several revisions -- was voted on too quickly for the CBO to develop a revised estimate.

Mandates Eliminated

The AHCA would eliminate the taxes and mandates that financed the ACA -- including the individual and employer mandate penalty -- allow insurers to charge older adults and young people less, and replace subsidies based on need with flat tax credits based primarily on an age. Over time, the plan would repeal the Medicaid expansion and put a ceiling on the entitlement program by shifting its structure to a per-capita block grant, which would increase as enrollee size increases. The bill would also freeze federal funding for Planned Parenthood.

The original AHCA bill was scheduled for a vote on March 24, but it was pulled at the last minute by House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) after he determined he did not have enough votes to pass it. Since then, Republicans made several changes to their bill in order to attract recalcitrant members of their party, both moderates and conservatives.

These included:

  • An that would allow states to opt out of requiring insurers to cover the ACA's list of "essential health benefits"; instead, states could develop their own lists of what benefits they considered essential. The amendment also would allow states to charge more for 1 year to patients with pre-existing conditions if they have been without insurance coverage for 63 days or more. This type of medical underwriting would be done in lieu of a 30% penalty called for under the law for patients who re-enroll in health insurance after such a lapse in coverage. States who opt to allow medical underwriting also would have to set up high-risk pools for patients with high costs due to pre-existing conditions.
  • An that would provide states with an extra $8 billion over 5 years to set up high-risk pools to cover patients with high costs due to pre-existing conditions, in addition to the $130 billion already in the bill that states could use for that purpose. Although no CBO estimate is available, an , a left-leaning think tank here, found that states would need an extra $200 billion for the high-risk pools to be adequately funded, assuming that 5% of patients in the individual and small-group markets end up in the pools.
  • An to prevent members of Congress from being exempted from the AHCA. The AHCA originally exempted Congress members from being affected by state waivers.

Rep. Phil Roe, MD (R-Tenn.), an ob.gyn., said he was voting for the bill because the ACA cannot be fixed. "The whole [ACA] plan is so complicated it's impossible," he told in a phone interview. "There are people out there who got helped by [the ACA], no question, but they'll get helped by this bill also."

More than half of those who have coverage through the ACA "have out-of-pocket costs and copays so high that they don't go for healthcare," he said. "If you have a health insurance card but you can't use it, it's not of much value to you. So we have to try to get the costs down."

Medical Groups Pan the Measure

Medical groups panned the House’s action. “The bill passed by the House today will result in millions of Americans losing access to quality, affordable health insurance and those with pre-existing health conditions face the possibility of going back to the time when insurers could charge them premiums that made access to coverage out of the question,” Andrew Gurman, MD, president of the American Medical Association (AMA), said in a statement. “The AMA urges the Senate and the Administration to work with physician, patient, hospital and other provider groups to craft bipartisan solutions so all American families can access affordable and meaningful coverage.”

“The American College of Physicians (ACP) is extremely disappointed” in the bill’s passage in the House, ACP president Jack Ende, MD, said in a statement. “The House action is by no means the end of the story, however. ACP will continue to do all that it can to ensure continued coverage and access for the millions of patients who have benefited from the Affordable Care Act.”

The [American Diabetes] Association remains deeply concerned with the AHCA and has expressed our reservations throughout the rushed legislative process, the group said in a statement. “The most alarming last-minute changes to the bill will allow states to waive the requirement for essential health benefits and health status rating. Weakening these rules will give insurers the ability to charge people with pre-existing conditions, — such as diabetes — higher prices. It will also allow insurers to deny people with diabetes coverage for the care and services they need to treat their disease.”

Heated Floor Debate

Debate on the House floor was heated. "How did we get to this point?" asked Rep. Michael Burgess, MD (R-Texas), an ob/gyn. "The ACA is simply not working for the American people; it is limiting choices, it is raising costs, it is leaving millions without access to care. The ACA has left the individual market in shambles and is driving insurers away from offering coverage."

"Pathetic -- that is the word to describe this process and this bill," said Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.). "If the American people could sue Congress for malpractice, my Republican friends would be in deep trouble. How could you do this to the people you represent? You're allowing insurance companies to discriminate against people with preexisting conditions? What is wrong with you guys?"