The healthcare industry is abuzz with speculation about its future under the Trump administration and Republican-controlled Congress. While nothing is truly certain, let us help you understand healthcare policy intricacies that are sure to change the face of healthcare as we know it today.
Paul Ryan’s Healthcare Reform Proposal
Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress vow to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. In the absence of any details from Trump, we can look to a proposal released by Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan titled “A Better Way”. Here’s a synopsis of the 37-page proposal:
- Maintains the idea that everyone in the U.S. should have health insurance
- Includes tax credits to help people pay for insurance
- Protects those with existing illnesses and medical conditions from losing coverage
- Maintains that a market approach could reduce healthcare costs and improve efficiency
- Includes tax-free health savings accounts to help pay for deductibles and keep premiums down for young, healthy people
- Limits tax breaks for employer-based insurance to encourage cheaper, high deductible policies
- Offers high risk pools for people difficult to insure, like those with chronic illnesses
While dubbed “Obamacare light” by some, Ryan’s plan changes a key feature of Obamacare that spreads the cost of insurance across generations, with healthy and young people subsidizing older and sicker people who typically require more care. Ryan’s plan enables younger people to start saving for major health problems over time through health savings plans that would be partly funded by the government. Read the proposal.
Navigating the Healthcare Policies of HHS Pick Tom Price
Tom Price, a third-generation physician who worked as an orthopedic surgeon for more than two decades, has served in Congress for 12 years. With this background, it’s expected that Price will support physician-friendly policies.
Price calls for a complete repeal of the Affordable Care Act and supports major changes to Medicaid and Medicare. He proposes converting Medicaid into block grants to states which would give them more freedom from federal eligibility requirements. For Medicare, he supports enabling older or disabled Americans to buy private insurance policies.
Details of Price’s healthcare policies are outlined in his 242-page plan titled “Empowering Patients First”.
Implications of a Medicaid Expansion Repeal
With the Affordable Care Act on the chopping block, Medicaid expansion could also see changes. In a new brief, the Kaiser Family Foundation outlined what’s potentially at stake for Medicaid. Key findings include:
- An estimated 11 million adults made eligible by the expansion could be at risk for losing Medicaid coverage
- The progress of reducing the uninsured could be reversed with a loss of Medicaid coverage
- At risk is $79 billion in federal funding received by Medicaid expansion states
Read the brief to learn more.
Get our take on industry trends
Data visualization: A picture is worth a thousand…healthcare data points?
The amount of data produced daily has grown exponentially with nearly 90% of the world’s data generated in the last two years alone. To ensure we can make sense of this data, analysts must find meaningful ways to present the information to their audiences.
Read on...How did we get here? Hospital analytics and the new normal
I have heard the word “unprecedented” so many times in 2020 that it has lost its significance; many of us have become desensitized to the extraordinary changes in the world this year.
Read on...How to help employer groups plan in a time of uncertainty
Employers and their sponsored health plans are thinking about next year’s benefit designs with a significant challenge not seen before: the effect of the coronavirus pandemic. There are important considerations to take into account before making any decisions about new or existing coverage. Becky Niehus, a director of Product Consulting at MedeAnalytics, explores these new issues and what employers can do to ensure employees are “covered.”
Read on...Healthcare’s return to “normal” after COVID-19: Is it possible?
As providers determine how to get patients to return to facilities for routine disease management and preventive screenings, opportunities are ripe for the application of analytics to triage at the right time to the right setting. Data related to COVID-19 will continue to flow rapidly, but there are possibly more questions than answers now about a return to “normal.”
Read on...