Protesters packed up signs and TV talkers put away their microphones Wednesday night, the beginning of the long wait till the Supreme Court decides the fate of the Affordable Care Act.
A decision on key components of the law, which could unravel the entire package, is not expected till June. Meantime, benefit advisers and other industry members are left to reassess what’s at stake, and how the public as well as Supreme Court justices are lining up.
Regarding the public, it’s still unclear where Americans stand on the ACA. While two-thirds of Americans oppose the individual insurance mandate that is at the heart of the Obama Administration's health care reform law, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation survey, the polls also reveal more nuanced attitudes.
Americans are evenly divided on the overall law, with 47% supporting it, according to Pew Research. And a New York Times/CBS News poll finds that many of the law's key provisions are backed by large majorities: the law's popular features include the requirement that insurance companies cover people with pre-existing conditions (85%), letting children stay on parents' policies until age 26 (68%) and cutting the cost of prescription drugs for seniors (77%).
As for the Justices, analysts inferred from their questioning during three days of oral arguments that the final vote is likely to be 5-4, but no certain indicator for or against the law. The Administration needs to at least one vote from of the five Justices typically considered conservative for the law to be upheld.
Meantime, here's a refresher on what is at stake if the Supreme Court strikes down the law:
BENEFITS ALREADY IN PLACE: Although key benefits of the ACA won't be implemented until 2014, significant changes are already in place. For example, 2.5 million young adults age 19 to 25 are now covered on their parents' policies. For Medicare, the first steps to close the gap in prescription drug coverage -- the notorious "donut hole" -- saved $2.1 billion for nearly 3.6 million seniors last year, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
STATE EXCHANGES: State insurance exchanges, which are being set up now and will fully launch in 2014, will open up access to insurance for anyone who can't access group health care coverage through the workplace -- a crucial, growing problem in an economy characterized by volatility and stubbornly high levels of structural unemployment.
For example, nine million Americans age 50 to 64 were uninsured as of 2010 -- up from 5.3 million in 2002, according to The Commonwealth Fund. Too young for Medicare, their only option now is the individual insurance market, where premium prices are high, coverage is partial and many can't buy policies at all due to pre-existing conditions. Nine million individuals were turned down for coverage in the individual market over the past three years due to pre-existing conditions, Commonwealth says.
Starting in 2014, the law will ban charging higher premiums or denying coverage based on health or age, and insurance companies will no longer be permitted to disqualify applicants based on pre-existing conditions. And applicants will be eligible for federal subsidies on the cost of coverage if they make less than 400% of the federally defined poverty level -- currently $92,000 for a family of four. For this group, the subsidy uses a sliding scale to hold costs as a share of income between 2% and 9.5%.
The Congressional Budget Office projects that 23 million Americans will gain coverage through the state exchanges by 2019. "That's a very sweeping change for people who need to retire early, are unemployed, or have a job that doesn't offer health care benefits," says Sara Collins, vice president for affordable insurance at The Commonwealth Fund.
The process will start with an application for insurance submitted to your state exchange; depending on your income, you'll be eligible to buy a policy in the exchange -- or receive coverage under Medicaid.
MEDICAID EXPANSION: Medicaid primarily serves parents with very low incomes, and few states cover adults who do not have children. The ACA provides federal funding for a dramatic expansion of Medicaid. The new program will serve all households that are living around the federal poverty level -- about $30,000 in annual income for a family of four. Fifty-seven percent of adults in that income range were uninsured for at least part of 2011, and 41% were uninsured for one year or longer.
So that's what's at stake if the health care reform law is struck down by the Supreme Court. All told, 31 million Americans who otherwise would have health insurance won't be covered at the end of this decade, and we'll be back to the drawing board on health care reform. Here's hoping it doesn't happen.
(Reuters contributions from Mark Miller, editing by Beth Pinsker Gladstone and Andrea Evans)
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6 Comments
Posted by: jimmy c | August 8, 2012 10:30 PM
Protesters packed up signs and TV talkers put away their microphones Wednesday night, the beginning of the long wait till the Supreme Court decides the fate of the Affordable Care Act.A decision on key components of the law, which could unravel the entire package, is not expected till June. Meantime, benefit advisers and other industry members are left to reassess what's at stake, and how the public as well as Supreme Court justices are lining up. this post is very good i like it. stainless steel cutlery sets
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Posted by: Johny12 | August 5, 2012 1:11 PM
Law does not have any provision relating to this. Americans are evenly divided on the overall law, with 47% supporting it, according to a report this figures are very close to reality.wwwAtticFan.com
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Posted by: Simonstar | July 18, 2012 11:16 PM
The healthcare law is no doubt a huge investment in terms of resources for it to be implemented smoothly. Many people want to be covered, but they cannot afford to pay. This one policy could divide the nation and I do not see the debate being solved any time soon. Simon
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Posted by: jack45 | June 6, 2012 12:08 PM
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