By GEORGES C.
BENJAMIN
SEP 04, 2018 | 4:05 AM
Since the
Affordable Care Act was signed into law in 2010, America’s access to healthcare
has improved dramatically. Roughly 20 million Americans have gained health
insurance coverage. Medicare beneficiaries can now get free preventive care and
pay less for prescription drugs. And no one can be denied coverage based on
preexisting conditions.
And yet,
a group of 20 Republican governors and attorneys general are trying to
accomplish in court what Republican lawmakers repeatedly failed to do in
Congress: removal of the ACA and its vital protections for consumers.Texas and
19 other red states filed the federal lawsuit, Texas vs. Azar, in
February. They argue that because Congress eliminated the individual mandate
penalty as part of last year’s tax bill, the mandate is no longer a tax; that
the mandate is therefore unconstitutional; and that the entire ACA must be
thrown out.
In an
almost unprecedented move, the Justice Department then announced in June that
it was abandoning its obligation to defend the ACA in court, saying it agreed
with the premises of the lawsuit. California Attorney General Xavier Becerra’s
office and other Democratic attorneys general will defend the law instead.
Federal courts in Texas are some of the most conservative in the country, so
it’s possible the case could advance to the U.S. Supreme Court. Oral arguments
are scheduled to begin this week in Texas.
I cannot
overstate how much this lawsuit threatens individual and public health.
Numerous studies have established definitively that health insurance improves
health. According to the New England Journal of Medicine, health
insurance provides “significant, multifaceted and nuanced benefits to health.”
The American Journal of Public Health has reported that
people who do not have health insurance die prematurely.
Overturning
the ACA will result in a catastrophic loss of coverage for millions of
Americans. According to a new analysis by the Urban Institute, if the ACA is
invalidated, more than 17 million people
would lose coverage in 2019. That would be a 50% increase in the number of
uninsured in just one year, including 12 million people who
receive insurance through the marketplaces created by the ACA and 2.3 million young
adults who gained coverage through its expansion of dependent care.
Striking
down the ACA will jeopardize the healthcare of those who need it most.
Nearly 12 million low-income
Americans who were enrolled in Medicaid through the ACA would likely lose
coverage. And many families will lose the protections that currently prevent
insurance companies from denying care to people with preexisting conditions.
Some will be denied coverage because they have diabetes, hypertension, cancer
or heart disease, or simply because they had asthma as a child.
Health
insurance isn’t the only vital benefit at risk. Eliminating the ACA will also
cause steep cuts to critical public health programs.
The ACA
has provided more than $8 billion in
funding for broad public health services and disease prevention programs
through what’s called the Prevention and Public Health Fund. These resources
have supported efforts to immunize children, ensure our water is safe to drink,
help people quit smoking and prevent drug addiction. This includes services
that are critical to stemming our national opioid epidemic.
The law
has also provided resources for developing and testing new ways to improve the
quality of the healthcare provided through insurance. This, too, could be lost.
According
to a widely cited Gallup poll,
a majority of Americans worry “a great deal” about the availability and
affordability of healthcare. They are right to worry, especially with the ACA
under attack.
This
lawsuit could be the most dangerous effort to destabilize the American
healthcare system yet. That’s why the American Public Health Association has
submitted friend-of-the-court briefs opposing this suit, along with many other
health organizations, insurers, economists and members of the business
community.
The Trump
administration and its supporters are playing politics with the health of the
American people. Healthcare isn’t a game. Millions of Americans have too much
to lose.
Georges C. Benjamin is the
executive director of the American Public Health Association.
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-benjamin-aca-lawsuit-texas-20180904-story.html?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Issue:%202018-09-05%20Healthcare%20Dive%20%5Bissue:16965%5D&utm_term=Healthcare%20Dive
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