And the State of Our Health Reform Is …

And the State of Our Health Reform Is …

Did the State of the Union hold any surprises for health reform? The health care law was more than a bit player in President Obama's address, but what unfolded on Tuesday night's national stage paled next to what's transpiring in Congress this week.

The run-up to last night’s State of the Union address was bracketed by the serious — like unresolved budget questions and the recent tragic shooting in Arizona — and the seriously frivolous, such as whether House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) would accept House Majority Leader Eric Cantor’s (R-Va.) invitation to sit together.

In short, the typical mix of imperatives and distractions. With the speech’s conclusion, the national conversation moved from deconstructing seating partners to debating the substance of President Obama’s remarks.

Yet two years into the nation’s debate on health reform, legislators remain bogged down in a mix of the fraught and frivolous. Tuesday marked the latest important chapter in the law’s saga — less for what happened on a prime-time stage, more for developments in congressional chambers. In word and deed, Republicans again demonstrated they seek an overhaul … of the overhaul.

About Last Night: Sputnik and Skutnicks

The president’s speech focused on the nation’s latest “Sputnik moment,” which he termed an opportunity for U.S. innovation to overcome a sluggish economy. However, Obama’s push to “win the future” meant he didn’t dwell on his past legislative accomplishments.

The president spent just 322 words — less than 5% of his prepared text — defending health care reform. That’s significantly down from last year’s address, when Obama spoke on health care for nearly twice as long and urged fellow Democrats not to “walk away” from the stalled health reform bill. The president’s remarks this year also contrasted with comments from Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), who delivered Republicans’ response to the State of the Union and spent more than 12% of his airtime on the GOP’s health law repeal effort.

Obama defended the law by abandoning economics for anecdotes: He invoked two so-called “Skutnicks” — the informal moniker for private citizens invited as guests to the speech — who personally benefited from the Affordable Care Act’s patient protections. Meanwhile, Ryan took a big picture view and argued that the overhaul is “accelerating our country toward bankruptcy” by creating a new, unfunded entitlement.

Going for Broke

While Obama suggested his willingness to seek input and “improve the law,” Ryan’s call for full repeal reflects Republicans’ firm conviction that the overhaul must be struck drown.

The GOP on Wednesday launches a full-scale attack on the health law, with members of Congress preparing a slew of legislation intended to overturn the individual mandate, defund provisions like the Independent Payment Advisory Board and even repeal the entire law. Meanwhile, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Tuesday began the legislative process of bringing the House GOP’s health care repeal effort to a Senate vote.

This new political battle unfolds with legislators partly confounded by a Kaiser Family Foundation tracking poll that both demonstrates surging support for the reform but also shows that negative perception of the law has reached historic highs. Released on Tuesday, the poll found that the disapproval rating for the overhaul is up nine percentage points since December 2010 and is at the highest since April 2010, just weeks after the law’s enactment. The change — a “curious contrast” with other polls, Politico notes — is driven by a 16-point swing in independents’ perception of reform and may reflect Republicans’ high-profile push to strike down the law. At the same time, only one-third of respondents supported the idea of defunding the health law.

The Next Round in the Chamber

Some of Obama’s proposals match up with in-progress congressional efforts, which should tee up his calls to action.

Spending freeze: While Obama’s proposed five-year freeze on domestic spending was a major plank of last night’s address, many Democrats expressed concern and noted that a spending freeze coincides with the rollout of many provisions of the health law. However, a freeze may not be a barrier to implementation, according to former HHS official Neera Tanden. The relevant government agencies “have a lot of flexibility to move funds around,” Politico reports.

Overturning 1099: The president’s most popular proposal last night may have been the call to “correc[t] a flaw” in the health law that places “an unnecessary bookkeeping burden on small businesses.” Bipartisan legislation to overturn the health law’s 1099 tax-reporting provision and backed by Sens. Mike Johanns (R-Neb.) and Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) needs just four senators to achieve filibuster-proof status. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.) also have introduced their own effort to repeal the measure.

Medical malpractice reform:  Obama’s latest call for medical malpractice reform came one day after House Republicans introduced a bill (HR 5) that would limit punitive damages in lawsuits.  While the idea does enjoy some bipartisan support, Democrats tend to oppose fixed caps on malpractice damages and observers question whether the president truly is committed to tort reform. According to David Kendall, a senior fellow at centrist think tank Third Way, Obama must be “serious because [the issue is] sure to upset more than a few Democrats.” In contrast, Forbes‘ David Whelan points to several pieces of “circumstantial evidence” suggesting that Obama is just paying lip service to the idea of medical malpractice reform, after proposing similar changes in a high-profile 2009 speech to the American Medical Association.

Medical liability reforms also are perceived as a fringe issue in the larger health care debate; a Congressional Budget Office estimate suggests that current tort reform proposals could save up to $60 billion over a decade — roughly 0.5% of all national health care spending, Politico reports.

The road to reform clearly wends through Congress — again — and California Healthline will continue its close watch on efforts to revise the health law. Meanwhile, here’s a review of other health reform stories making news across the nation.

Challenges to the Reform Law

Defending the Overhaul

In Public Opinion

Eye on Job-Based Coverage

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