What You Missed While on Holiday Break

What You Missed While on Holiday Break

Washington, D.C., often goes quiet during the winter holiday season, but officials continued to pave the road to reform even as Congress was on break. Several agencies issued key guidance on implementing the federal health overhaul, and a number of new patient protections took effect last week.

Washington, D.C., was spared a snowstorm, but there was a flurry of health reform activity during the holiday season.

Three agencies released key guidance on implementing the federal health overhaul, HHS issued a closely watched proposal on how health insurance companies would have to justify significant premium hikes, federal and a wave of patient protections took effect on Jan. 1. The efforts capped off a busy year that began with questions over whether the overhaul would pass and ended with every state having implemented at least one aspect of the law.

Between the federal provisions slated to take effect in 2011 and ongoing resistance to the reform law, the coming months promise to be equally eventful. HHS officials are shifting from “phase one” of the overhaul — an effort to roll out consumer protections and insurance industry regulations — into “phase two”: work focused on delivery system reform. At the same time, Republicans will use their new House majority to kick off a sweeping GOP challenge to the law, and questions about the overhaul’s constitutionality continue to overshadow its implementation.

Upcoming columns will detail these new health policy issues; this edition will quickly review key updates since we last looked in on the road to reform.

New Patient Protections

Democrats “frontloaded the law with a number of consumer-protection related provisions that they expect will boost support for the overhaul,” according to The Hill. Some of the measures that took effect on Jan. 1 include:

Meanwhile, California has moved forward with its own patient protections “by both implementing and improving on” the federal overhaul, according to Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access California. Some of the state’s largest health insurers have retracted their previous decision to stop selling policies for children in light of a new California law (AB 2244) that prohibits companies that lack child-only plans from selling new policies on the broader individual market.

CMS Rulemaking on Other Key Issues

CMS officials also made several important announcements related to carrying out the law.

Key Federal Guidance on Implementation

HHS, IRS and the Department of Labor on Dec. 22 issued guidance on how industries can comply with various aspects of the federal overhaul. “Not surprisingly, these issuances received virtually no press coverage,” law professor Timothy Jost wrote on the Health Affairs blog. “Nevertheless, they are important both in their own right and for what they signal about the future of ACA implementation.”

Altogether, the guidance suggests that the Obama administration is seeking to “delay compliance deadlines [and] maximize flexibility” in order to build support from insurers and employers, according to Jost. While winning over these key constituencies could be crucial to the law’s long-term survival, Jost cautions that federal officials must avoid making concessions that could weaken the overhaul and alienate reform advocates that the White House needs, too.

We’ll continue to watch this careful balance as industry stakeholders carry on their tug-of-war over the reform law. Meanwhile, here’s a look at other recent developments shaping reform implementation — or challenging it — across the nation.

Rolling Out the Reform Law

Challenging the Overhaul

Eye on the Industry

In the States

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