The Future of Healthcare
In June, The Hill hosted a Future of Healthcare Summit to
address critical issues in healthcare, from the Medicare for All proposals made
by Democratic presidential hopefuls to the opioid crisis. Speakers included
policymakers, health officials, and industry leaders, on both sides of the
aisle.
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), for example, took a critical
stance on the idea of Medicare for All at the summit. His statements are
summarized here.
His concerns are practical; “We can’t even pay for Medicare for some,” he said,
referring to an earlier report that Medicare will exceed its hospital insurance
fund by 2026. Manchin, accordingly, prefers to fix the Affordable Care Act
rather than create an entirely new system.
Another issue discussed at the summit was that of data
security. As health care becomes increasingly digitized, the risk to people’s
privacy rises, as evidenced by recent data breaches. Lawmakers are responding
to these breaches, Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) by reaching out to health care
groups for input on strategies to improve cybersecurity, and Sens. Amy
Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) by introducing the Protecting
Personal Health Data Act. Read more about this here.
High cost drugs are another upcoming issue in the health
care world, discussed in this
Hill article. Innovative cures may merit a high price, but some companies
are asking such massive sums for potentially life-saving solutions that they
are inaccessible to the people who need them. Accordingly, lawmakers are trying
to come up with solutions to make these drugs more affordable, such as Sen.
Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), who has considered allowing Medicaid to pay for drugs
over time.
In the same vein, Rep. Tom Reed (R-NY.) called for the cost
of insulin to be lowered in an op-ed on The Hill, available here;
he notes that insulin prices have doubled in the last seven years, and tripled
in the decade prior, that out-of-pocket insulin costs can exceed $300 a vial,
and that patients are often racking up debt or skipping doses with serious
health consequences. Reed is pushing for transparency from insulin
manufacturers, and has introduced the SPIKE Act, which would require
justification for price hikes. Likewise, Rep. Buddy Carter (R-Ga.) has
expressed his concern in a
recent op-ed about the prices for drugs which treat cancer, and is also
pushing for transparency to lower costs.
Meanwhile, Reps. David Trone (D-Md.) and Donald Norcross
(D-N.J.) wrote in to The Hill, responding to issues of addiction raised at the
conference. Trone drew
attention back to the opioid crisis and its ongoing effects, and described
the steps being taken to combat it. Norcross called
for enforcement of the 2008 requirement that insurance cover mental health
and substance-use disorders to the same extent physical ailments are covered,
and for continued funding and new strategies to deal with substance abuse.
Finally, Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) criticized
the Trump administration as “sabotaging our health system” by destabilizing the
health care market and creating difficulties in accessing it. She cites
specific efforts the administration has made to reduce access, including
supporting attempts to overturn the Affordable Care Act. Baldwin has responded
by supporting the ENROLL Act to restore funding for the Navigator, which had
previously been reduced by the Trump administration and by introducing the No
Junk Plans Act to reel back the administration’s expansion of junk insurance
plans.
From data security to drug prices, The Hill’s Future of Healthcare Summit covered a lot of ground. These issues in health care and the responses proposed to solve them continue to develop. If you have questions or would like to discuss planning opportunities to address your health care needs, please don’t hesitate to contact us. Call (402) 614-6400 today to schedule your free, no-obligation attorney consultation.
Visit our website at www.ElderLawOmaha.com.
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