Senator tweets about the healthcare bill.
The link circles a section of the proposed healthcare plan, which says that a certain paragraph of a certain federal law will cease to apply at the end of 2019.
This is the paragraph they're referencing.(5) Minimum standards.—Effective January 1, 2014, any benchmark benefit package under paragraph (1) or benchmark equivalent coverage under paragraph (2) must provide at least essential health benefits as described in section 1302(b) of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
These are the minimum standards being referenced.Minimum standards.—Effective January 1, 2014, any benchmark benefit package under paragraph (1) or benchmark equivalent coverage under paragraph (2) must provide at least essential health benefits as described in section 1302(b) of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
(A) Ambulatory patient services.
(B) Emergency services.
(C) Hospitalization.
(D) Maternity and newborn care.
(E) Mental health and substance use disorder services, including behavioral health treatment.
(F) Prescription drugs.
(G) Rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices.
(H) Laboratory services.
(I) Preventive and wellness services and chronic disease management.
(J) Pediatric services, including oral and vision care.
These regulations apply to "benchmark plans" offered by the state. This is my first foray into directly reading federal law so you'll have to forgive any mistakes.
From what I can gather, every 2 years each state picks a plan from 2 years ago as a benchmark. No plan offered on the state market can provide less than that plan. The regulations to be stripped away provide a minimum standard for each benchmark. Under the old system, a benchmark could exceed the minimum of the ACA but it could not be lower than it.
Under the new law states can pick whatever they want as a benchmark. I'm a little fuzzy on how you could pick a benchmark lower than your previous one, but presumably there's a way or there'd be no point to removing that law. Removing the essential minimums would essentially make the ACA and all of its improvements totally voluntary by state. I mean look at those requirements, I think we can all agree those are pretty minimal. Any plan that doesn't offer A,B,C, or F pretty much isn't health insurance as most people would think of it. Arguably G and H as well. Meanwhile D and E are basically anti-discrimination laws to make sure women and the mentally ill aren't targeted to be denied health insurance.