CBO: 32 million to lose their health coverage by 2026 under repeal-and-replace bill
AP  By Mara Lee
Updated at 5:18 pm  - Modern Healthcare
Senate Republicans' repeal-and-delay bill would cause 32 million to lose their 
health coverage by 2026, and 17 million to become uninsured next year, according 
to a new projection released today the Congressional Budget 
Office.
Under the Senate GOP's initial bill, which proposed a replacement 
for the Affordable Care Act, CBO projected that 22 million would be uninsured by 
2026 as a result of the law. Lacking support for that bill, Better Care 
Reconciliation Act, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell pulled the plug on a 
repeal-and-replace strategy and is now considering the repeal-and-delay tactic. 
President Donald Trump today urged Senators to send him a bill, even if it means 
further delaying their August recess. 
"For seven years you promised the 
American people that you would repeal Obamacare. People are hurting. Inaction is 
not an option and frankly I don't think we should leave town unless we have a 
health insurance plan," he said during a lunch with GOP lawmakers.
Three 
Republicans senators already said on Monday they would not even agree to start 
debating a repeal-and-delay approach. Sen. Susan Collins of Maine voted against 
the same bill in 2015, and Alaska's Lisa Murkowski and West Virginia's Shelley 
Moore Capito also said they are not going to vote for repeal without knowing 
whether they can live with the replacement.
McConnell (R-Ky.) needs 50 of 
the 52 Republicans to vote yes to get the bill passed, because Vice President 
Mike Pence would be the tie breaker.
The repeal-and-delay bill cuts less 
out of Medicaid than BCRA because while it ends the enhanced match for Medicaid 
expansion—which led to 12 million people getting coverage—it does not change the 
financing to Medicaid for the children, disabled adults, parents of young 
children and elderly people on the program. The enhanced match would only last 
in 2019 and 2020. The six-percentage-point increase for home health care waiver 
activities would also disappear at the beginning of 2020.
However, repeal 
and delay leaves the fate of the individual market completely in the dark, 
because it's unknown what kind of subsidies would be available for low and 
moderate income people to buy insurance in the yet-to-be written replacement. 
The bill would appropriate cost-sharing reduction payments to insurers through 
the end of 2019.
The CBO estimate assumes nothing is done to replace the 
ACA, which would mean premiums would increase by 50% more than would be expected 
under current law by 2020, and they would about double by 2026.
Next 
year, the CBO expects, about 10 million fewer people would be in the individual 
market, mostly because they don't want to buy insurance, and without a mandate, 
they'd stop buying policies. However, the CBO also projects that 10% of the 
population would live in counties that have no insurer willing to sell 
individual policies.
It would get worse quickly. The nonpartisan budget 
shop projects that half the U.S. population would not be able to buy individual 
plans at all by 2020, and 75% would have no willing seller by 2026, because it 
would be so unprofitable to sell such high-priced insurance with no help to pay 
premiums. Only the sickest people would find it worth it to pay in that 
scenario.
The 17 million increase in uninsured next year also includes 
about 4 million fewer people going into Medicaid, because they wouldn't hear 
about the mandate, visit the exchange, and find out they qualify for free health 
insurance. It also includes roughly 2 million fewer people on employer-sponsored 
insurance next year without the employer mandate.
The repeal-and-delay 
approach does add a little spending in health care.
Hospitals would get 
$21 billion back over 10 years in the disproportionate share hospitals 
program.
The bill would also appropriate $1.5 billion in the next two 
fiscal years for grants to states for substance abuse or mental health needs. It 
would add $422 million to federally qualified health care center spending in the 
current fiscal year.
The bill gives senators two years to figure out a 
replacement. In seven months since controlling both the executive and 
legislative branches, they've been unable to find middle ground between 
conservatives and moderates in the Republican party.
Some Republican 
senators are meeting Wednesday night for a meeting to try to bridge the divide, 
after the president exhorted them to at lunch today. HHS Secretary Dr. Tom Price 
and CMS Administrator Seema Verma will also attend.