On late Friday afternoon,
December 14, 2018, United States District Court Judge Reed O’Connor struck down
Obamacare, a/k/a the Affordable Care Act ruling that it was unconstitutional.
Let us explore the reasoning behind the opinion and the possible ramifications
and implications, both short term and long term of that decision.
Summary of Decision
Judge O’Connor issued a 55 page
opinion which granted summary judgment for the plaintiffs in the case entitled Texas, et al v. United States, et al, Civil Action No. 4:18-cv-00167-O.
(The case is generally known as “Texas v.
Azar”) The plaintiffs were Republican State Officials from twenty (20)
different states. The case was filed in February of 2018. The reason this date
is significant will be discussed later in this article.
First, a summary judgment is a
motion filed by a party which asserts that there are no disputed material facts
in the case and that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law. If the
court agrees that there are no material facts, the judge then applies the law
as established by prior cases, interprets the Constitution or statutes involved
in the case and makes its ruling.
Judge O’Connor, predicting his
ruling would be controversial started his historic opinion with these words:
“The United States healthcare system touches millions of lives in a daily and
deeply personal way. Health-insurance policy is therefore a politically charged
affair – inflaming emotions and testing civility. But, Article III courts, the
Supreme Court has confirmed, are not tasked with, nor are they suited to
policymaking.”
The Court then struck down the
entire Affordable Care Act (“ACA”) on the grounds that its mandate requiring
people to buy health insurance is unconstitutional and the rest of the law could
not stand without it. Judge O’Connor specifically held that the individual
mandate requiring people to have health insurance “can no longer be
sustained as an exercise of Congress’s tax power.”
The importance of Congressional taxing power
Judge O’Connor focused on
Congress’s taxing power as the key issue because it was the issue the United
States Supreme Court relied upon in upholding the constitutionality of the ACA
in 2012. In the 2012 case, the Supreme Court said that Congress legally could
impose a tax penalty on people who do not have health insurance.
In the 2012 case, the Justice
Department under President Obama maintained that the individual mandate went
hand-in-hand with the rules protecting people with pre-existing conditions and
the insurance subsidies the law provides, and the individual mandate could not
be eliminated without scrapping the entire law. This mandate was controversial
and in a close 5 -4 decision, the Supreme Court placed great importance on this
provision. The mandate provided that if an individual or family did not have
health insurance, they would be subjected to a financial penalty of the greater
of $695 per person per adult, or 2.5% of household income.
The Supreme Court, in its 2012 opinion
written by usually conservative justice, Chief Justice John Roberts held that
this “penalty” as referred to in the ACA was not in actuality, a penalty, but
instead was a tax and as such, was a lawful, constitutional application of
Congress’s taxation power. However, and in a significant glimpse of future
battles, Justice Roberts also stated, “The Federal Government does not have the
power to order people to buy health insurance.”
The Tax Reform Act of 2017
Enter President Trump and the
Tax Reform Act of 2017. In this broad and sweeping reformation of the tax code,
Congress eliminated the ACA’s individual mandate’s “penalties” as part of the new
tax law. Because there are no tax penalties associated with the ACA and
because, in part the Obama Administration argued the totality of the ACA must
stand or fall on that basis, the plaintiffs in Texas v. Azar successfully argued that the basis for the Supreme
Court’s decision in 2012 had been eliminated.
With the individual mandate now removed,
the basis relied upon by the Supreme Court to uphold the constitutionality of
the ACA became moot and the ACA was now susceptible to new attacks. These
attacks came to fruition in February 2018 when Texas v. Azar was filed in the traditionally conservative Northern
District of Texas.
With the reasoning of Judge
O’Connor’s decision being explained in “civilian language” (hopefully), we can
now examine the implications and ramifications.
Short-term impact?
The short-term impact of Judge
O’Connor’s ruling is likely to be negligible. First, Judge O’Connor did not
issue a “stay” order or grant injunctive relief to the extent that his ruling
would be “stayed” pending final appeal. But, he also did not enter an
injunction blocking its continued operation. So, technically, while the ACA is
no longer the law of the land, it is likely to stay in force and effect pending
final appeal through the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals and then ultimately, the
Supreme Court.
Further, Trump Administration
officials who oversee the ACA exchanges went on record Friday night that the
federal government will continue to enforce the ACA while the order is being
appealed. Seema Verma, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services tweeted, “The recent federal court decision is still moving through
the courts, and the exchanges are still open for business and we will continue
with open enrollment. There is no impact to current coverage or coverage in a
2019 plan.” Verma also stated earlier this month that CMS had a plan to protect
pre-existing conditions if the law was struck down.
Democratic State Officials from
sixteen (16) states vowed to immediately appeal Judge O’Connor’s decision.
Ordinarily, a case cannot be appealed until a final judgment is rendered in a
case. Some dispute exists as to whether the summary judgment order from Judge
O’Connor resolves all issues and disputes in the case. If so, appeal will be
immediate and the defendants in Texas v.
Azar undoubtedly will petition the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New
Orleans to issue a stay of the ruling pending all appeals.
Therefore, until a final
decision by the Supreme Court, or until a new law is passed by Congress, the
provisions of the ACA are likely to stay in force and effect.
Long Term Possible Impact and Ramifications
Assuming Judge O’Connor’s ruling
is not overturned by the Supreme Court, and the ruling that the ACA is
unconstitutional is allowed to stand, the long-term ramifications are
potentially catastrophic for mental health. The ACA provided coverage
regardless of pre-existing conditions. It provided financial assistance for
private insurance. The ACA established rules which set forth a basic minimum
set of benefits insurance policies must cover. Finally, the ACA provided health
coverage for millions of Americans who previously could not qualify under
privately operated insurance plans. These issues and concerns, and many others
are back on the table and are jeopardized.
The Urban Institute, a
left-leaning organization and think tank estimated that up to 17 million
Americans could lose their health insurance. This includes the millions who
gained coverage through the ACA’s expansion of Medicaid and millions more who
received subsidized private insurance through the ACA’s online marketplaces.
Insurers would no longer have to cover young adults up to age 26 under their
parents’ plans. Insurers could place annual and lifetime limits on coverage.
The cap on out-of-pocket costs would be taken away.
Arguably the most catastrophic
loss would be coverage for people with pre-existing conditions, a condition
which is prevalent with those suffering from eating disorders. More often than
not, an eating disorder is a long term disease requiring years of counseling
and treatment. Recovery is dependent on medical stabilization, addressing any
environmental component, psychological and behavioral treatment, work and
resiliency. Recovery for each person is as individual as the person him or
herself. It is not unusual for treatment to take a number of years. All of this
information is well known to insurance providers. With no legislative oversight
or federal law in place, insurance providers could again rely upon the
“pre-existing condition” exclusion to deny coverage for residential treatment, outpatient
treatment, PHP, IOP … in short, all eating disorder treatment.
Treatment centers and counselors
would necessarily become even more dependent on private pay patients as
insurance coverage would be denied or limited. This could result in the growing
manifestation of the self-fulfilling perception that eating disorders are
merely a “rich little, white girl’s disease.”
Residential Treatment Centers could be impacted the most
Despite the passage of the ACA
and Mental Health Parity Act of 2008, insurance providers have been carefully
scrutinizing residential treatment for eating disorders for medical necessity. Weekly
peer-to-peer reviews are not unusual. Insurance guidelines independent from
those set forth in the DSM-V are adopted in insurance policies. In November
2017, the Milliman Group found that behavioral health care was four to six times
more likely to be provided out-of-network than medical or surgical treatment.
This study also found that insurance providers paid primary medical care professionals
twenty percent (20%) more for the same types of care than they
paid mental health care specialists, including psychiatrists.
After the ACA was
signed into law and became effective in 2010, private equity companies went on
a feeding frenzy of acquisition of residential treatment centers. Between 2011
and 2018, there were at least seventeen (17) different transactions in which
residential treatment centers were bought by private equity firms. Most of the
members of the Residential Eating Disorder Consortium (“Consortium”) are owned
by PE firms. The acquired facilities include the Eating Recovery Center
(twice), Timberline Knolls, Castlewood, Monte Nido, The Emily Program, Remuda
Ranch and many others.
The take-over of
residential care by PE firms was predicated upon both the Mental Health Parity
Act of 2008 and the ACA. PE firms saw an economic opportunity arise from the
absence of federal regulation and oversight of the mental health industry. They
were emboldened by legislation requiring parity between mental health treatment
and medical treatment. The ACA removing pre-existing conditions from the
purview of insurance providers and mandatory insurance for all Americans
resulted in a perfect storm in the mental health industry and the private
equity firms capitalized.
Acquisitions were
structured in a manner attempting to avoid corporate practice of medicine
doctrines and doctors and owners of treatment centers listened to the seductive
“Call of the Sirens,” and sold their practices to PE firms. However, these
transactions are structured to be dependent on aggressive expansion and growth.
This growth is necessary to increase the asset base of the treatment provider
so that future debt obligations can be met. The transactions are also
presumably dependent on the belief and necessity that the ACA would remain in
place.
With the harsh
reality that the ACA has now been ruled unconstitutional, the PE firms and
their treatment centers face a new reality … that is, insurance providers will
increase their scrutiny of claims for treatment, that they will rely upon the
Court’s holding that the ACA is unconstitutional and will phase back in their
denying claims because of pre-existing conditions or and will remove the cap on
the maximum amount of out-of-pocket expenses incurred by insureds. This will
require residential treatment centers to increase their dependence on private
pay patients. These treatment centers may also be forced to need to increase
their costs and expense to patients. They could also be forced to implement
large cost reductions including laying off staff and professional personnel in
order to meet their debt obligations.
In short, financial Armageddon
could be at hand.
Possible Solutions
The Texas v. Azar decision constitutes a
grave crisis impacting all Americans. This crisis could shake the very
foundation of the Republic at a time when both major parties are more intent on
promulgating the power of their own party and tearing apart the other party. Confidence
in our political leaders is low. As for loyal opposition? Respect for those
across the aisle? Working together in the spirit of compromise and
collaboration while maintaining one’s own dignity and self-respect? These are
all attributes which have become foreign to our so-called political leaders on
the Hill and in every state capitol.
And yet, the only
possible long-term solution is to rediscover that collaboration and come up
with a bipartisan plan that results in health care being made available to all
Americans at a cost which is affordable. Unfair insurance practices must be
curtailed. The most vulnerable of our citizens must be provided with health
care which is both substantive and affordable.
The crisis is here.
At the same time, the opportunity for a greater future is similarly here.
Crisis or
Opportunity? Our future depends on the answer to that question.
Interesting. Thank you for your review of the ruling. I suspect there is much more in addition to what we have seen to date. A ruling is far enough out for congress to rectify their mistakes and create the promised changes that include "coverage for pre-existing conditions in an improved version. Be interesting to see if both parties can really create a good plan. I have doubts.
ReplyDelete