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Trump administration, in reversal, will resume risk payments to health insurers

The administration suspended the program less than three weeks ago, saying it was compelled to do so by a federal court decision in New Mexico.

But the administration said Tuesday that it would restore the program because otherwise health plans could become insolvent or withdraw from the market, causing chaos for consumers.

In adopting a new rule, the administration essentially accepted the arguments of critics, including consumer groups, health insurance companies and Democrats in Congress, who said that suspending the payments would cause turmoil in insurance markets.

The program, known as risk adjustment, makes payments to insurers that enroll higher-risk people, such as those with chronic conditions. The money comes from insurers that enroll healthier people. The purpose of the cash transfers is to reduce incentives for insurers to avoid sicker patients.

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Seema Verma, the administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, issued the new rule on Tuesday, which she said would “restore operation of the risk adjustment program and mitigate some of the uncertainty caused by the New Mexico litigation.”

Health plans that had “expressed concerns about having to withdraw from markets or becoming insolvent should be assured by our actions today,” Verma said. “Alleviating concerns in the market helps to protect consumer choices.”

Payments will resume around Oct. 22, the Department of Health and Human Services said in the new rule.

“Taking immediate action to allow for the continued operation of the risk adjustment program is imperative to maintain stability and predictability in the individual and small group health insurance markets,” the department said.

If payments are not made, it said, “there is a serious risk” that insurers will substantially increase premiums in 2019 to make up for the loss. The higher premiums could make coverage unaffordable for some consumers, especially those who do not qualify for subsidies, it said.

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Insurers are now deciding whether to participate in the marketplace in 2019 and setting the rates and benefits of the plans they intend to offer next year.

Republicans in Congress, afraid of being blamed in the midterm elections this year for even higher premiums, had urged the Trump administration to resume the payments to insurers.

In February, Judge James O. Browning of the U.S. District Court in Albuquerque voided the formula used by the federal government to calculate risk adjustment payments under the Affordable Care Act. He said the formula was flawed because federal officials “assumed erroneously” that collections and payments had to offset each other.

The Trump administration said Tuesday that it would use the exact same formula for the next round of risk adjustment payments. But it provided a fuller explanation of its method of calculating the payments, as Browning had requested.

The administration did not change the formula to address the substantive concerns of the judge or the insurance company that filed the lawsuit, New Mexico Health Connections. So it is unclear whether they will be satisfied with the administration’s move.

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Dr. Martin E. Hickey, the founder of New Mexico Health Connections, said he was “not surprised” by the administration’s action, but he declined to say how the company might respond. The case is still pending before Browning.

President Donald Trump has taken many steps to undermine the Affordable Care Act. The record of the Department of Health and Human Services is mixed. Officials like Verma have denounced the law, but said they are obliged to carry it out while it remains on the books.

Administration officials have said the decision to suspend the payments to insurers was driven by officials at the White House and the Justice Department, not by Verma or Alex M. Azar II, the secretary of Health and Human Services.

Hickey said the risk adjustment formula was biased in favor of large, established insurers and discriminated against smaller new insurers like his company.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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Robert Pear © 2018 The New York Times

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