Republicans may gut an overlooked provision of Obamacare — and disrupt health insurance
Paul Ryan
Paul Ryan

(House Speaker Paul Ryan.AP)

Despite prior insistence that negotiations over the healthcare bill were over, Politico reported Wednesday that "White House officials" were looking to make "tweaks" to the American Health Care Act to win the votes of holdout conservative members of Congress.

One change the White House is reportedly looking at could create a lot of unintended consequences.

Conservatives in the House are upset that the AHCA doesn't do enough to remove insurance regulations imposed by Obamacare — and therefore doesn't do enough to lower premiums. So they want to eliminate the "essential health benefits" rules that say what health-insurance plans have to cover, in hopes this will make insurance more customized and less expensive.

Repeal of the EHB rules was included a leaked "discussion draft" for the healthcare bill in February. Its exclusion from the final bill was something of a surprise.

That said, there are some plausible reasons Republicans backed off the effort to repeal EHBs — and why reinserting the repeal at the behest of conservatives could create new problems for the already-troubled bill.

Many EHBs are pretty essential

The Affordable Care Act, the healthcare law better known as Obamacare, names 10 EHBs that all health plans must cover, and they're not exactly bells and whistles. The first benefit deemed essential is outpatient care — that is, doctor's visits. The second is visits to the emergency room. The third is hospitalization.

If the EHB rules were repealed, insurers could literally sell plans that do not pay for you to go to the doctor, or that don't pay for prescription drugs, or that don't cover pregnancy-related care.

EHB repeal would also allow insurers to sell plans that do not cover substance-abuse treatment, a key issue for members of Congress from states hit by the opioid epidemic.

Of course, repealing the EHB rules would not prohibit insurers from offering these various benefits. You could look for an insurer that offers plans with benefits you really care about. But without the EHB rules, you might find such plans are newly unaffordable.

Without the EHB rules, insurers could, for example, sell some plans that cover maternity care and others that do not. Men would not buy maternity coverage, and many women would wait to buy maternity coverage until they thought they were likely to get pregnant.

The problem is, if you choose to pay for something, insurers will assume you are highly likely to use it and price accordingly.

In the case of maternity care, the consulting firm Milliman estimates that premiums for women under 40 who want coverage would be 25% to 70% higher than the premiums for no-maternity plans, if plans with maternity coverage were available at all in a given state.