Health Care

A sharp rise in overdose deaths, including in Colorado, led to highest premature death rate in years

DENVER – Premature deaths in the U.S. have risen steadily over the past couple of years, and drug overdoses surpassed injuries as the main reason for the early deaths for the first time since tracking began.

The 2017 County Health Rankings report, compiled by the University of Wisconsin and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, found that premature death rates (people dying before age 75) rose by a full 1 percent – amounting to 39,700 people who died early compared to 2014. Continue reading

Projection: 600K Coloradans will lose Medicaid, state will lose $14B by 2030 under AHCA

DENVER – Colorado would lose $340 million in federal funding in 2020 when Medicaid provisions under Obamacare run out under the GOP-sponsored American Health Care Act, and the state stands to lose $14 billion in federal funds by 2030, according to analysis on the proposal released Thursday by the Colorado Health Institute.

The report says the state will have to choose between cutting up to 600,000 Coloradans from Medicaid by 2030 or making cuts to the state budget the nonpartisan CHI says would be “historic.” Continue reading

AG Sessions: Idea medical pot can remedy opioid addiction is ‘stupid’ and ‘hyped’

DENVER – U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Wednesday said the idea that medical marijuana could be used as a remedy to heroin and opioid addiction is “stupid” in his latest statements questioning the legitimacy of medical and recreational marijuana programs in states like Colorado.

Speaking to law enforcement agencies in Virginia, Sessions said he and his office “may rethink” some of the policies regarding federal enforcement of marijuana laws in states that have legalized recreational and medical marijuana, according to The Washington Post.

“Medical marijuana has been hyped, maybe too much,” Sessions said.

The Post reports that Sessions also said after his speech that he was “dubious” of medical marijuana and research that points to it being an alternative painkiller and treatment option for opioid addicts.

“I’ve heard people say we could solve our heroin problem with marijuana. How stupid is that? Give me a break,” he said during his speech, which again lumped together drug use and an uptick last year in violent crime.

Eight states and the District of Columbia have legalized recreational marijuana sales, but medical marijuana is legal in 28 states and D.C.

In recent weeks, Sessions has said he’s “not a fan” of marijuana use but has said that states “can pass the laws they choose,” though he maintained that federal law trumps state law when it comes to marijuana enforcement.

Colorado Attorney General Cynthia Coffman responded to Sessions’ prior comments by inviting him to Colorado to see its program firsthand.

“I’d like to be able to share what we have learned and where we have put in place a good framework for marijuana regulations,” she said. “Now for the federal government to say we’re doing things wrong, or we’re going to come in and take this regulation away from you without having first looked to see what we’re doing is precipitous.”

During Wednesday’s speech, Sessions also said that the country has “too much tolerance for drug use,” and went back to citing Nancy Reagan’s “Just Say No” campaign as a means for combating drug use, according to The Post.

Colorado’s medical and recreational businesses sold more than $1 billion worth of pot last year. Industry leaders have said the dismantling of the state’s industry could cause a recession.

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24 million Americans would lose insurance under GOP proposal to replace Obamacare by 2026, CBO says

DENVER – Twenty-four million people who would be insured under Obamacare would not have insurance under the new health care bill supported by President Trump and House Republicans by 2026, according to an analysis by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office released Monday.

The CBO report, also compiled with the Joint Committee on Taxation, has been highly-anticipated since House Republicans first introduced the American Health Care Act just more than a week ago, as it anticipates the expected impacts on the federal budget and American people. The JCT released some initial estimates last week. Continue reading

Report estimates new health care bill will cause 15 million to lose coverage, possibly millions more

DENVER – A report out Friday from the Brookings Institution says it is likely the Congressional Budget Office will estimate more than 15 million people would lose health care coverage under the new House GOP bill.

The CBO is expected to release its projections Monday on how many people might lose health insurance, and how much premiums and out-of-pocket costs might amount to under the American Health Care Act – the bill House Republicans have put forth to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

The budget office provides nonpartisan analysis of the effects legislation and other orders might have on the national budget and on Americans. It has no political affiliation or motivations.

The projections released Friday by Brookings Institution are based off prior CBO analysis and was compiled as part of the Leonard D. Schaeffer Initiative in Health Policy.

The analysis finds that it’s likely CBO will determine at least 15 million people will lose coverage by 2026.

“Estimates could be higher, but it’s is [sic] unlikely they will be significantly lower,” the report says.

It says that the ACHA’s repeal of the individual mandate contained in the ACA, better known as Obamacare, would leave 15 million uninsured. Further, the report says, the parts of the new bill affecting Medicaid would lead to “significant coverage losses, likely on the order of several million.”

The main basis for the report’s judgments is a recently-released CBO report that estimated that repealing the individual mandate of the ACA would cause individual premiums to increase by 20 percent and lead to 6 million people losing insurance by 2026.

Another CBO report determined that another 2 million would lose employer coverage and that another 7 million would lose Medicaid coverage.

Many, including Colorado Republican Sen. Cory Gardner, have voiced concerns about the provision that would end Medicaid expansion allowed under the ACA in 2020, and would further penalize people who had lapses in coverage. Others still have voiced concerns over a move to use tax credits that analysts have said benefit the wealthy more than low-income people and are 36 percent lower than the tax credits available under the ACA.

The CBO report is expected to have huge ramifications on the bill’s fate in Congress. It has already received significant pushback from both Democrats and conservatives, but passed through two House committees without significant changes.

On Friday, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price said that he didn’t believe that “individuals will lose coverage at all.”

But House Speaker Paul Ryan, who has led the effort to push the new bill quickly through Congress said, “We always know you’re never going to win a beauty contest when it’s free market versus government mandate,” according to a Vox report.

Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Colo., has joined a growing list of members of Congress to say they would not vote on the new bill until they received estimates from the CBO.

“We’re not about to let the tyranny of the majority in Congress leave people vulnerable just because House GOP wants to jam this bill through,” she tweeted.

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Colorado may owe feds millions after Medicaid overpayment due to ‘human programming error’

DENVER – Colorado is trying to figure out how to set aside $25 million in case it needs to pay the federal government back after a computer programming error led to the state being overpaid by millions of dollars in Medicaid funds.

On Feb. 15, Office of State Planning and Budgeting Director Henry Sobanet sent a letter to Sen. Kent Lambert, the chair of the Joint Budget Committee, informing him of the overpayment. Continue reading

Tipton, Lamborn and Gardner all hosting telephone town halls Wednesday evening

DENVER – Three of Colorado’s Republican members of Congress are holding telephone town hall meetings Wednesday evening to talk with constituents.

Sen. Cory Gardner is holding his fourth in a series of town halls Wednesday evening at 7:10 p.m. Mountain Time. He is holding several throughout the year at different times of the day in order to connect with different groups of people, he says.

You can sign up to participate in the Gardner town hall by clicking here. You must sign up at least an hour before the start time to be able to pose a question, but anyone can listen in.

In the March 1 town hall, Gardner talked about marijuana, health care, and Russia, among other subjects.

Rep. Doug Lamborn will also host one Wednesday. His begins at 6:30 p.m. Mountain Time. Sign up for the town hall by clicking here.

And Rep. Scott Tipton will hold a town hall starting at 5:30 p.m. Mountain Time Wednesday. The town hall was originally slated for Tuesday, but was pushed back to Wednesday because of flight delays, Tipton said.

You can sign up for Tipton’s town hall here.

Many of Colorado’s congressional delegation is holding town hall meetings over at least the next month in order to hear from constituents on topics concerning them.

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How does the House GOP health care bill differ from Obamacare?

DENVER – Top Republicans in Washington began their push to promote the new health care bill drafted by the House GOP Tuesday as critics from both sides of the aisle surfaced, and as many wondered exactly what the draft bill would mean for them.

House Republicans and President Trump unveiled the American Health Care Act late Monday. Trump and other Republicans had campaigned on the premise they would repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, but the new bill has drawn plenty of criticism already. Continue reading

Cory Gardner says he doesn’t support GOP’s Obamacare replacement bill without Medicaid protections

DENVER – Colorado Republican Senator Cory Gardner is threatening not to vote for the bill Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives have drafted to replace the Affordable Care Act if it isn’t changed ahead of a vote.

Gardner and three other Republican senators – Rob Portman of Ohio, Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska – sent a letter Monday to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell saying the House draft replacement bill doesn’t adequately cover Medicaid recipients in states that have voted to expand Medicaid under the ACA, also known as Obamacare.

The draft bill was released by House Republicans Monday afternoon. Read it by clicking here.

The letter says the draft “does not meet the test of stability” for people enrolled in Medicaid.

“We will not support a plan that does not include stability for Medicaid expansion populations or flexibility for states.”

The states the four senators represent all voted to expand Medicaid under Obamacare.

“Reform should not come at the cost of disruption in access to health care for our country’s most vulnerable and sickest individuals,” the letter reads. “Any changes made to how Medicaid is financed through the state and federal governments should be coupled with significant new flexibility so they can efficiently and effectively manage their Medicaid programs to best meet their own needs.”

Though the letter says the senators believe the Affordable Care Act should still be repealed and replaced, it also says that a gradual rollout of the new program would be necessary “to ensure states have the time to successfully implement” the new changes.

Medicaid serves mostly low-income and disabled individuals, and the letter sent by Gardner says that he and the other senators fear a “poorly implemented or poorly timed” change in its funding structure would result in a “reduction in access to life-saving health care services.”

The letter also points out that Health and Human Services has noted that one-third of Medicaid recipients covered under its expansion has a mental health or substance abuse disorder.

One in five Coloradans are covered through Health First Colorado, the state’s Medicaid program.

House Republicans are expected to introduce the replacement bill in committee on Wednesday after meeting with the White House Friday and working through the weekend to put finishing touches on the bill.

Gardner had been among several Republicans under fire from constituents worried about losing their health care if the ACA is replaced. But he has also discussed a bill that would defund Planned Parenthood, saying he is pro-life, which has angered some saying he’s on the fence on health care issues.

But during his time in Congress, Gardner voted numerous times in the past to repeal Obamacare or gut the program, according to a health care vote tracking organization.

In the 2014 Senate campaign, Gardner told a woman who asked him about Medicaid expansion that he “didn’t know how” Colorado would pay for it.

At least four Senate Republicans would have to vote against the bill to stall it. Aside from the four who listed concerns about Medicaid, some other Republicans have voiced worry over the use of tax credits to offset individual costs. Republicans hold 52 seats in the 115th Congress, compared to 46 Democrats and two independents who usually vote with Democrats.

The full letter the four senators sent to McConnell can be read below:

Dear Majority Leader McConnell,

As you know, Medicaid covers more than 72 million Americans and is the core of the health care safety net for individuals across the country. The Affordable Care Act destabilized the private insurance market and created an unsustainable path for both the states and the federal government in Medicaid. While we support efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act and make structural reforms to the Medicaid program, we are concerned that the February 10th draft proposal from the House of Representatives does not provide stability and certainty for individuals and families in Medicaid expansion programs or the necessary flexibility for states.

We are concerned that any poorly implemented or poorly timed change in the current funding structure in Medicaid could result in a reduction in access to life-saving health care services. The Medicaid population includes a wide range of beneficiaries, many of which cycle on and off Medicaid due to frequent changes in income, family situations, and living environments.  The Department of Health and Human Services reports that nearly one-third of individuals covered under the Medicaid expansion have a mental health or substance use disorder. As the largest payer of mental health and substance use services in the United States, it is critical that any health care replacement provide states with a stable transition period and the opportunity to gradually phase-in their populations to any new Medicaid financing structure.

We believe Medicaid needs to be reformed, but reform should not come at the cost of disruption in access to health care for our country’s most vulnerable and sickest individuals. Any changes made to how Medicaid is financed through the state and federal governments should be coupled with significant new flexibility so they can efficiently and effectively manage their Medicaid programs to best meet their own needs. We also believe a gradual transition is needed to ensure states have the time to successfully implement these new changes. The Affordable Care Act is not working for states or the federal government and must be repealed and replaced with a plan that reforms Medicaid and protects individuals and their families over the long term. However, the February 10th draft proposal from the House does not meet the test of stability for individuals currently enrolled in the program and we will not support a plan that does not include stability for Medicaid expansion populations or flexibility for states.

Sincerely,

[Senators]

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Colorado Sen. Cory Gardner talks marijuana, Russian meddling, health care in telephone town hall

DENVER – Colorado Senator Cory Gardner answered questions from 12 Coloradans ranging from marijuana to health care and the administration’s executive orders on immigration in a 45-minute telephone town hall Wednesday morning.

The telephone town hall was an olive branch to frothing constituents who have demanded in recent weeks that the Republican senator hold in-person town hall meetings with his constituents, despite most of his fellow Colorado Congressmen also refraining from doing so. Continue reading