ACA Replacement?
While both the Trump administration and Congress insist that they will repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, neither has yet provided information about what that replacement might look like.
But one place worth looking for a possible glimpse into the future is the Affordable Care Act replacement plan proposed by Rep. Tom Price (R-GA), President Trump’s nominee to serve as Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services.
In 2015, Rep. Price proposed the Empowering Patients First Act as a vehicle for replacing the Affordable Care Act. While the bill was not adopted by Congress at the time, Dr. Price should soon be in a position to exert meaningful influence over the manner in which the Trump administration and Congress go about replacing the Affordable Care Act.
The Kaiser Family Foundation has prepared a summary of Dr. Price’s 2015 proposal. Go here to see that summary and to find a link to the legislation itself.


That includes 680,000 Pennsylvanians who enrolled in the state’s Medicaid program after the reform law allowed for that program’s expansion, more than 400,000 people who signed up for insurance on the federal health insurance exchange, the state’s taxpayers who might be left with the bill for some or all of these costs if the reform law’s financial support were to disappear in the near future, and others.
A new paper from the Kaiser Family Foundation looks at some of the major questions that will arise in the coming months, including:
The uninsured rate in the U.S., 20 percent before the Affordable Care Act took effect, is now 13 percent.
This conclusion is drawn in a new study from the Georgetown University Health Policy Institute based on interviews with leaders of eleven hospital systems and federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) in seven states: four that expanded their Medicaid programs and three that did not.