Despite Administration “Win,” Some Sick Kids Will Remain Uninsured

Policy can never be separated from politics and this morning we got another reminder.

After the New York Times reported yesterday that insurers might try to avoid issuing policies for kids with pre-existing conditions – despite that the reform law meant to prohibit this – the AP reports this today:

After nearly a year battling President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats over the health care overhaul, the insurance industry says it won’t block the administration’s efforts to fix a potentially embarrassing glitch in the new law.

In a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, the industry’s top lobbyist said Monday insurers will accept new regulations to dispel uncertainty over a much-publicized guarantee that children with medical problems can get coverage starting this year.

Quick resolution of the doubts was a win for Obama — and a sign that the industry has no stomach for another war of words with a president who deftly used double-digit rate hikes by the companies to revive his sweeping health care legislation from near collapse in Congress.

A “win” for Obama? Well yes. The Administration is enjoying a day of headlines trumpeting its victory over insurance companies. The headline in Politico’s daily health care e-mail blast was “SEBELIUS LAYS DOWN THE LAW.” Pretty tough stuff. Plus, the clarification means Democrats will still be able to tout this immediate benefit of health reform during this year’s congressional campaigns. But is it a win for sick kids who can’t get insurance coverage? Maybe, in some cases.

The Public Option: Five Reasons Harry Reid Went For It

Less than two weeks ago, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s aides and colleagues were saying they were all but certain he would bring health care legislation to the Senate floor without a public option. Yesterday, as everyone who follows this issue now knows, he did the opposite. It’s a big gamble. While Reid will likely [...]