Thursday's health stories

Pennsylvania ACA rates will soar if Trump and Congress make changes
Pennsylvania consumers who buy health insurance through the Affordable Care Act are in line for some price shock next year — if the Trump administration and Congress take actions that weaken the law.
That was the blunt warning issued today by Insurance Commissioner Teresa Miller. Pennsylvania's 2018 individual ACA rate increases, aggregated across the five insurers that will sell plans:
- If the individual mandate is repealed and cost-sharing subsidies are not paid: 36.3%
- If nothing is changed: 8.8%
What this means: Health insurers have made it clear that to keep premiums stable, they need the cost-sharing subsidies and mandate requiring everyone buy insurance. Higher rates would be a direct result of President Trump and Congress undermining the ACA as it is written.
Worth noting: While an 8.8% premium hike for individual plans and 6.6% increase for small-employer plans are more in line with medical cost trends, those rates are still well above inflation and would be felt more by people who don't receive subsidies.

ACA health insurer gets another $160 million
Bright Health, a startup health insurance company that only sells Affordable Care Act plans in the individual market, has raised $160 million in a new round of venture capital funding.
New investors: Greenspring Associates, Greycroft Partners, Redpoint Ventures and Cross Creek Advisors. Bright Health's original investors — New Enterprise Associates, Bessemer Venture Partners and Flare Capital Partners — also joined the funding round.
What to watch for: Bright Health has raised $240 million in venture capital since its founding last year, and the company will expand its ACA footprint and offer Medicare Advantage plans in 2018. Bright Health, led by former UnitedHealthcare CEO Bob Sheehy, just started selling ACA plans this year, and only in Colorado. The plans include only one in-network system of hospitals and doctors, called Centura Health, and future plans in other states will feature a similar narrow network.

ACA changes are aiding online health brokers
Two new federal policies will tinker with Affordable Care Act enrollment and make online insurance brokers a lot happier. During the next open-enrollment period, individual ACA shoppers and those who work in small businesses will be able to sign up for health coverage directly from web brokers like eHealth instead of getting redirected to HealthCare.gov.
Why it matters: The changes make it clear that if the Trump administration has to carry out the law, it will put more control into the hands of the private sector. More people could ultimately sign up for ACA plans if they don't have to bounce around different websites, but there are concerns that web brokers might direct people toward health plans that aren't the best fit.

Ohio sues five opioid manufacturers
Ohio's attorney general filed suit against five manufacturers of opioids, claiming they violated state laws and committed Medicaid fraud in their marketing of medications, per CNBC.
What Ohio wants: An injunction to prevent further "glossy" marketing of opioids, damages repaid for the state's continued response to the crisis, and some sort of reparations paid to opioid consumers.
By the numbers: Almost 20% of Ohio's population was prescribed an opioid at some point last year.
Why it matters: Ohio is the second state (after Mississippi) to sue opioid makers, and it increases the odds that drug manufacturers could face more lawsuits over their role in the opioid crisis.



