Table 3.
Reform strategy | Advantages | Disadvantages | Impact on marginalized groups | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
Institute state-specific mandates | Prevent adverse selection (withdrawal of healthy people from the insurance Marketplace) | Can drive up health care costs; Loss of individual autonomy | Reduce overall cost of insurance for low-income individuals | Levitis 2018 [22]; eHealth 2019 [25]; Gasteier 2018 [99] |
Increase opportunity to purchase and hold short-term insurance | Increased availability and affordability of insurance; Greater freedom of choice | Could divert healthy individuals away from the insurance Marketplace; Coverage of ten essential benefit categories no longer guaranteed |
Costs of BRCA1/2 genetic testing, colonoscopy and polyp removal increased; Denial of insurance to individuals with preexisting conditions | Palanker et al. 2017 [100] |
Engage more states in Medicaid expansion | Decreased rate of uninsured; Earlier cancer detection | Greater federal and state healthcare costs; Reduced quality of care, e.g., in appointment availability and wait time |
Reduced number of low-income and racial-ethnic minority uninsured | Artiga et al. 2019 [46] |
Enact Medicare for All | Decreased rate of uninsured, aided by unrestricted or lowered age of enrollment | Sizable increase in federal budget; Increased insurance premiums or payroll taxes depending on strategy used | BRCA1/2 counseling and genetic testing and colonoscopy covered; increased availability to low income and racial-ethnic minority groups | Oberlander 2019 [56]; Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget 2019 [60] |
Enact Medicare for All variations (e.g., a public option) | Decreased rate of uninsured; Allowing a public option would be nondisruptive to current insurance Marketplace | Disparity between public and private insurance payment rates; Possible employer “dumping” of sickest into public plans | Supports individuals at high-risk, e.g., those with a family history of breast or colorectal cancer; increased availability to low-income and racial-ethnic minority groups | Hellmann 2019 [61]; Glied 2019 [62] |
Permit state-specific benchmarking of benefits plans | States can select benefit plans according to their particular population’s needs | Conservative states could select least generous benefits | Increased flexibility could work either way – increase benefits (e.g., Lynch syndrome genetic testing) or reduce benefits (e.g., pre-cancer screening) for those in need | Gibson et al. 2018 [101] |
Federal agency revised guidance on or legislative amendment of ACA | Provide changes to ACA benefits that apply nationally | Incremental increases to insurance costs; Value of changes depends on rigor of evidence | Introduce changes that increase covered services (e.g., Lynch syndrome testing, BRCA genetic testing) for groups in need | CMS 2018 [102]; Mach and Kinzer 2018 [103] |