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NCCS Joins Cancer Organizations to Express Opposition to the American Health Care Act

May 4, 2017/in Cancer News, Cancer Policy Blog, NCCS News, Policy Comments Access to Care, Affordable Care Act, Health Care Coverage, Pre-Existing Conditions NCCS News, Policy Comments /by actualize
NCCS joined with patient advocacy organizations in the Cancer Leadership Council (CLC) in submitting a letter to Congressional leaders regarding the American Health Care Act (AHCA):

CANCER LEADERSHIP COUNCIL

A PATIENT-CENTERED FORUM OF NATIONAL ADVOCACY ORGANIZATIONS
ADDRESSING PUBLIC POLICY ISSUES IN CANCER

Cancer Organizations Express Opposition to American Health Care Act

Washington, May 4, 2017 – As the House of Representatives prepares to vote on the American Health Care Act, the undersigned organizations in the Cancer Leadership Council issue the following statement:

Our organizations – cancer advocacy organizations, research foundations, and cancer professional societies – stand with the 16 million Americans living with cancer.  The patients we represent are among the many millions of Americans with pre-existing conditions.  Cancer patients have serious health care needs from the time of diagnosis, and those who survive treatment and enter long-term survivorship face a lifetime of monitoring and follow-up care.  Cancer survivors may confront a wide range of late and long-term side effects of cancer treatment, including second cancers.

The American Health Care Act (AHCA), as revised to include the MacArthur amendment and the Upton-Long amendment, remains inadequate to meet the needs of cancer survivors.  Instead of protecting people with pre-existing conditions and safeguarding their ability to purchase adequate and affordable health insurance coverage, the revised AHCA offers an inadequate patchwork of risk pools and financial assistance.  If the AHCA is approved, cancer patients will be left with no assurance that they can obtain adequate health insurance and the care they need.

The Upton-Long amendment is a woefully inadequate effort to provide an assurance of access to care for those with pre-existing conditions, including 16 million Americans with cancer.

There are additional ways in which the AHCA fails Americans with cancer.  By permitting states to waive the guarantee of essential health benefits, the legislation would eliminate the guarantee of access to all elements of cancer care.  The legislation would also deprive cancer patients, who were at risk of medical bankruptcy prior to the Affordable Care Act, of protections against annual and lifetime coverage caps and put them once again at great financial risk.

The legislation poses different risks to different populations of cancer patients.  Young adult survivors of cancer have enjoyed benefits from Medicaid expansion, a benefit threatened by the legislation.  Substantially higher premiums for older Americans, as permitted by the legislation, will have a disproportionate impact on cancer patients because cancer incidence increases with age.
We caution against consideration of this legislation prior to receipt of the Congressional Budget Office analysis of the bill’s fiscal impact and its effects on the number of Americans with health insurance.

Due to the inadequacy of the AHCA in protecting cancer patients’ access to appropriate cancer care, we oppose the legislation.  We urge Members of Congress to stand with cancer patients and others with pre-existing conditions by rejecting this legislation.

CANCER LEADERSHIP COUNCIL

American Society for Radiation Oncology
CancerCare
Cancer Support Community
Children’s Cause for Cancer Advocacy
International Myeloma Foundation
The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society
LIVESTRONG
Lymphoma Research Foundation
National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship
National Patient Advocate Foundation
Ovarian Cancer Research Fund Alliance
Pancreatic Cancer Action Network
Sarcoma Foundation of America
Susan G. Komen

# # #

Download the PDF of the letter here.

Tags: affordable care act, AHCA, Medicaid, policy comments, pre-existing conditions, repeal and replace
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Harmar Brereton, MD

Founder
Northeast Regional Cancer Institute

 

“Perhaps one of the most impactful collaborations in Dr. Brereton’s extraordinary career remains his early work and long friendship with Ellen Stovall. Through him, and in turn through the thousands of lives he has touched, Ellen’s work continues, and her mission lives on.”

—Karen M. Saunders
President, Northeast Regional Cancer Institute