President Donald Trumpās early actions on health care signal his likely intention to wipe away some Biden-era programs to lower drug costs and expand coverage under public insurance programs.
The orders he issued soon after reentering the White House have policymakers, health care executives, and patient advocates trying to read the tea leaves to determine whatās to come. The directives, while less expansive than orders he issued at the beginning of his first term, provide a possible road map that health researchers say could increase the number of uninsured Americans and weaken safety-net protections for low-income people.
However, Trumpās initial orders will have little immediate impact. His administration will have to take further regulatory steps to fully reverse Bidenās policies, and the actions left unclear the direction the new president aims to steer the U.S. health care system.
āEveryone is looking for signals on what Trump might do on a host of health issues. On the early EOs, Trump doesnāt show his cards,ā said Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at KFF, the health policy research, polling, and news organization that includes Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņīl Health News.
A flurry of executive orders and other actions Trump issued on his first day back in office included rescinding directives by his predecessor, former President Joe Biden, that had promoted and under the Affordable Care Act .
Executive orders āas a general matter are nothing more than gussied up internal memoranda saying, āHey, agency, could you do something?āā said , a law professor at the University of Michigan. āThere may be reason to be concerned, but itās down the line.ā
Thatās because making changes to established law like the ACA or programs like Medicaid generally requires new rulemaking or congressional action, either of which could take months. Trump has yet to win Senate confirmation for any of his picks to lead federal health agencies, including Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the anti-vaccine activist and former Democratic presidential candidate he has nominated the lead the Department of Health and Human Services. On Monday, , a physician who directs the , as acting secretary for the department.
āWeāre getting rid of all of the cancer ā I call it cancer ā the cancer caused by the Biden administration,ā Trump told reporters as he signed some of the executive orders in the Oval Office on Jan. 20. His order rescinding more than 70 Biden directives, including some of the former presidentās health policies, said that āthe previous administration has embedded deeply unpopular, inflationary, illegal, and radical practices within every office of the Federal Government.ā
During Bidenās term, his administration did implement changes consistent with his health orders, including lengthening the enrollment period for the ACA, increasing funding for groups that help people enroll, and supporting the Inflation Reduction Act, which boosted subsidies to help people buy coverage. After falling during the Trump administration, enrollment in ACA plans soared under Biden, hitting record highs each year. are enrolled in ACA plans for 2025.
The drug order Trump rescinded called on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to consider tests to lower drug costs. The agency came up with some ideas, such as setting a flat $2 copay for some generic drugs in Medicare, the health program for people 65 and older, and having states try to get better prices by banding together to buy certain expensive cell and gene therapies.
That Trump included the Biden drug order among his revocations may indicate he expects to do this term or even roll back drug price negotiation in Medicare. Or it may have been slipped in as simply one more Biden order to erase.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
Bidenās experiments in lowering drug prices didnāt said Joseph Antos of the American Enterprise Institute, a right-leaning research group. Antos said heās a bit puzzled by Trumpās executive order ending the pilot programs, given that of tying drug costs in the U.S. to lower prices paid by other nations.
āAs you know, Trump is a big fan of that,ā Antos said. āLowering drug prices is an easy thing for people to identify with.ā
In other moves, Trump also rescinded Biden orders on racial and gender equity and issued an order asserting that there are only two sexes, male and female. HHS under the Biden administration supported gender-affirming health care for transgender people and provided guidance on civil rights protections for transgender youths. Trumpās missive on gender has intensified concerns within the LGBTQ+ community that he will seek to restrict such care.
āThe administration has forecast that it will fail to protect and will seek to discriminate against transgender people and anyone else it considers an āother,āā said Omar Gonzalez-Pagan, senior counsel and health care strategist at Lambda Legal, a civil rights advocacy group. āWe stand ready to respond to the administrationās discriminatory acts, as we have previously done to much success, and to defend the ability of transgender people to access the care that they need, including through Medicaid and Medicare.ā
Trump also halted new regulations that were under development until they are reviewed by the new administration. He could abandon some proposals that were yet to be finalized by the Biden administration, including expanded coverage of anti-obesity medications through Medicare and Medicaid and a rule that would limit nicotine levels in tobacco products, Katie Keith, a Georgetown University professor who was deputy director of the White House Gender Policy Council under Biden, for Health Affairs Forefront.
āInterestingly, he did not disturb President Bidenās three executive orders and a presidential memorandum on reproductive health care,ā she wrote.
However, Trump instructed top brass in his administration to look for additional orders or memorandums to rescind. (He revoked that created the Gender Policy Council.)
Democrats criticized Trumpās health actions. A spokesman for the Democratic National Committee, Alex Floyd, said in a statement that āTrump is again proving that he lied to the American people and doesnāt care about lowering costs ā only whatās best for himself and his ultra-rich friends.ā
Trumpās decision to end a Biden-era executive order aimed at improving the ACA and Medicaid probably portends coming cuts and changes to both programs, some policy experts say. His administration previously opened the door to work requirements in Medicaid ā the federal-state program for low-income adults, children, and people with disabilities ā and previously issued guidance enabling states to cap federal Medicaid funding. Medicaid and the related Childrenās Health Insurance Program cover
āMedicaid will be a focus because itās become so sprawling,ā said Chris Pope, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative policy group. āItās grown after the pandemic. Provisions have expanded, such as using social determinants of health.ā
The administration may reevaluate steps taken by the Biden administration to allow Medicaid to pay for everyday expenses some states have argued affect its beneficiariesā health, including air conditioners, meals, and housing.
One of Trumpās directives orders agencies to deliver emergency price relief and āeliminate unnecessary administrative expenses and rent-seeking practices that increase healthcare costs.ā (Rent-seeking is an economic concept describing efforts to exploit the political system for financial gain without creating other benefits for society.)
āIt is not clear what this refers to, and it will be interesting to see how agencies respond,ā Keith wrote in her Health Affairs article.
Policy experts like Edwin Park at Georgetown University have also noted that, separately, Republicans that could lead to large cuts in Medicaid funding, in part to pay for tax cuts.
Sarah Lueck, vice president for health policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning research group, also pointed to Congress: āOn one hand, what we see coming from the executive orders by Trump is important because it shows us the direction they are going with policy changes. But the other track is that on the Hill, there are active conversations about what goes into budget legislation. They are considering some pretty huge cuts to Medicaid.ā
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