Practice Economics

Supreme Court to hear ACA subsidy challenge


 

References

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review a case challenging the legality of federal subsidies provided under the Affordable Care Act.

©trekandshoot/thinkstockphotos.com

The Supreme Court is not likely to hear King v. Burwell before December 17.

The Court issued the order Nov. 7, granting the plaintiffs in King v. Burwell a review of the case. The plaintiffs assert that under the ACA, only state marketplaces can issue subsidies to eligible patients.

In July, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against the plaintiffs, upholding the government’s ability to provide subsidies to eligible patients who purchase insurance through the 36 federally facilitated health care marketplaces.

On the same day, a limited panel of judges on the District of Columbia Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that the federal marketplace subsidies were not legal in a similar challenge, Halbig v. Burwell.

The government appealed, seeking a full review, which was granted in September. All 17 D.C. Circuit judges will review the case on Dec. 17.

The Supreme Court is not likely to hear King v. Burwell before that date.

aault@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @aliciaault

Recommended Reading

DeSalvo to stay involved in health IT work
MDedge Surgery
Survey: Pediatric hospitalists are treating more acutely ill children
MDedge Surgery
ACA implementation hinges on election outcomes
MDedge Surgery
Medicare finalizes $40 per month payments for patient care coordination
MDedge Surgery
Medicare begins bundled hospital outpatient payments in 2015
MDedge Surgery
Malpractice climate: ‘Stable, but still dysfunctional’
MDedge Surgery
Sharing is caring: A primer on EHR interoperability
MDedge Surgery
Inpatient handoff program reduced errors
MDedge Surgery
Midterm ballot initiatives mostly favor physicians
MDedge Surgery
Medicare inches closer to advance care planning payment
MDedge Surgery

Related Articles