We are five days away from a very consequential U.S. election, and living in Pennsylvania, I'm reminded of that every time I pass a billboard on the highway, turn on the television, or look at my cell phone. (Dear campaigns: I've decided whom I will be voting for. Please stop texting me. Please.) Few reporters or bloggers have been paying much attention to the most serious threat to the Affordable Care Act's no-cost preventive services mandate since it became law in 2010. You can take a deep dive into this drawn-out and somewhat convoluted legal odyssey by reading two recent editorials in JAMA, the first one co-authored by JAMA editor-in-chief and former U.S. Preventive Services Task Force Chair Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, PhD, MD, and the second one by a pair of Harvard Law School professors. In a related Health Affairs Forefront commentary, Richard Hughes explored the "uncertain future" of uniform preventive care recommendations, from legal obstacles to the real possibility that a second-term Trump administration appoints the outspoken anti-vaxxer Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. as Secretary of Health and Human Services.
The spectrum of primary preventive care endorsed by the USPSTF is broad, and includes services such as fluoride varnish application to prevent cavities in children age 1 to 5 years. Wait, don't dentists do that? Yes, but many families with health insurance don't have dental coverage and can't afford the out-of-pocket cost of this periodic service. A recent study showed that the mandate's implementation in January 2015 was associated with a higher likelihood of a privately insured young child in Massachusetts receiving fluoride varnish during a medical visit.
For the sake of argument, let's assume that the courts invalidate the requirement for insurers to cover preventive services without cost-sharing. Fewer people will receive timely screening for cancer. Although it's unclear how many lives will be lost prematurely (the most conservative estimate, none, strikes me as being overly pessimistic), cancer screening costs at least $43 billion annually, and some of that money would presumably become available to spend on other things that improve health.
How about tuition-free medical school for all? My alma mater, NYU, started the trend of multimillion-dollar philanthropy for this purpose, and though $43 billion probably isn't enough of an endowment for all 200 M.D. and D.O. degree granting schools to be tuition-free in perpetuity, it's a pretty sizeable down payment. The problem is, as I predicted in 2019 and reiterated in a recent article in The Atlantic, tuition-free schools (which now include NYU's Long Island School of Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine, and Johns Hopkins University) aren't producing more primary care-oriented graduates and "could perversely be making it harder for low-income and underrepresented minority students to go to medical school":
In the year after NYU went tuition-free, the number of applicants shot up by 47 percent. Because the number of slots did not increase proportionally, this made getting admitted dramatically more difficult. High-income applicants have extensive advantages at all levels of higher-education admissions, so making a school more selective virtually guarantees that its student body will become more wealthy, not less, which is exactly what happened at NYU.