Supreme Court case seeks to make it harder to get screened for cancer and other tests

Without the PSTF, insurers will be able to deny coverage for these treatments. And employers will potentially be able to offer health plans not covering them.

Furthermore, who the hell is Braidwood. This appears to be a shell company with an address and nothing else.

Becerra v. Braidwood Management threatens to make your health insurance worse.

A new Supreme Court case seeks to make it harder to get screened for cancer

And yet, despite the fact that this case has largely been heard by very sympathetic judges, those judges have only accepted some of the Braidwood Management plaintiffs’ arguments.

If the PSTF falls, insurers will be able to deny coverage for these treatments. And employers will potentially be able to offer health plans that don’t cover them.

Accordingly, principal officers (the ones who must be confirmed by the Senate) are generally understood to be department leaders and other very high-ranking officials who answer directly to the president. Inferior officers, by contrast, are officers of the United States who are responsible to a principal officer.

Nevertheless, the Fifth Circuit concluded that members of the PSTF are not ultimately responsible to the secretary (and thus they must be Senate-confirmed), in large part because the Fifth Circuit believed that no statute actually gives the secretary the direct authority to override one of the PSTF’s decisions. Instead, if the secretary disagreed with a decision by the PSTF, the secretary would have to either threaten to fire PSTF members unless they reverse course, or actually fire them and replace them with people who will implement the secretary’s preferred policy.

This isn’t an especially persuasive argument — most people would rightfully think of someone as their boss if that individual had the power to hire and fire them. And it’s not even clear that the secretary doesn’t have the lawful authority to override the PSTF without firing any of its members.

The Justice Department, in other words, has strong legal arguments against the two lower courts’ positions in this case. Whether that will be enough to persuade a GOP-controlled Court, however, remains to be seen.