168K in state could lose health insurance
More than 168,000
The study from CT DataHaven details the significant consequences for health-care coverage in
Signed into law
Citing an analysis by
Individual municipalities are projected to see hundreds, if not thousands, of residents losing coverage.
DataHaven relied on these numbers, along with those from the
"Millions of Americans, including thousands of
The law is also projected to have a severe impact on
For example, in state
Lower-income residents are expected to be affected the most, with about 102,000
The law is also expected to disproportionately impact minority populations.
While the largest number of projected losses is that of the state's white population, the 71,000 people projected to lose health-care coverage represents only 3% of the population. By comparison, 9% of the Latino population and 8% of the Black population are expected to lose coverage.
Single-parent families or other nonmarried households are also projected to be disproportionately affected.
A driving force behind the projected coverage losses is the law's work requirement provisions that make it necessary for certain benchmarks to be met in order to stay on Medicaid.
Beginning
The law also makes changes to eligibility for immigrants, lowers the amount that states such as
The policy changes could result in higher health care costs and insurance premiums, and/or reduced services for all residents, according to the report.
"The legislation is projected to dramatically increase the cost of health insurance enrollment through Access Health CT," according to CT DataHaven.


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