Congressional delegation warned against lapse in medical insurance subsidy
The issue that has
"Quite honestly, it's one of the only times that I've seen everyone in the industry in agreement on something,"
That unity prompted McKone and others involved in health care to urge
The matter has locked up the current Republican-led Congress, with
Without the CR, the federal government will begin shutting down on
The ACA credits, which go mainly to working Americans without employer-based insurance, expire at the end of the year, and the anticipation of their ending is already being baked into premiums for next year.
"Time is of the essence," said
About 100,000 Oklahomans believed to be claiming the tax credits now will see their net out-of-pocket costs rise 75% to 100%, experts say, but just about all health insurance rates and medical providers will be affected.
That's because many people are expected to drop coverage because of the higher rates. The loss of relatively healthy individuals raises the per-person cost for the insurer of those still covered, while more uninsured unhealthy people means more uncompensated care and more cost-shifting to everyone else.
Seven insurers currently offer health plans through the ACA's individual marketplace in
Of those, about one-third are thought to have qualified for tax credits through the enhanced eligibility provisions.
Originally, ACA marketplace subsidies, in the form of refundable tax credits, were limited to households with incomes within 100% to 400% of the poverty line.
In 2021, however, enhanced eligibility was extended to individuals and households whose health insurance premiums exceed 8.5% of income, regardless of how much that income is.
Those are the subsides that are due to expire in December.
Faulkenberry said enhanced eligibility appeared to have a stabilizing effect on
"These are working Oklahomans that do not have an employer-sponsored health plan," said Faulkenberry. "These are individuals who own or work in small businesses. These are entrepreneurs. These are farmers."
"It's the middle-income families who could really feel this the most," said McCone. "It's farmers. It's self-employed. It's early retirees (not old enough for Medicare) who are going to feel this and who this will affect."
Besides McCone and Faulkenberry, the group that met with congressional staffers last week included
The
The letter cited examples of projected increases, including a
But while extending the tax credits may be beneficial to household and perhaps even state budgets, it would cost the federal government an estimated
Some who favor extending the credits in some form say they can be modified to save money and still serve their intended purpose.
Among suggestions are a one- or two-year extension while the program is reworked, hospital reimbursement caps, and other cost-containment measures and eligibility tweaks.
And, for some
But "we believe that extending these credits is one of the most important things that



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