In the states that didn't expand Medicaid, 1.6M can't afford health insurance
BY:
The majority of residents in this coverage gap are people of color, an analysis found.
Nearly 1 of every 5 uninsured working-age adults across the 10 states that have not expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act are, according to a new analysis, stuck in a health care limbo known as a "coverage gap." That means they earn too much money to receive Medicaid but not enough to qualify for financial help to purchase their own plan on the marketplace.
In
"They are all people with incomes below the federal poverty level, and yet they have no financial assistance or coverage," said
The analysis also found that more than 60% of those who fall into this gap are people of color: Latino people account for 35%, Black residents account for 24%, and Asian people account for 2%.
"This is not a conservative or liberal issue. This is about the people that we represent in the state of
What's the coverage gap?
The Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, was enacted in 2010, but 10 states have not expanded Medicaid, the federal-state program that provides health care for low-income people. They are
The Affordable Care Act allowed states to expand Medicaid to cover people up to 138% of the federal poverty line. The costs of insuring more people would be paid for primarily with federal funds and a smaller state match. People who earned more than that could receive tax credits to subsidize health insurance costs.
But in the states that didn't expand, many people with low incomes were left without affordable options.
"They simply don't have access to affordable health insurance coverage, and therefore fall into what we call the coverage gap," Tolbert said.
In
Considering expansion
Some analysts say that, despite misgivings about the Affordable Care Act, holdout states will need to reconsider expansion to bring in federal matching funds and help their residents.
"There is no real solution to ensuring some level of health insurance coverage for this population, absent a Medicaid expansion," said
"If you're going to have a safety net insurance system in this country, which we should have, it absolutely has to be reliably there for people in this kind of income with these kinds of income levels," Capretta said. "There needs to be some push and movement to see if there is a way forward to get the coverage gap fully closed."
In
"My argument to my
White said the Republican caucus has been seeing a change in temperature, with more support for expansion. He added that for the first time, the
"We have finally seen the thawing of the ice here," White said. "Now, where that leads to the next session in the coming years, I don't know. But I'm encouraged."
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