Many Virginians drop ACA coverage, SCC hears Many Virginians drop ACA coverage and more likely will, SCC hears
The reason is cost: when President
The credits eliminated or reduced Obamacare premiums for many, and that provided a subsidy for higher-income individuals who weren't entitled to them initially.
"The changes really began when our open enrollment period began, when we saw two and a half, or almost three times the number of customers cancel health insurance compared to prior years. And as that trend has continued throughout this coverage year, the only significant difference that we've been able to identify is this cost difference," Patchett said.
"We understand that there are tens of thousands of Virginians who are on the cusp of losing their health insurance in the coming days, and we expect that the nearly 35,000 Virginians who've lost coverage since the end of open enrollment, that number may double or more within the next week or two," he added.
Many were automatically re-enrolled in their plans when they didn't do anything during the enrollment period, and the 90-day grace period for paying premiums is expiring, said
"It's hard to be sunny about the next couple of years when we're not looking at an increase in enrollment. I have a member who told me today they have 30,000 people in the grace period, who're on the exchange now. Will all of them not pay? Absolutely not. A bunch of them will wait till the last day. But others won't," he said.
"The way the exchange works, is they were automatically enrolled in a similar product, and so they didn't have to take any action. So when you have to take an action is really when the rubber hits the road," Gray said.
"If you haven't paid, which many have not, then that grace period starts. And so when we have significant percentages in the grace period, more than 10% in most cases, that creates a real concern that they won't pay by the end, or a significant percentage of them, so that shows that they haven't wrapped their hands around the situation," he said.
One big issue is who's dropping out.
With the ending of the enhanced credits, the biggest dollar jump in premiums came for individuals earnings 300% to 400% of the federal poverty level:
"I think conventional wisdom said that's where we're going to see the biggest drop off, people whose monthly premiums would change from
Many of them are younger individuals, who tend to be healthier, which could be an issue.
Ending the enhanced credit has meant "that gap of not having to pay a premium at all, but now paying
He warned that going forward, people who are currently paying their monthly bills for coverage could also decide to let coverage lapse as bills roll in later this year.
"We've talked about being at risk of losing over 100,000, and you know, at this point, we're not there, yet. Doesn't mean that it can't get worse," Gray said.
"It probably will, but let's put it in perspective ... remember, it's who's in the pool that matters just as much as the size of the pool," he said.
"A lot of folks who are in the pool are never going to leave the pool because they're sick and they need the coverage at any price. The subsidies from the federal government are substantial, even without the enhanced subsidies," he said.
"Could it get more expensive? Sure, if the pool gets sicker, absolutely," Gray said.
"Is it going to spiral right away? No, and I want to provide that reassurance," he added.
Sen.
An effort after
"Families are already seeing premiums skyrocket - some doubling or even tripling - while a new report shows ten



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