More Hoosiers go uninsured, resulting in higher emergency department usage
Nearly 60,000 fewer Hoosiers signed up for insurance through the Affordable Care Act exchanges this year following the expiration of enhanced tax credits that once kept their monthly premiums low, researchers from health policy group KFF found in an analysis last month.
Another 400,000 Hoosiers are no longer covered by Medicaid since the
Meanwhile, those insured through employer plans are reporting unsustainable monthly premiums, pressuring them to consider high-deductible plans or forego coverage altogether.
Health and anti-poverty advocates say the trends could result in worse health outcomes, delayed and uncompensated medical care — and ultimately more medical debt for Hoosiers.
What's happening on the exchanges
The expiration of enhanced tax credits from the American Rescue Plan, adopted in 2021 to lower monthly premiums for Americans insured through ACA plans, resulted in 23 million fewer Americans signing up for ACA coverage this year, according to KFF.
The plans are used by Americans who earn too much for Medicaid, yet cannot afford or are not eligible for insurance through their employer.
The health policy group found the average ACA premium hit
Only 300,049 Hoosiers enrolled in ACA plans this year, KFF found.
The health policy group anticipates more Americans will lose coverage as the year progresses and they are unable to keep up with premiums.
Premium surge hits middle-income families hardest
The KFF report found a disproportionate share of Americans who dropped ACA coverage are in middle-income households earning too much for what remains of the premium subsidies.
"There's no way I could have paid that," she said.
Now uninsured, Conrad declined coverage through her employer, saying a simple plan covering a single primary care visit a year and no prescriptions would have cost her at least
"If I can't get on state health insurance, I probably will be uninsured indefinitely unless some policy changes happen, because there's just no way that I can afford insurance through my job," she said. "Even if I could, it wouldn't be worth it."
Hoosiers insured through their employers are struggling to afford their premiums too.
"So, not only am I paying
Hospitals report surge in uninsured
Emergency department visits in
IHA reports much of the decline in coverage is due to the Medicaid eligibility redetermination process, while federal policy changes like Medicaid work requirements and the expiration of ACA premium tax credits is expected to further fuel the trend this year.
Some hospitals are reporting to IHA a projected doubling of bad debt in 2026, at a time when the association is already projecting an additional
"Hospitals will continue to care for every patient who walks through their doors, but as coverage declines, uncompensated care rises, which adds to the financial strain for hospitals already operating on thin or negative margins," Tittle said. "Ensuring continuous coverage for eligible Hoosiers is essential to keeping patients healthy and our healthcare system sustainable."
Will uncompensated care lead to higher prices?
But Levin said there is little evidence this is needed, as research finds commercial prices are primarily linked to hospital market power and negotiating leverage, rather than uncompensated care or public payer reimbursement levels.
"In
Advocates brace for more medical debt
The anti-poverty group recently advocated for legislation that would have allowed Hoosiers to deduct health insurance premiums from their taxes, as well as a bill to protect Hoosiers who rely on charity care or medical payment plans from debt collectors. Neither bill advanced.
"People are fearful," Macey said. "There's a lot of changes coming quickly in terms of work requirements and copays and documentation that will be ramped up or needed, and I think it will mean people lose coverage beyond what you're seeing with the



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