Protect Our Car: Texas Lawsuit Days of Action – Coverage For Communities of Color
Last month, the
"The Fifth Circuit's disastrous decision on
Days of Action: Day 11 of 11 focuses on Coverage For Communities of Color. To learn more about our Days of Action, visit our website.
What's At Stake: Coverage For Communities of Color
The ACA helped reduce longstanding racial disparities in coverage rates, improving health care access for communities of color across the board.
The ACA helped lower the uninsured rate for African Americans by more than one third. Before the passage of the ACA, more than 16 percent of the nearly 50 million Americans lacking health insurance were African Americans. According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the ACA helped lower the uninsured rate for nonelderly African Americans by more than one third between 2013 and 2016 from 18.9 percent to 11.7 percent.
Repealing Medicaid expansion would disproportionately harm communities of color. After the implementation of the ACA, gaps in insurance coverage narrowed the most in states that adopted Medicaid expansion. Moreover, communities of color make up significant proportions of the Medicaid population: Black Americans make up 13.4 percent of the
Latinos stand to lose if the ACA is overturned. The percentage of people gaining health insurance under the ACA was higher for Latinos than for any other racial or ethnic group in the country. According to a study from
Research confirms that the ACA improved health care access for communities of color:
Commonwealth Fund Study Found That Medicaid Expansion Has Been Key To Improving Racial Equity In Health Insurance Coverage And Access To Care. "Uninsured rates for blacks, Hispanics, and whites declined in both expansion and nonexpansion states between 2013 and 2018. In addition, disparities in coverage between whites and blacks and Hispanics also narrowed over that time period in both sets of states... People living in Medicaid expansion states benefited the most in terms of coverage gains. All three groups reported lower uninsured rates in expansion states compared to nonexpansion states, and larger coverage improvements between 2013 and 2018. Coverage disparities in expansion states narrowed the most over the period, even though the disparities were smaller to begin with. The black-white coverage gap in those states dropped from 8.4 percentage points to 3.7 points, while the difference between Hispanic and white uninsured rates fell from 23.2 points to 12.7 points." [
Black Women Were More Likely To Receive Care Because Of The ACA. "There has been an increase in the share of black women with a 'usual source of care'--meaning a particular doctor's office, clinic, or health center. In 2010, 83 percent of black women had a usual source of care. By 2014, the share had risen to 88.1 percent. Furthermore, black women have experienced a reduction among those who delayed or went without care due to cost. In 2010, 18.6 percent of black women 'who had to delay or forgo care because of cost'; by 2014, only 15.1 percent of black women did so." [
Bottom line: "Health coverage is especially important for African Americans and other racial and ethnic minorities because they often have worse health status than their white counterparts," according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Coverage losses incurred by overturning the ACA would be devastating for communities of color and reverse the significant gains in health care access made by the law.
30 dogs saved from the Puerto Rican earthquakes are coming to Philly for adoption
Protect Our Care: Texas Lawsuit Days of Action – Marketplace Signups & Financial Assistance
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