Senate Bill Would Devastate Health Care in Rural America
The
The
Rural areas have also greatly benefited from the ACA's premium tax credits and cost-sharing subsidies and would be disproportionately harmed by the
Medicaid -- and Medicaid Expansion's -- Critical Role in
Medicaid has long played an essential role in delivering health care in rural America. In 2010, prior to the ACA, 18 percent of rural residents nationwide were enrolled in Medicaid, compared to 15 percent of urban residents. This reflected various factors unique to rural America, including its lower access to job-based coverage, greater prevalence of self-employed jobs (such as farming and contracting), lower incomes, and greater share of people with a disability.[2] In a 2007 survey, for example, two-thirds of farmers cited the cost of health insurance as the biggest threat to their farms.[3]
Like the rest of the country, rural America has enjoyed large gains in health coverage since the ACA's major coverage expansions took effect in 2014. The uninsured rate among rural non-elderly individuals plummeted by nearly one-third between 2013 and 2015, from 17 percent to 12 percent, according to a
Coverage gains occurred in both Medicaid and private insurance, but states that expanded Medicaid have made larger gains in rural health coverage: the uninsured rate among rural, non-elderly individuals dropped much more in states that expanded Medicaid (from 16 percent in 2013 to 9 percent in 2015) than in non-expansion states (from 19 percent to 15 percent).[5] (See Figure 1.)
Medicaid also plays a larger role in providing health coverage to children in rural areas than urban areas: 45 percent of children in small towns and rural areas have Medicaid coverage, as compared to 38 percent in urban areas. Medicaid is a big reason why the uninsured rate among children in rural areas fell from 9 percent in 2009 to 6 percent in 2015.[6]
Among non-elderly adults, 1.7 million of the more than 11 million people who have newly gained Medicaid coverage through the ACA expansion live in rural America, according to CBPP estimates (see Appendix Table 1). The expansion population is more rural than the population as a whole: rural residents make up 12 percent of the population of expansion states but 14 percent of expansion enrollees in these states. In at least eight expansion states, more than one-third of expansion enrollees live in rural areas:
People enrolled in coverage through the Medicaid expansion are receiving needed primary care and critical health services, research shows. For example, a survey of low-income, non-elderly adults in
The Medicaid expansion has been a lifeline for rural areas in other ways. The ACA coverage expansions, especially the Medicaid expansion, have substantially reduced hospitals' uncompensated care costs, which fell by about half as a share of hospital operating budgets between 2013 and 2015 in expansion states.[10] Reductions in uncompensated care and increases in the share of patients covered by Medicaid have been especially important for rural hospitals. For example:
* Both urban and rural hospitals in expansion states saw improvements in operating margins after the expansion. But these gains were larger for rural hospitals (a 4 percentage-point increase) than in urban areas (a 1 percentage-point increase).[11]
* Since 2013, hospitals' uncompensated care costs have fallen by 1.7 percentage points more, and their Medicaid revenue as a share of total revenue has risen by 2.9 percentage points more, in expansion states than in non-expansion states.[12] (See Figure 2.)
* Most of the 78 rural hospitals that have closed since 2010 are in southern states that haven't expanded Medicaid.[13]
Senate Cuts Would Undermine Entire Medicaid Program in
The
In nine states (
In addition, the
Overall, these changes would cut federal Medicaid spending by
Senate Bill's Tax Credits Would Not Meet Rural Residents' Needs
The Senate Republican bill's damage to rural America would extend beyond people who are or may become eligible for Medicaid. The bill's cuts to tax credits for the purchase of individual market coverage would raise premiums for many people in rural areas, especially for older people and people living in high-cost states. Many of the 1.6 million current rural marketplace enrollees could find themselves unable to afford their high insurance premiums.[18]
Today, premium tax credits are based on the value of "silver plan" coverage: a plan that covers, on average, 70 percent of health costs. Under the
The
Because rural states and areas tend to have older populations and higher health care costs, the
As Table 1 shows, ten of the 11 states where low-income older people would face the steepest percentage increases in net premiums have significant rural populations.[19] (Also see Appendix Table 2.) For example, in
Even within a given state, rural consumers would often fare worse than urban ones, county-level data from the
Finally, like the House bill, the
Senate Bill Would Fuel Market Instability and Lead to Higher Premiums and Benefit Reductions
CBO predicts that "a small fraction of the population resides in areas in which -- because of this legislation [the
In response to this dilemma -- and the premium increases that CBO projects under the
Excluded services could include maternity care, mental health and substance use disorder treatment, rehabilitative and habilitative services, or pediatric dental care. CBO notes that out-of-pocket costs associated with maternity care and mental health and substance abuse services could increase "by thousands of dollars" and that annual and lifetime limits on benefits would also no longer apply. Those with the greatest health care needs would see their out-of-pocket payments rise the most in states that eliminated or substantially altered the essential health benefits requirement.
Because rural populations tend to be older and sicker than urban populations and have significant needs for mental health and substance use disorder treatment, waivers of certain essential benefits could have an especially large impact on them. For example, rural suicide rates are nearly double urban rates and families in rural areas experience considerable stress due to high poverty and unemployment.[23] In addition, the opioid epidemic has hit rural areas hard and reducing treatment options would be particularly consequential in those parts of the country.[24] For these reasons, rural residents likely benefit disproportionately from the ACA's health benefit protections -- and could be disproportionately harmed by the loss of those protections, as well as by the other major provisions of the
See the details here (http://www.cbpp.org/research/health/senate-bill-would-devastate-health-care-in-rural-america)
Footnotes:
[1]
[2] For more information about Medicaid's role in rural America prior to the ACA, see Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, "Rural America Will Benefit from Medicaid Expansion,"
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6] Karina Wagnerman et al., "Medicaid in Small Towns and
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11] Analysis of unpublished data from the
[12]
[13]
[14]
[15] For more information about the
[16] CBO found the Medicaid cuts in the House-passed bill, the American Health Care Act (AHCA), would have similar effects, with
[17]
[18] This includes only the enrollees in the 39 HealthCare.gov states.
[19] Our analysis uses the same methods as our earlier paper on the effect of the Republican plan in the states using the HealthCare.gov platform. See
[20]
[21] CBPP analysis of
[22]
[23]
[24]



Club for Growth: Obamacare Repeal Should Include Lee-Cruz Consumer Freedom Option, Nix, NIIT
James Kent Appointed to Lead Willis Re as John Cavanagh Announces His Retirement
Advisor News
- Equitable launches 403(b) pooled employer plan to support nonprofits
- Financial FOMO is quietly straining relationships
- GDP growth to rebound in 2027-2029; markets to see more volatility in 2026
- Health-related costs are the greatest threat to retirement security
- Social Security literacy is crucial for advisors
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- Best’s Special Report: Analysis Shows Drastic Shift in Life Insurance Reserves Toward Annuity Products, and a Slide in Credit Quality
- MetLife to Announce First Quarter 2026 Results
- CT commissioner: 70% of policyholders covered in PHL liquidation plan
- ‘I get confused:’ Regulators ponder increasing illustration complexities
- Three ways the Corebridge/Equitable merger could shake up the annuity market
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Insurance resolution sparks backlash
- Municipalities contend with surprise bills as health costs rise
- Health care in America should be redesigned
Op-ed: We should redesign health care in America. Here's a plan that would help Nebraskans (copy)
- Humana and Thor hit the Casualty List, can revive and thrive
Humana and Thor Hit the Casualty List
- Pols & Politics: Romney, Patrick, Dukakis, Weld, and Healey to celebrate 20 years of MassHealth
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- An Application for the Trademark “PREMIER ACCESS” Has Been Filed by The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America: The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America
- AM Best Assigns Credit Ratings to North American Fire & General Insurance Company Limited and North American Life Insurance Company Limited
- Supporting the ‘better late than never’ market with life insurance
- Best’s Special Report: Analysis Shows Drastic Shift in Life Insurance Reserves Toward Annuity Products, and a Slide in Credit Quality
- The child-free client: how advisors can support this growing demographic
More Life Insurance News