Millions of Americans have gained health insurance coverage,
since the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was passed into law on March 23,
2010.…
16.4 million Americans who were previously uninsured, have gained health insurance coverage, since the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was passed into law on March 23, 2010. Over 14 million uninsured adults acquired insurance following the first open enrollment period in October 2013. An additional 2.3 million young adults between the ages of 19 and 25, gained coverage between 2010 and October 2013, because of the ACA provision allowing children under the age of 26 to remain on their parent’s plan.
The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index
estimates that the national uninsured rate has plummeted from 20.3
percent, prior to the 2013 open enrollment period, to just 13.2 percent
in early 2015. Predictably, the decline in the uninsured rate was most dramatic in states that expanded Medicaid coverage.
The uninsured rate for Latinos
dropped the sharpest from a baseline uninsured rate of 41.8 percent,
when open enrollment began, to 29.5 percent in 2015. The
African-American uninsured rate fell from 22.4 percent to 13.2 percent
during the same time span. The white uninsured rate tumbled from 14.3
percent to a mere 9.0 percent over the same period.
In raw numbers,
6.6 million additional White Americans, 4.2 million Latinos, and 2.3
million African-Americans who were previously uninsured gained health
care coverage under the provisions of the ACA. While no figures are
calculated for Asian-Americans, Pacific Islanders, or American Indians,
presumably they add up, to account for the remaining 1 million Americans
who gained insurance over the same time frame.
The
Supreme Court may choose to gut Obamacare in June. However, if they do
so, they will be stripping away health care coverage for millions of
Americans who have benefited from the ACA. Republicans like to attack
Obamacare at every turn, but the bottom line is the ACA has brought
affordable health care coverage to millions of Americans. 16.1 million
Americans who did not have health coverage prior to the ACA, now have
affordable care. There is no rational or humane reason for the Supreme
Court, or the GOP Congress, to turn their backs on millions of
Americans. However, out of sheer spite for the President’s landmark
accomplishment, they will probably do just that.
No comments:
Post a Comment