The Standard (St. Catharines)

Nearly 11.8M enrol for Obama health law in 2018

- RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

WASHINGTON — Nearly 11.8 million Americans have signed up for coverage this year under former President U.S. Barack Obama’s health care law, about three per cent less than last year, according to a new tally by The Associated Press.

Enrollment remained remarkably stable despite U.S. President Donald Trump’s disdain for “Obamacare,” and repeated efforts by the Republican-led Congress to repeal the program. The Trump administra­tion also cut the signup window in half, slashed the ad budget, and suddenly stopped a major subsidy to insurers, which triggered a jump in premiums.

“If you had asked me a year ago whether enrolment for 2018 would be almost equal to 2017, I would have laughed at you,” said Larry Levitt, who follows health law for the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation. “So long as lots of people are still getting insurance it becomes much harder to take that away.”

The outlook for next year, however, remains unclear. Congress has repealed the unpopular requiremen­t that most people carry health insurance or risk fines from the IRS. That’s expected to embolden some healthy people to go without coverage, which would raise premiums for those left behind.

The Trump administra­tion is also promoting lower-cost insurance alternativ­es that don’t offer the comprehens­ive benefits available through the health law. If they prove popular, that could siphon off more healthy people.

Officially known as the Affordable Care Act, the health law offers subsidized private insurance to people who don’t have coverage on the job, through HealthCare.gov and staterun insurance markets.

AP’s count shows that states running their own marketplac­es mostly outperform­ed the federal HealthCare.gov.

New York, Washington, Colorado, Rhode Island and Connecticu­t were among the state-run markets that increased their enrolment over last year’s numbers. State-run marketplac­es tended to have longer sign-up periods and some invested heavily in marketing.

But California’s state-run market, which reported total sign-ups of more than 1.5 million on Wednesday, saw a slight dip.

State officials pointed to an increase in the number of new customers enrolling through Covered California and said that some returning consumers instead bought plans directly from insurers.

Many states carried by Trump in 2016 also saw respectabl­e sign-ups, including Florida, Texas, and Georgia. Overall the 39 states that use the federal HealthCare.gov website saw their enrolment slip by about five per cent.

 ?? JON ELSWICK/AP PHOTO ?? A new tally by The Associated Press finds that nearly 11.8 million Americans have signed up for coverage this year under former U.S. President Barack Obama’s health care law. That’s only about three per cent less than last year, remarkably stable...
JON ELSWICK/AP PHOTO A new tally by The Associated Press finds that nearly 11.8 million Americans have signed up for coverage this year under former U.S. President Barack Obama’s health care law. That’s only about three per cent less than last year, remarkably stable...

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