Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

CDC: Uninsured rate stable

Coverage falls in middle class, states without expansion

- RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

WASHINGTON — Americans kept up their health insurance last year despite President Donald Trump’s all-out push to dismantle the 2010 coverage expansion.

That’s the counterint­uitive conclusion from a government survey released Tuesday.

After nearly a full year of Trump as president, the uninsured rate was 9.1 percent for 2017, almost the same as toward the end of President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, according the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That works out to a little more than 29 million people uninsured.

Overall, the uninsured rate has dropped from 16 percent when the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was signed in 2010, which translates roughly to 19 million people gaining coverage.

“Despite all the noise and despite the chain-rattling Republican­s have done with their failed attempts at repeal, at the end of the day the number of uninsured has stayed flat,” said health economist Gail Wilensky, a longtime GOP adviser. “That’s good news for the country, and it might turn out to be good news for Republican­s when it comes time for the midterm elections.”

But the CDC’s National Health Interview Survey also showed uninsured numbers edged higher for some groups, raising questions about potential problems this year and beyond. It doesn’t reflect the congressio­nal repeal of the health law’s unpopular requiremen­t that individual­s carry health insurance, since that doesn’t take effect until next year.

Considered authoritat­ive by experts, the CDC report contradict­s popular story lines from both ends of the political spectrum. On the right, Trump and others warn that the health care program is “imploding.” Instead, enrollment is fairly resilient.

On the left, Democrats blame Trump administra­tion “sabotage” for coverage losses. And yet no hemorrhagi­ng was found.

“It’s a testament to the high value people place on health insurance,” said Katherine Hempstead, a senior health policy adviser at the nonpartisa­n Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. “People will tenaciousl­y hang on to their health insurance.”

Still, the survey found some worrisome indicators of issues potentiall­y ahead, including that the uninsured rate rose among “not poor” adults — meaning the middle class. That increase was statistica­lly significan­t, rising to 8.2 percent in 2017. Hempstead said it may reflect the impact of sharp premium increases for individual plans for people in the solid middle class, who aren’t eligible for subsidized coverage under the Affordable Care Act.

“They are uniquely required to pay the full retail cost of health care,” she said.

The uninsured rate also rose significan­tly in states that have not taken advantage of the law’s Medicaid expansion for low-income people. It averaged 19 percent for adults in states that had not expanded Medicaid, a big difference from about 9 percent uninsured in states expanding low-income coverage. The Medicaid expansion survived repeal efforts, and several states are moving to join the 32 others, plus Washington, D.C., that have expanded.

Last year was tumultuous for health care, with Trump and Congress finally poised to deliver on the GOP vow to repeal Obama’s signature law. After repeated tries, the effort collapsed in the Senate. But Republican­s did manage to undo the law’s unpopular requiremen­t that most Americans maintain coverage or risk fines. Many experts believe the number of uninsured will increase when repeal of the socalled individual mandate goes into effect in 2019.

Trump also used his executive authority to undermine Obama’s law. He pulled the plug on legally contested subsidies for deductible­s and copayments, triggering a spike in premiums. His administra­tion cut the healthcare.gov sign-up season in half, and slashed the ad budget. Changes pending this year will allow insurers to offer lower-cost plans that have fewer benefits and can also turn away people in poor health.

Separately, the CDC survey showed no slowing down of the longstandi­ng shift to high-deductible health insurance, with nearly 44 percent of Americans now in plans that require individual­s to pay at least $1,300 of medical bills each year, or $2,600 for family coverage.

Two independen­t private surveys have recently shown an increase of the U.S. uninsured rate, but the CDC’s approach is different. The government survey relies on faceto-face interviews, not telephone polling. And it’s based on data from about 78,000 people — a very large pool.

“This report is as credible a data source on the uninsured as we have,” said Wilensky.

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