Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Crisis costs state workers jobs, health coverage

- By Ana Radelat CTMIRROR.ORG

As the number of unemployed in Connecticu­t explodes in the coronaviru­s pandemic, the number losing their employerba­sed health care coverage is also rising sharply.

About 60 percent of state residents are covered by an employerba­sed plan in Connecticu­t, a state that has prided itself on a low rate of uninsured. But the pandemic has cost the state some 400,000 jobs — and the nation 30 million — and more job losses are expected.

That’s likely to result in a wave of newly uninsured people in Connecticu­t — one that could dwarf the spike in uninsured that occurred in the Great Recession. In the first year of that recession, 2008, the number of uninsured in the state increased by 22,000.

Although the state does not yet have any hard data on how many have lost coverage because of the pandemic, Health Management Associates, a consulting group, estimates 130,000 to 382,000 Connecticu­t workers could do so, depending on the full impact of the pandemic on the state in the coming weeks and months. HMA also projected that as many as 77,000 state residents could become uninsured.

Many who’ve lost their jobs can extend their employer-based health coverage due to a federal law called the Consolidat­ed Omnibus Budget Reconcilia­tion Act, or COBRA, which gives jobless workers and their families the right to choose to continue their group health plan, normally for a period of 18 months.

But those who choose to use COBRA to extend their health benefits are likely to have to pay up to 102 percent of the cost to their plan, which could exceed more than $1,000 a month for family coverage. Congress is considerin­g new subsidies to help workers opting for COBRA

benefits. But approval of those subsidies is not assured, and the money appropriat­ed may not be enough.

Vicki Veltri, executive director of the state’s Office of Health Strategy, said there may be better options for those who have lost their health care coverage.

The newly jobless may qualify for no-cost coverage under one of the state’s HUSKY programs. Or they may qualify for a heavily subsidized individual health insurance plan through Access Health CT, the state’s Affordable Care Act exchange.

“There is no downside in going to the AccessHeal­th option,” Veltri said.

After the coronaviru­s began to make its deadly way across the United

States, Access Health CT establishe­d a special enrollment period – from March 19 to April 17. About 3,420 Connecticu­t residents who were uninsured at that point seized the opportunit­y to purchase a policy from Anthem or ConnectiCa­re through the marketplac­e.

Another 2,209 residents who had a health plan, but lost it — perhaps because they lost their jobs — also purchased coverage during the special enrollment period.

Access Health said another 1,060 people have enrolled in an individual plan on the exchange since then. Although the enrollment period has ended, the newly jobless can still purchase coverage through AccessHeal­th CT because the loss of a job is considered one of several “qualifying events” that allows a person to purchase a policy through the exchange at any time of the year.

Access Health also determines if an applicant is eligible for Medicaid, or HUSKY as it’s known in Connecticu­t.

David Dearborn, spokesman for the Connecticu­t Department of Social Services, said he expects an increase in HUSKY enrollment, just as enrollment in the state’s food stamp program “will be up significan­tly.”

“The extent of the Medicaid/HUSKY increase for April is undetermin­ed at this point, but indication­s from applicatio­n intake and enrollment activity at Access Health CT so far point to increased enrollment,” Dearborn said.

Access Health said 63,076 state residents have applied for HUSKY coverage from Jan. 1 through April 30. That’s a 44 percent increase in applicatio­ns over the same period in 2019.

Congress has allocated about $440 million in new funding for Connecticu­t’s Medicaid program, in anticipati­on of increased enrollment.

Congress has also approved new laws that mandate free testing and treatment for COVID-19. On Wednesday, the Trump administra­tion unveiled the specifics of a plan to support the health care system during the pandemic and with the aim of making sure uninsured patients will be covered by giving hospitals and doctors direct payments from the government.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said $20 billion will be doled out to health care facilities across the country and another $10 billion will be focused on rural health clinics and hospitals. Hot spots that have carried the brunt of the cases will get $10 billion in relief. New York, for example, the hardesthit state in the country, will be allocated $4.4 billion.

But this money would only be available to health care providers for COVID-19 related treatment. And many hospitals say it’s not likely to cover all the costs of treating the newly uninsured.

 ?? John Moore / Getty Images ?? Nurses tend to a COVID-19 patient in a Stamford Hospital intensive care unit on April 24.
John Moore / Getty Images Nurses tend to a COVID-19 patient in a Stamford Hospital intensive care unit on April 24.

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