The Denver Post

NUMBER OF INSURED ADULTS UP IN RURAL COLO.

Medicaid expansion leads to decrease in uninsured adults in rural Colorado

- By Jessica Seaman

The uninsured rate for lowincome adults has dropped 29 percentage points since Colorado expanded Medicaid — the largest decrease experience­d by a state, according to a study. The state saw the uninsured rate for rural adults slide from 42 percent to 13 percent.

The uninsured rate for lowincome adults has dropped 29 percentage points since Colorado expanded Medicaid — the largest decrease experience­d by a state, according to a new study.

Colorado is one of multiple states to see a decrease in the number of uninsured adults in rural areas since expanding Medicaid.

The state saw the uninsured rate for adults in rural areas and small towns slide from 42 percent in 200809 to 13 percent in 201516, according to the report by Georgetown University’s Center for Children and Families and University of North Carolina’s NC Rural Health Project.

“We knew Medicaid expansion was having a big impact in rural parts of our state but this report — it really sort of outlines how dramatic that impact has been,” said Adam Fox, director of strategic engagement for the Colorado Consumer Health Initiative.

Medicaid — the government health care program for lowincome adults and children — started growing in Colorado in 2009 when lawmakers expanded the program to all individual­s below the poverty line.

It grew again after most legislator­s approved expanding Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. Under what is also known as Obamacare, Medicaid was extended to almost all lowincome individual­s with incomes at or below 138 percent of the poverty line, roughly $28,676 for a family of three, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Colorado is not the only state to see larger decreases in the uninsured rates for lowincome adults in rural areas and small towns. Other states, such as Nevada, Kentucky, Oregon and New Mexico, have also seen doubledigi­t drops in uninsured rates.

Overall, states that expanded Medicaid saw uninsured rates for adults in rural communitie­s fall from 35 percent to 16 percent between 200809 and 201516, according to the Sept. 25 report.

States that chose not to expand Medicaid have seen uninsured rates decline at a slower rate, if at all. Collective­ly, nonexpansi­on states saw uninsured rates in rural areas slip from 38 percent to 32 percent during the sevenyear period, the study shows.

The report’s findings highlight the role Medicaid plays in rural communitie­s, which have a higher number of uninsured patients and have been battling a shortage of health care providers, said Joan Alker, executive director of the Center for Children and Families and an author of the study.

“Many folks don’t realize Medicaid is such a critical pillar of the health care system in those communitie­s,” Alker said.

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