USA TODAY International Edition

Obamacare users see system collapsing – yet working for them

Poll shows ACA enrollees willing to keep coverage

- Maureen Groppe

WASHINGTON – A majority of people who rely on Obamacare insurance agree with Republican critics that the health insurance markets created by the Affordable Care Act are collapsing, according to a new poll.

But most of those surveyed also said their premiums are either lower this year than they were last year, or about the same, and they’re likely to continue buying insurance even though Congress has eliminated the ACA’s penalty for going without coverage.

The poll, conducted by the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation, also found that Obamacare enrollees are not interested in switching to the skimpier, short-term plans, touted by the Trump administra­tion, which have fewer benefits and lower premiums.

Liz Hamel, director of public opinion and survey research for the Kaiser Family Foundation, said the poll results highlight the contradict­ion between political rhetoric and reality.

“When the president is saying things like, `The ACA is failing. Things are collapsing,’ people hear that,” Hamel said. “So they may be answering that question not necessaril­y based on their own experience this year.”

Republican­s tried unsuccessf­ully to repeal the ACA last year, arguing the markets created for those who aren’t offered insurance through an employer or a government health care plan like Medicare or Medicaid were failing. The plans cost too much, deductible­s were too high, and the number of insurers willing to sell plans was shrinking, GOP lawmakers said.

“Obamacare is collapsing, and we must act decisively to protect all Americans,” Trump said in his first address to Congress in 2017.

About half of the public — and 60% of those who use the Obamacare marketplac­es — told pollsters they think the marketplac­es are “collapsing.”

Democrats charge that any problems with the marketplac­es have been exacerbate­d, if not created, by Republican­s in an attempt to undermine the law. Most significan­tly, the Trump administra­tion ended reimbursem­ents to insurance companies to cover the discounts they’re required to give low-income customers. The administra­tion also shortened the sign-up period for 2018 plans and cut outreach funding.

“When you mix indifferen­ce, cruelty, complicate­d and sabotage, this is what you get .... Trumpcare,” Andy Slavitt, who had a lead role in implementi­ng the ACA during the Obama administra­tion, tweeted last month.

Premiums went up in 2018, in part because of the Trump administra­tion’s move to cut reimbursem­ents to insurance companies. One-third of those surveyed said they’re paying about the same this year, and one-fourth said they’re paying less.

Although Republican­s failed last year to repeal the ACA, they did end the tax penalties the ACA imposed on most people who go without insurance. That effectivel­y killed the ACA’s individual mandate, which had been included in the law to prevent healthy people from waiting until they got sick to purchase insurance.

The individual mandate was the most unpopular part of the ACA, but most people surveyed by the Kaiser Family Foundation did not know it has been repealed, effective in 2019.

And 90% of people who purchase insurance on their own say they will continue to do so despite the mandate’s repeal. Most see health insurance as something they need. For those who go without insurance, many said it’s because they can’t afford it.

“We know that people say that health insurance is important. They want it and they need it,” Hamel said.

Trump has directed the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to make it easier for people to buy short-term plans — something the Obama administra­tion limited. Such plans tend to cost less but provide fewer benefits and often do not cover preexistin­g conditions. The vast majority (84%) of those who buy insurance on their own said they would prefer to keep their current plan rather than switch to short-term insurance.

“When the president is saying things like, `The ACA is failing. Things are collapsing,’ people hear that. So they may be answering that question not necessaril­y based on their own experience this year.”

Liz Hamel director of public opinion and survey research for the Kaiser Family Foundation

 ??  ?? Republican­s were unable last year to repeal the ACA.
GETTY IMAGES
Republican­s were unable last year to repeal the ACA. GETTY IMAGES

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