New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Uninsured numbers decline in rural Conn.

- By Mackenzie Rigg

Connecticu­t saw one of the biggest drops in the uninsured rate among lowincome adults living in rural areas and small towns compared to other states, according to a national study released this week.

The uninsured rate for low-income adults (below 138 percent of the federal poverty level) has fallen since 2008-09 in nearly all states, but small towns and rural areas of states, including Connecticu­t, that have expanded Medicaid have seen the sharpest declines, according to the study by the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families and the North Carolina Rural Health Research Program. The study examined the status of insurance coverage for low-income adults in the 46 states with significan­t rural population­s.

The uninsured rate for this population dropped sharply from 35 percent to 16 percent in rural areas and small towns (identified as “non-metro counties” in the study) of Medicaid expansion states compared to a decline from 38 percent to 32 percent in non-expansion states between 2008-09 and 2015-16.

In Connecticu­t, the uninsured rate in its sole nonmetro county, Litchfield, fell from 32 percent in 2008-09 to 9 percent in 2015-16.

Non-metro counties in the report are defined as having no urban centers or no center with more than 50,000 people. The other seven Connecticu­t counties — Fairfield, Hartford, New Haven, Tolland, Middlesex, Windham and New London — are considered metro counties.

“I am aware Medicaid expansion has made a tremendous impact on coverage in Connecticu­t,” said Patricia Baker, president and CEO of the Connecticu­t Health Foundation. “I had no idea that our rural rate would go from 32 percent uninsured to 9 percent. That’s a stunning finding.”

Joanne Borduas, CEO of the Community Health and Wellness Center of Greater Torrington, a community health center that serves residents in Litchfield County, acknowledg­ed that having insurance makes accessing health care much easier.

But, said Borduas, a lack of insurance is only one reason people may not get preventive health care or manage their chronic conditions. Other factors include access to healthy food, housing and transporta­tion.

In the seven metro counties in Connecticu­t, according to the study, the uninsured rate for low-income adults fell from 22 percent to 11. For all counties, the change was 23 percent to 11.

Facing uncertaint­y

Sherman resident Linda Yannone is one of the people who lives in a metro county and who benefited from Medicaid expansion in Connecticu­t. Sherman, a small, rural town, is in northern Fairfield County.

When Yannone’s husband lost his job at a car dealership in 2006, they lost their health care coverage too. And although they bought private health insurance, the cost of premiums drained their savings and they had to stop paying for it. This was especially difficult because Yannone is a

cancer survivor and lives with lupus, an autoimmune disease.

“I was facing complete uncertaint­y about how I was going to care for myself going forward,” she said, adding that she was forced to pay for her health care out-of-pocket, which meant rationing her medication­s at times and accepting free care when it was offered.

All that uncertaint­y changed when Yannone became eligible for HUSKY D, the state’s expanded Medicaid program.

Medicaid expansion

Connecticu­t expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act in mid-2010. This extended coverage to low-income adults who did not have minor children and were not disabled. This was only a partial expansion — it covered people earning up to 56 percent of the poverty level, with a slightly higher income limit for Fairfield County.

The state then expanded eligibilit­y to 138 percent of the federal poverty level on Jan. 1, 2014. On this date, “generous” federal funding first became available for expanded Medicaid coverage, according to the study.

Before the expansion, most low-income adults who did not have minor children did not qualify for Medicaid. There was a separate state-funded program that provided medical assistance for very low income people who had extremely limited assets, called state-administer­ed general assistance, known as SAGA. It covered roughly 46,000 people who were then moved into Medicaid.

Medicaid has played a key role in lowering the percentage of Americans who lack health insurance. Nationally, the uninsured rate for all Americans under the age of 65 (adults and children) fell dramatical­ly between 2010 and 2016 from 18.2 percent to 10.4 percent, rising slightly to 10.7 percent in 2017, according to the study.

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