San Antonio Express-News

Biden is encouraged by interest in Obamacare

- By Ricardo Alonso-zaldivar

WASHINGTON — In a solid start, more than 200,000 people signed up for coverage the first two weeks after President Joe Biden reopened Healthcare.gov as part of his coronaviru­s response, the government said Wednesday.

Early consumer interest in the three-month special enrollment period shows pent-up demand for health insurance a year into the COVID-19 pandemic, with many people still unemployed or unable to work as many hours as before.

If the pace keeps up, “this special enrollment period could make a meaningful dent in the number of people uninsured,” said Larry Levitt, who tracks health insurance for the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation. “The enrollment numbers so far are stronger than I would have expected.”

Biden called the sign-ups “an encouragin­g sign,” adding that “we can’t slow down until every American has the security and peace of mind that quality, affordable health coverage provides.”

Reopening the health insurance markets fits into Biden’s strategy of pushing the U.S. toward coverage for all by building on the Obama-era Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare. Healthcare.gov offers taxpayer subsidized private health insurance, catering mainly to low- and moderate-income working people.

If Congress passes Biden’s coronaviru­s response bill, financial assistance for premiums will become considerab­ly more generous, and a greater number of solid middle-class households would also qualify. Though the sweetened subsidies last only through the end of next year, their availabili­ty is expected to boost insurance coverage. The Democratic COVID-19 legislatio­n also features incentives for states to expand Medicaid to cover more low-income adults.

The numbers released Wednesday by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services show that more than 206,000 people signed up for coverage from Feb. 15-28. The figures are partial, since they cover only the 36 states served by the federal Healthcare.gov insurance market. National enrollment will be higher when totals from states running their own insurance websites are factored in later.

Another 54,000 people who went to Healthcare.gov were found to be eligible for Medicaid, the agency reported.

Healthcare.gov will be accepting applicatio­ns through May 15, a stretch about twice as long as the regular annual open enrollment. The government has a $50 million advertisin­g budget for the sign-up period, five times what the Trump administra­tion would spend on annual open enrollment.

Former President Donald Trump tried repeatedly and unsuccessf­ully to repeal “Obamacare” and refused to reopen enrollment because of the pandemic. Biden’s special sign-up period features a special emphasis on reaching Black and Latino communitie­s that have borne a heavy burden from COVID-19.

“Obamacare” now covers more than 20 million people through a combinatio­n of subsidized private plans and, in most states, expanded Medicaid.

Job losses during the pandemic have have increased the number of uninsured people, but it’s unclear by how much. Some experts estimate between 5 million to 10 million more uninsured, while the Congressio­nal Budget Office suggests a lower number, closer to 3 million.

In total, the budget office estimates that about 33 million people are uninsured. That’s still less than when former President Barack Obama’s health care law was passed, but it marks a definite reversal from prior years in which the uninsured rate steadily declined.

 ?? Amr Alfiky / New York Times file photo ?? President Joe Biden and a Democratic Congress hope to engineer the first major repair job and expansion of the Affordable Care Act since its passage.
Amr Alfiky / New York Times file photo President Joe Biden and a Democratic Congress hope to engineer the first major repair job and expansion of the Affordable Care Act since its passage.

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