San Antonio Express-News

HHS chief touts boosting minorities’ ACA coverage

- By Julian Gill julian.gill@chron.com

Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra visited Texas this week to shed light on a recent rise in Affordable Care Act insurance coverage in the Black and Latino population nationwide, and to encourage Texans to find a health plan when open enrollment starts Nov. 1.

A new federal analysis shows 1.3 million Black people and 2.6 million Latino people enrolled in health coverage through Healthcare.gov during the 2022 open enrollment period, representi­ng a 49 percent and 53 percent increase, respective­ly.

But the data does not go into greater detail about states and counties, and it remains to be seen how the increase will affect the uninsured rate in Texas, consistent­ly ranked as the worst in the nation.

In 2020, census data shows about 17 percent of the Texas population did not have health insurance, more than double the national rate. Texas is one of 12 states that have declined to expand Medicaid eligibilit­y, to include families whose household income is at or below 138 percent of the poverty level, or roughly $38,000 per year for a family of four.

“If Texas were to expand Medicaid, we’d have

the largest number of Americans getting enrolled, getting access to health care immediatel­y,” Becerra said during a Wednesday news conference at a Legacy Community Health clinic in a predominan­tly Latino neighborho­od in Houston.

Becerra, a former lawyer, last year became the first Latino to oversee the federal health agency and has pushed his goals of expanding health access and equity. The federal report released Tuesday attributed the growth of marketplac­e coverage partly to a boost in federal funding for outreach and education. The Biden administra­tion also has said the American Rescue Plan Act helped bring ACA premiums to an alltime low and enrollment to an all-time high.

Becerra also visited

MD Anderson Cancer Center later in the afternoon to discuss President Joe Biden’s goal of reducing cancer death rates by at least 50 percent over the next quarter century.

One of the panelists at Legacy, Shawn Kingsley, spoke to the rise in ACA enrollment among people who had been covered through private insurance. A profession­al chef, Kingsley previously had coverage through Cigna; when that ended, he enrolled in a plan through the marketplac­e with the help of Legacy Community Health. He said the coverage helped him get his blood sugar under control.

“I can’t say enough about how important it is that we extend health care to everyone,” he said.

 ?? Jon Shapley/staff photograph­er ?? HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra listens to Peter Pisters, president of MD Anderson Cancer Center.
Jon Shapley/staff photograph­er HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra listens to Peter Pisters, president of MD Anderson Cancer Center.

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