Health Insurance - NFL greats demand lifetime salaries, health insurance in blistering threat to boycott Hall of Fame
A new survey
from the U.S. Census Bureau found the Missouri uninsured rate remained
steady at 9.1 percent in 2017 despite several Congressional attempts to
gut the Affordable Care Act and the repeal of the individual mandate,
the requirement that all Americans have insurance.
Missouri’s
percentage of uninsured people is in line with the national rate of 9
percent. The number of uninsured people nationwide has been falling
since 2013, when it was 13.4 percent.
States
that expanded Medicaid had lower uninsured rates. In Illinois, 6.8
percent of people in Illinois lacked health insurance in 2017, according
to the Census survey.
Experts predicted the lack of support for
the Affordable Care Act in Washington would result in the uninsured rate
going up. In 2017, that didn’t happen. But there will likely be a
greater change in the coming years, said Jen Bersdale, executive
director of Missouri Health Care For All.
Even though Congress
passed the law eliminating the penalty for not having insurance in late
2016, it won’t go into effect until 2019.
“I’m not surprised we
didn’t see huge effects from those policies in 2017,” Bersdale said.
“I’ll be curious and concerned to see what the 2018 numbers show.”
The
state can’t make any definitive claims on why Missourians are
uninsured, said Angela Nelson, director of the Missouri Department of
Insurance's Division of Market Regulation. The department only tracks
Missourians who buy individual or group-based plans, she said, and
people with those plans only account for 20 percent of the state’s
population.
“One of the things that’s missing when you look at
some of those surveys at the federal level that give us information
about our state is that we don’t really get a sense of the motivations
behind it,” Nelson said.
But Nelson said mandated coverage is
only one factor that compels people whether or not to buy a plan. For
example, the state mandates automobile coverage, but 13 percent of
drivers still are uninsured, she said.
“Even with compulsory
coverage laws, those don’t’ necessarily always guarantee you get a zero
percent uninsurance rate,” she said.
Bersdale and Nelson said
high premium prices are likely driving people out of the market. While
many people receive income-based subsidies to offset the cost of buying
insurance on the health insurance marketplace, there are others who make
too much money to qualify and bear the brunt of double-digit rate
increases.
“These plans … are getting more and more expensive
with larger and larger out-of-pocket costs,” Bersdale said. “We’ve
certainly heard people who say, ‘If it goes up another hundred bucks a
month, I’m out, I just can’t do it anymore.’ We know people who have
already had to make that call.”
source : http://news.stlpublicradio.org/post/rate-missourians-without-health-insurance-remains-9-percent-census-finds#stream/0