Practice Economics

ACA: Uninsured patient numbers dropped after first enrollment


 

References

The uninsured rate of working adults in the United States declined from 20% to 15% after the first Affordable Care Act open enrollment period.

Sara Collins, Ph.D., of the Commonwealth Fund and her associates also found that 6 in 10 newly covered patients have used their health plan to visit a doctor or hospital, or to fill a prescription.

The Commonwealth Fund tracking survey examined data from 4,425 adults about health and insurance trends from April 9 to June 2 and compared the findings with those from a 2013 Commonwealth Fund survey.

Alexander Raths/Fotolia.com

The uninsured rate among patients aged 19-64 years went from 20% for July to September 2013 to 15% for April to June 2014.

The uninsured rate among patients aged 19-64 years went from 20% for July to September 2013 to 15% for April to June 2014. For young adults (19-34 years), the uninsured rate dropped from 28% to 18% over the same time period. Among the Hispanic community, uninsured patients declined from 36% to 23%, the survey found. The findings were published July 10.

In states that expanded Medicaid, the uninsured rate fell from 28% to 17% for patients at the poverty level. However, in states that chose not to expand Medicaid, the rate of uninsured poor patients changed from 38% to 36%.

The survey findings provide early evidence that the ACA’s coverage provisions are helping Americans most at risk for lacking health insurance, Dr. Collins and associates noted. Evidence also shows that the new insurance coverage is helping people gain new access to the health care system. Nearly three-fourths of previously uninsured adults who used their new plan reported they would not have received the same care prior to gaining coverage.

agallegos@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @legal_med

Recommended Reading

NIH expands its Undiagnosed Diseases Network
MDedge Cardiology
When it’s more than burnout, where can physicians turn?
MDedge Cardiology
Fee schedule: Medicare gives details on care coordination pay, SGR cut
MDedge Cardiology
Accountable care organizations may fuel new litigation theories
MDedge Cardiology
Accountable care organizations may fuel new litigation theories
MDedge Cardiology
ICD-10: Dual coding is only for testing, claims backlog
MDedge Cardiology
Mayo Clinic tops hospital rankings for 2014-2015
MDedge Cardiology
EHR use hasn’t sent Medicare payments soaring
MDedge Cardiology
Physician groups take closer look at telemedicine
MDedge Cardiology
Seventy percent of docs using EHRs to e-prescribe
MDedge Cardiology