A major goal of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was to decrease the number of uninsured people in the US. The coverage expansions were implemented in 2014. Between 2013 and 2018, the number of uninsured people in the US dropped from over 41 million to just over 27 million. (1) Supporters of the law can claim that the number of uninsured people has dropped by more than 14 million people. Those who believe the ACA did not go far enough will point out that more than 27 million people in the US still lack health insurance coverage. So, who are these 27 million, and why do they lack health insurance coverage despite Medicaid expansion, a new subsidy system, and a mandate that everyone have coverage?

People

A 2018 report funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Urban Institute examined the characteristics of the nonelderly uninsured population. The report provides the following granular insight regarding uninsured groupings by rationale. (2)

Uninsured Recap

What’s Next?

The bottom line is that the US is the only economically developed country without a formal universal healthcare system. This is a social-justice issue that cannot be politically ignored. Several states have introduced ballot initiatives to create universal coverage in their state. Finding the money within each state to fund the initiatives has been too much to overcome so far. Expect left-leaning states to continue to explore state-based efforts to achieve universal coverage if the federal government is unable to do so.

“Healthcare is a right” signs will be common in presidential campaign stops. If our country believes healthcare is a right, the question becomes whether this right has a corresponding responsibility—the responsibility to pay for it. The balance between the right to have something and the responsibility to pay for it, as an individual or as a country, is the essence of the political healthcare debate.

Closing

After the last several blogs that I’ve posted, here’s what I want you to know about the people involved and insurance coverage. If you had 100 people in the room representing a cross-section of the American population, the group would look something like this:

Thoughts? Questions? I’d love to hear from you on this topic!

Next week, I’ll take a look at a little something I call “Underwronging and the Health Wars.” Be sure to tune in. And, if you haven’t already, I encourage you to sign up for our “Insiders’ Club” where you’ll be notified when I release new information AND receive a FREE copy of my book “The Voter’s Guide to Healthcare: A non-partisan, candid, and relevant look at politics and healthcare in America” when it’s available.

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