In a post on healthinsurance.org, I report that almost 2 million of the private plan enrollees on Healthcare.gov would have qualified for Medicaid if their states had embraced the ACA Medicaid expansion.
That is, about a third of the six million-plus private plan enrollees in non-expansion states and about 22% of all ACA private plan signups would have been in Medicaid if the Supreme Court had not made the expansion optional or if every state had embraced it voluntarily. In that case, there would probably be fewer than 10 million signups in the "Qualified Health Plans" (QHPs) offered on the exchanges today.
In their furious rejection of everything associated with the ACA, and cruel denial of insurance to millions of their constituents, red state governors and legislatures gave the QHP markets in their states a vital boost.
In the healthinsurance.org post, I explore the weakness in exchange offerings that these statistics imply. In brief, because exchange offerings are so much cheaper and offer such dramatically better coverage at the lower end of the subsidy-eligible income range, takeup is dramatically better among the lowest-income eligible uninsured than among the uninsured in higher subsidy-eligible income bands, as Avalere recently concluded.
Here I just want to add some support to my calculation that about 1.9 QHP enrollees in non-expansion states had incomes in the 100-138% FPL range, which would have put them in the Medicaid pool in expansion states.
That is, about a third of the six million-plus private plan enrollees in non-expansion states and about 22% of all ACA private plan signups would have been in Medicaid if the Supreme Court had not made the expansion optional or if every state had embraced it voluntarily. In that case, there would probably be fewer than 10 million signups in the "Qualified Health Plans" (QHPs) offered on the exchanges today.
In their furious rejection of everything associated with the ACA, and cruel denial of insurance to millions of their constituents, red state governors and legislatures gave the QHP markets in their states a vital boost.
In the healthinsurance.org post, I explore the weakness in exchange offerings that these statistics imply. In brief, because exchange offerings are so much cheaper and offer such dramatically better coverage at the lower end of the subsidy-eligible income range, takeup is dramatically better among the lowest-income eligible uninsured than among the uninsured in higher subsidy-eligible income bands, as Avalere recently concluded.
Here I just want to add some support to my calculation that about 1.9 QHP enrollees in non-expansion states had incomes in the 100-138% FPL range, which would have put them in the Medicaid pool in expansion states.