WASHINGTON — Really? The Supreme Court’s big health care decision means 30 million or more uninsured Americans are soon going to have coverage? It’s far from that simple.
The ruling does point a way forward for millions who can’t get affordable coverage because they’ve been sick, they’re self-employed or they are otherwise shut out of the insurance plans that most Americans get in the workplace. But the path is clouded for millions more: the people on the bottom rungs of the economic ladder who are supposed to be reached by a major expansion of Medicaid.
Thanks to last week’s ruling on President Barack Obama’s overhaul, states can opt out of the expansion without fear that Washington will shut down all their federal Medicaid financing. And if some states do opt out, a lot of their residents are going to have to find another way to get coverage, or continue to go without.
Roughly 15 million uninsured are expected to get private insurance through new exchanges — marketplaces to be set up in each state by 2014 — that will be shored up by the individual coverage requirement that helps create a big pool of consumers. That mandate, vital to the law, was upheld by the court.
Another 15 million people or so — mainly adults with incomes just above the poverty line — are expected to be reached through Medicaid, and the federal government has generous subsidies to entice the states to come on board. That’s not to say all of them will; Florida Gov. Rick Scott announced over the weekend that his state will opt out, and others will probably follow.
It’s unclear how many of these low-income people would be able to get private health insurance in states that decide not to expand Medicaid. Even modest copayments may be a barrier for some of them.
“We’re talking about individuals making less than $15,000 a year who do not qualify for Medicaid today and who cannot afford to pay for private health insurance,” said Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va. About 60 percent of the more than 265,000 uninsured people in his state are potentially eligible for the Medicaid expansion, also scheduled for 2014.
The Congressional Budget Office, the nonpartisan budgetary scorekeeper for lawmakers, is reassessing its estimate of the coverage impact of the law in light of the court’s Medicaid ruling.
“I’m very worried that the court’s decision makes coverage for these very low-income individuals optional for the states,” said Rockefeller.
Officials at the Health and Human Services department say they are not particularly concerned. They may have lost the stick, but they still have carrots.
The law calls for Washington to cover the full cost of the first three years of the expansion, eventually dropping to a 90 percent share. That’s still far above the average 60 percent federal share of Medicaid costs the federal government currently is paying.
“We believe that states will in fact take advantage of the coverage for these individuals because of many factors,” said Mike Hash, director of the HHS office responsible for the health overhaul. “One is the available federal funding.”
Not every state took part when the Children’s Health Insurance Program was launched in the 1990s, Hash noted. But within two years they were all aboard.
Jonathon Turley, a constitutional law scholar at George Washington University, says the ruling on Medicaid could go a long way toward undermining the overall law, in giving states a possible exit option.
“I look at this law and I see potential chaos if states start opting out,” he said. “In the end,” he said of the law’s standing after the court decision, “it can be viewed as a success only to the extent a crash landing is still considered a landing.”
Many uninsured people still don’t know what to make of Obama’s law. Polls have found much skepticism that it will make much difference, even though expanding coverage is its central goal.
“Those of us who are uninsured have been getting the short end of the stick for so long we don’t figure the stick will get any longer,” said Casey Quinlan, a self-employed consultant and breast cancer survivor who has been uninsured more than three years. She lives near Richmond, Va.
Going without health insurance has long been seen as a personal issue, a misfortune for many and a choice for some. Of those who lose coverage, half get it back in a matter of months, usually by landing a new job. Others face years of uncertainty.
After the Supreme Court decision, Quinlan says she’s hopeful for two reasons. Starting in 2014, people like her with a history of medical problems cannot be turned down for coverage by health insurance companies. And federal subsidies will make premiums more affordable.
Quinlan makes too much money to be eligible for Medicaid, so she plans to pick insurance through the Virginia exchange. The first open enrollment sign-up period is only 16 months away, October 2013.
If all goes smoothly, Quinlan will be able to pick from a range of private insurance offerings with different levels of cost sharing, from “platinum” coverage that features higher monthly premiums but low copays to a “bronze” plan that comes with lower premiums but a high annual deductible. That’s the dollar amount of medical expenses consumers themselves pay each year before insurance kicks in.
The hospitalization, outpatient and prescription benefits will be fairly standard, keyed to plans now available to people with employer coverage. Quinlan said she thinks she will pick low-cost “catastrophic” coverage to keep her monthly premiums manageable.
She’s a little uneasy about having to wait until 2014. What if Republicans deliver on their vow to repeal what they scorn as “Obamacare?”
“People are going to be exhausted by the idea that we’re going to have to slog forward another two years until the market opens up,” she said.
Please read our comment policy before commenting.