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eridani

(51,907 posts)
Tue Nov 26, 2013, 05:05 AM Nov 2013

Only 5.7% of Americans under 65 are in the individual health insurance market





http://www.familiesusa.org/ACA-individual-market/

As we near the end of month two of open enrollment and HealthCare.gov continues to improve, we have seen a surge in the number of people enrolling in high-quality, affordable health insurance. But concerns remain over the issue of terminated plans in the individual (non-group) market, how consumers are dealing with these terminations, and whether they will have to pay more for new coverage.

We had the same concerns, and we wanted to know exactly how many people are affected by plan terminations as well as how they are affected. In our most recent report, we use national and state-level data to provide concrete answers to these questions.

The bottom line: Less than 1 percent of Americans under the age of 65 face the situation where they would not be offered the same individual market plan and would also not qualify for financial help to buy a new plan. And even this small percentage of people will still benefit from the many consumer protections made possible by the Affordable Care Act.

Like we said last week, the individual market has always been volatile, and in fact, it was much worse before health reform. Known as the “wild wild west” of health insurance, the individual market had very few consumer protections. Many essential health services were not covered, and the plans often had no limit on out-of-pocket costs. All of this added up to a recipe for financial ruin for people who got sick or needed treatment after an accident.

Times have changed, and as with any major change, there will be obstacles along the way. But it’s important to focus on the millions of Americans who have, and will, enroll in new, affordable health insurance that they can rely on.

Thank you for your continued hard work, and please share this important resource with your networks!

Amy Smoucha
Field Director
Families USA
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Only 5.7% of Americans under 65 are in the individual health insurance market (Original Post) eridani Nov 2013 OP
Why are the five percent taking up ninety five percent of the media air time, whining about MADem Nov 2013 #1
Because the opposition will glom on to anything negative. My MIL's TV never goes to Laura PourMeADrink Nov 2013 #3
Waiting HockeyMom Nov 2013 #2

MADem

(135,425 posts)
1. Why are the five percent taking up ninety five percent of the media air time, whining about
Tue Nov 26, 2013, 06:39 AM
Nov 2013

how AWFUL it's going to be for .... everyone (who falls into that one percent of people who might, maybe, who knows...pay more)?

 

Laura PourMeADrink

(42,770 posts)
3. Because the opposition will glom on to anything negative. My MIL's TV never goes to
Tue Nov 26, 2013, 09:05 AM
Nov 2013

anything but FOX....she was over our house and I had MSNBC on and she said "why are they not
talking about ACA?"

IMHO, the Obama Administration made a very critical error. Whenever you roll out a system - you quantify the problems ASAP. If you don't, you leave a void for naysayers to fill. This week you say only 10% got on - then the next week you can show progress by saying now 20%, etc. etc. Instead - all that stuck was "cluster f.."

I stopped listening too when Obama was getting so trashed for "lying" about keeping coverage. It made me feel bad, because most people looked at him like he was lying. I never heard the explanation - did you? Don't understand why he didn't blame the insurers for dropping people? Regardless of how few the segment holds, it gave them ammunition

 

HockeyMom

(14,337 posts)
2. Waiting
Tue Nov 26, 2013, 08:32 AM
Nov 2013

My daughter's wife changed jobs and is waiting for her new employer's health insurance to kick in after 3 months in January. She doesn't make a lot of money and Cobra is too expensive for them. Go on the exchanges for only 3 months coverage? I am sure there are a lot of people in a situation lke my DIL who wait until their new employer's benefits kick in. They are 26 and 34 years old.

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