Ten states have uninsured rates below 5 percent. What are they doing right?
Ten states have uninsured rates below 5 percent. What are they doing right?
Universal health care remains an unrealized dream for the United States. But in some parts of the country, the dream has drawn closer to a reality in the 13 years since the Affordable Care Act passed.
Overall, the number of uninsured Americans has fallen from 46.5 million in 2010, the year President Barack Obama signed his signature health care law, to about 26 million today. The US health system still has plenty of flaws — beyond the 8 percent of the population who are uninsured, far higher than in peer countries, many of the people who technically have health insurance still find it difficult to cover their share of their medical bills. Nevertheless, more people enjoy some financial protection against health care expenses than in any previous period in US history.
"Everybody has health insurance" is not universal health care. I have health insurance and thousands of dollars of medical debt. And it's good insurance.
I’m sorry to hear about your situation. This article focuses more on efforts to reduce the number of uninsured people and is aware of what you’re saying about costs:
…many of the people who technically have health insurance still find it difficult to cover their share of their medical bills. Nevertheless, more people enjoy some financial protection against health care expenses than in any previous period in US history.
That's great and I'm glad to hear it. It still isn't universal healthcare by any means. Universal healthcare means removing profit motive from the system.
More fun to mention 11 “states” at a 5.1% uninsured cutoff, because number 11 is Peurto Rico -- a US territory that you might expect to be less developed. Since people are forced to run javascript to see the list, I’ll copy it here up to the 6% point:
Massachusetts
District of Columbia
Hawaii
Vermont
Iowa (what’s a red state doing here?)
Rhode Island
Minnesota
New Hampshire
Michigan
New York
Puerto Rico
Connecticut
Pennsylvania
Wisconsin
Kentucky (what’s a red state doing here?)
Delaware
Ohio (what’s a red state doing here? OH will worsen over time; to be fair they only recently became solidly red)
West Virginia
…
(22) California (6.5%.. worse than we might expect for CA)
…
(52) Texas ← ha! Of course Texass is last. 16.6% uninsured in the most notable red state showing us how to take care of people
The general pattern is expected.. the bottom of the list is mostly red states.
It's almost like Democrats tend to work to get Healthcare for people, and Republicans tend not to. Weird, I was told all political parties are the same.
I'll also point out Iowa and Ohio are more purplish states, both voted for Obama twice. Ohio still has a democratic senator.
Kentucky also has a democratic governor that ran on expanding Medicaid access.
Kentucky is there because of Kynect. When the ACA passed, Kentucky was one of the few red states to create our own state insurance exchange instead of relying on the federal exchange (which in hindsight, is a really fucking funny thing for the other red states to do. I thought they hated relying on the federal government?). At the time, it was lauded as a prime example of how to create and run such an exchange. And despite Bevin dismantling it when he was elected, our current governor made sure to restart it.
Also, because our governor at the time was a Democrat (Steve Beshear, the father of our current governor) Kentucky took the Medicaid expansion. So we had the money to cover the extra enrollees.
Yeah Massachusetts hardly surprises. They've had a fantastic healthcare program in effect for over a decade. Crazy what you can accomplish when you mass millions of people under a non-profit public entity payer...