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While Republicans tried to end Obamacare, uninsured rate unchanged in Trump's first year

Phil Galewitz
Kaiser Health News

Despite Republican resistance to the Affordable Care Act, the percentage of Americans without health insurance in President Donald Trump's first year in office remained the same as during the last year of the Obama administration, according to a closely watched report from the Census Bureau released Wednesday.

The uninsured rate did rise in 14 states in 2017, but it was not immediately clear why. The states, including Texas, Florida, Vermont, Minnesota and Oregon vary dramatically by location, politics and whether they expanded Medicaid under the federal health law or not.

The uninsured rate fell in three states: California, New York and Louisiana.

An estimated 8.8 percent of the population, or about 28.5 million people, did not have health insurance coverage at any point in 2017. That was slightly more than the 28.1 million in 2016, but did not affect the uninsured rate. Census officials said the difference was not statistically significant.

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About 17 percent of Americans were uninsured in 2010, the year Barack Obama and a Democratic congressional majority enacted the Affordable Care Act. Trump and congressional Republicans have consistently opposed the law.

The Census numbers are considered the gold standard for tracking who has insurance because the survey samples are so large.

Analysts credit the health law with helping drive down the number of uninsured.

Also a factor: The proportion of people without insurance typically falls as unemployment rates decline. That’s because more people can get health coverage at work or can better afford buying insurance on their own.

The nation’s unemployment rate has been falling since before 2011. It was 4.1 percent in the last quarter of 2017, the lowest level since before the Great Recession began in December 2007.

President Donald Trump appears at a fundraiser in Sioux Falls, South Dakota last week.

Critics of the health law said the report emphasized its deficiencies.

“Today’s report is another reminder that Obamacare has priced insurance out of the reach of millions of working families," Marie Fishpaw and Doug Badger of the Heritage Foundation said in a statement. "Despite a growing economy and very low unemployment rate, the uninsured rate remains virtually unchanged.”

But the law’s supporters saw the glass as half full.

“These numbers show the resilience of the Affordable Care Act,” said Judith Solomon, senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

She said people still value the coverage they receive from the health law even as it’s been under attack by Trump and Republicans who want to repeal it.

“It’s good news because the numbers show the strength of the ACA but bad news in that we have not seen further progress," she said.

But she expressed concern about the large number of states seeing uninsured rates increase.

Uninsured rates last year ranged from a high of more than 17 percent in Texas to low of just under 3 percent in Massachusetts.

Former President Barack Obama speaks at the University of Illinois last week.

West Virginia had one of the sharpest increases in uninsured.

About 14 percent of the state’s residents were uninsured in 2013 before the ACA’s premium subsidies and Medicaid expansion began.

That rate fell by nearly two-thirds by 2016. Last year, however, West Virginia’s uninsured rate crept up 0.8 percentage points to 6.1 percent, according to the Census.

Carol Bush, 58, of Elkins, W.Va., expects to lose coverage Oct. 1 because her job is ending.

It's an unfortunate irony: Elkins has served for the past three years as a navigator helping people in her community find coverage in the health law marketplaces. Federal officials have largely scrapped that program.

The Trump administration cut funding by more than 80 percent during the past two years, saying it had no proof that navigators were helping people find coverage.

Only if consumers signed up in the presence of the navigator was the session considered a success.

Carol Bush, who has worked as a health insurance navigator the past three years in West Virginia, expects to be uninsured by month’s end. She is losing her job amid Trump administration cuts to the Affordable Care Act navigator program.

Bush had coverage through the University of West Virginia, which has a navigator contract that ends at the end of this month. Without employer coverage, Bush said, the cheapest insurance she could find would be about $1,100 a month. She won’t qualify for a federal subsidy to reduce her premium because her family’s income is too great. Her husband is insured through Medicare.

She said she has strongly considered going without insurance because of the cost, but she knows she needs it.

“In all honesty, I've always had some kind of health insurance, and the thought of being without it worries me,” she said. “I can't risk getting seriously ill and incurring enormous debt at this point in my life. Peace of mind has a value too.”

Shenandoah Community Health Center, a federally funded health clinic in Martinsburg, W.Va., has started to see an increase in uninsured patients the past year, CEO Michael Hassing said, but it’s still below the levels it saw before the health law’s coverage expansion began in 2014.

Hassing said he believes many patients have dropped coverage because they believed the ACA’s individual mandate had been eliminated.

“Folks say, ‘I don’t need to have it anymore,’ and they let it go,” he said.

While the GOP failed last year to repeal the law, it was able to strip out one of its key features — the individual penalty for not having coverage.

The vote last December eliminated that penalty starting in 2019 — meaning Americans are still required to have health coverage this year or face the consequences on their 2018 taxes.

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is an editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation that is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.