MEDICAID ENROLLMENT SPIKE A THREAT TO
OBAMACARE STRUCTURE?
(CBS
News) The disastrous rollout of HealthCare.gov may have another serious
problem: A CBS News analysis shows that in many of the 15 state-based health
insurance exchanges more people are enrolling in Medicaid rather than buying
private health insurance. And if that trend continues, there's concern there
won't be enough healthy people buying health insurance for the system to work.
As the
Obamacare website struggles, the administration is emphasizing state-level
success. President Obama said Monday, "There's great demand at the state
level as well. Because there are a bunch of states running their own
marketplaces."
But left
unsaid in the president's remarks: the newly insured in some of those states
are overwhelmingly low-income people signing up for Medicaid at no cost to
them.
Matt
Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors,
said, "We're seeing a huge spike in terms of Medicaid enrollments."
He says
the numbers have surprised him and state officials.
CBS News
has confirmed that in Washington, of the more than 35,000 people newly
enrolled, 87 percent signed up for Medicaid. In Kentucky, out of 26,000 new
enrollments, 82 percent are in Medicaid. And in New York, of 37,000
enrollments, Medicaid accounts for 64 percent. And there are similar stories
across the country in nearly half of the states that run their own exchanges.
Medicaid
experts say they're not sure why they're seeing the lopsided enrollment
numbers, but point out it's easier to enroll in Medicaid than private
insurance.
An
administration spokeswoman says coverage provided by the new law offers "a
range of options so consumers can pick a plan that best meets their needs ...
and their budget."
But Gail
Wilensky, a former Medicaid director, said the numbers are causing concern in
the insurance industry, which needs healthy adults to buy private insurance in
large numbers for the system to work.
"Either
the private insurance enrollments come up somewhere around the expected amount
or there's going to be a problem. ... You need a volume and you need a mix of
people that are healthy as well as high users in private insurance, in order to
have it be sustainable," she said.
The
Obama administration says they expected these high enrollment numbers in
Medicaid because the law expands the number of low-income people who can get
Medicaid, CBS News' Jan Crawford reported on "CBS This Morning."
Supporters say this shows demand. But industry sources say that if we do not
see some real turnaround soon, there could be big problems for the entire
system.
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