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Nearly 54 Million Americans Have Pre-Existing
Conditions That Would Make Them Uninsurable in the Individual Market without
the ACA
Almost
Half of Non-Elderly Families Have At Least One Adult with a Pre-Existing
Condition
An
updated KFF analysis estimates that almost 54 million
people – or 27% of all adults under 65 —have pre-existing health conditions
that would likely have made them uninsurable in the individual markets that
existed in most states before the Affordable Care Act.
The
share of adults under 65 with such declinable pre-existing conditions varies
significantly across states, from at least a third in West Virginia (37%),
Arkansas (34%), Kentucky (34%), and Mississippi (34%) to a little more than
one in five in Colorado (22%).
Older
working-age Americans (ages 55-64) are the most likely age group to have
declinable pre-existing conditions (44%), more than twice the share (18%)
among the youngest age group (18-34). Women are more likely than men to have
declinable conditions (30% compared to 24%).
Almost
half (45%) of non-elderly families include at least one adult with a medical
condition who might not be able to buy individual insurance without the ACA’s
prohibition of medical underwriting.
The
analysis comes as the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals weighs a decision in the
Texas v. Azar case, which seeks to overturn the entire
Affordable Care Act, including the provisions that prohibit insurers from
denying coverage or charging more to people with pre-existing conditions. The
Trump administration has joined the conservative state Attorneys General in
arguing that the ACA should be invalidated.
While
most people with pre-existing conditions are covered now through employers or
public programs such as Medicaid, people may look to the individual market
for coverage during periods of transition, such as losing or changing a job,
leaving a job due to illness, starting a business, aging off a parent’s
policy, retiring before age 65, or losing Medicaid eligibility.
Before
the ACA protections took effect in 2014, private insurers in the individual
market could use applicants’ health status, history and other risk factors to
determine whether and under what terms to issue coverage. Some conditions
that could lead to automatic denials of coverage at the time include
cancer, diabetes, epilepsy, heart disease, and pregnancy.
Using
2018 data from two large government surveys, the analysis estimates the total
number of non-elderly adults in each state with a health condition that could
lead to a denial of coverage in the individual insurance market, based on
pre-ACA field underwriting guides for brokers and agents. The estimates do
not include people with other health conditions that would not necessarily
cause a denial, but could lead to higher insurance costs based on
underwriting.
Whether
and how people with pre-existing conditions could be affected if they seek
coverage on the individual market in the future depends on the outcome of the
ongoing court challenge, and how federal and state lawmakers respond to the
court’s decision.
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues, the Kaiser Family Foundation is
a nonprofit organization based in San Francisco, California.
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Friday, October 4, 2019
Nearly 54 Million Americans Have Pre-Existing Conditions That Would Make Them Uninsurable in the Individual Market without the ACA
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