Only 11% of Medicare Enrollees Were Previously Unemployed?
Splat.
Early signals suggest the majority of the 2.2 million
people who sought to enroll in private insurance through new
marketplaces through Dec. 28 were previously covered elsewhere, raising
questions about how swiftly this part of the health overhaul will be
able to make a significant dent in the number of uninsured.
Insurers, brokers and consultants estimate at least two-thirds of
those consumers previously bought their own coverage or were enrolled in
employer-backed plans.
The data, based on surveys of enrollees, are preliminary. But
insurers say the tally of newly insured consumers is falling short of
their expectations, a worrying trend for an industry looking to the law
to expand the ranks of its customers.
About 48 million Americans were uninsured in 2012. The health law is
expected to cut 25 million from that total by expanding state-run
Medicaid programs and the pool of privately insured people who buy
through state marketplaces, also called exchanges.
Only 11% of consumers who bought new coverage under the law were
previously uninsured, according to a McKinsey & Co. survey of
consumers thought to be eligible for the health-law marketplaces. The
result is based on a sampling of 4,563 consumers performed between
November and January, of whom 389 had enrolled in new insurance.
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