Effect of ObamaCare on Pennsylvania
The Heritage Foundation has a new analysis from the Lewin Group on the impact in Pennsylvania on private health care coverage, the uninsured, and physicians and hospitals of the "American Affordable Health Choices Act."
Effects on Private Coverage and the UninsuredEffects on Physicians and Hospitals
- 51 percent of privately insured Pennsylvania residents would transition out of private insurance. Of the estimated 7.6 million Pennsylvania residents with private health insurance, there would be a decline of 3.9 million people with private coverage.
- 59 percent of Pennsylvania residents with employer-based coverage would lose their current insurance. Of the estimated 7 million Pennsylvania residents with employer-based coverage, 4.1 million people would be shifted out of their current employer-based plan.
- 80 percent of Pennsylvania residents in a health insurance exchange would end up in the public plan. Of the estimated 5.5 million Pennsylvania residents who would obtain coverage through an exchange, 4.4 million would be covered by the public plan.
- 32 percent of the uninsured in Pennsylvania would still lack coverage. Of the estimated 1.4 million Pennsylvania residents without health insurance, the legislation would only reduce the uninsured by 952,600, leaving 447,400 Pennsylvania residents without coverage.
- Physicians in Pennsylvania could see their net annual income decline by $321.4 million, an average loss in income of $6,480 per physician. Of this net loss in income, $1.832 billion is attributable to the public plan using Medicare-based payments. Today, Medicare physician payments in Pennsylvania are 76 percent of private payments.
- Hospitals in Pennsylvania could have their net annual income fall by about $2.7 billion, with hospital total margins dropping to -1.6 percent. This loss in hospital income, greater than total hospital margins, is overwhelmingly attributable to the public plan using Medicare-based payments. Today, Medicare hospital payments in Pennsylvania are 71 percent of private payments.
1 comment:
NB. I am a small business with four employees. My monthly vig per employee to the insurance mafia is twice what this study assumes. One of my employees had breast cancer eight years ago and I had to fight to keep her covered through her treatment. I went back and ten years ago we were paying 20% of what they charge me now. Also, the copays were about 20% of what they are now. I can assure you that my business income has not gone up more than 5 times what it was 10 years ago. I would love to have my employees get health care for half of what they are charged now.
Post a Comment