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Proposed regulations could limit access to affordable health coverage for workers' children and family members

Authors :
Ken, Jacobs
Dave, Graham-Squire
Dylan H, Roby
Gerald F, Kominski
Christina M, Kinane
Jack, Needleman
Greg, Watson
Daphna, Gans
Source :
Policy brief (UCLA Center for Health Policy Research).
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Key Findings. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) is designed to offer premium subsidies to help eligible individuals and their families purchase insurance coverage when affordable job-based coverage is not available. However, the law is unclear on how this affordability protection is applied in those instances where self-only coverage offered by an employer is affordable but family coverage is not. Regulations recently proposed by the Department of the Treasury would make family members ineligible for subsidized coverage in the exchange if an employee is offered affordable self-only coverage by an employer, even if family coverage is unaffordable. This could have significant financial consequences for low- and moderate-income families that fall in this gap. Using an alternative interpretation of the law could allow the entire family to enter the exchange when family coverage is unaffordable, which would broaden access to coverage. However, this option has been cited as cost prohibitive. In this brief we consider a middle ground alternative that would base eligibility for the individual worker on the cost of self-only coverage, but would use the additional cost to the employee for family coverage as the basis for determining affordability and eligibility for subsidies for the remaining family members. We find that: Under the middle ground alternative scenario an additional 144,000 Californians would qualify for and use premium subsidies in the California Health Benefit Exchange, half of whom are children. Less than 1 percent of those with employer-based coverage would move to subsidized coverage in the California Health Benefit Exchange as a result of having unaffordable coverage on the job.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Policy brief (UCLA Center for Health Policy Research)
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........e5aa894de32751f86767c31136cf0acc