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Impact of the Affordable Care Act on the Latino Community National Hispanic Medical Association Meeting Steven Weinberger, MD, FACP Executive Vice President.

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Presentation on theme: "Impact of the Affordable Care Act on the Latino Community National Hispanic Medical Association Meeting Steven Weinberger, MD, FACP Executive Vice President."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Impact of the Affordable Care Act on the Latino Community National Hispanic Medical Association Meeting Steven Weinberger, MD, FACP Executive Vice President and CEO American College of Physicians

3 Important baseline statistics  >50 million Hispanics in US (17% of total US population)  Fastest growing racial or ethnic population in US  By 2050: anticipated 30% of total population  Currently: Hispanics have highest uninsured rate among racial/ethnic groups (~1/3 lack coverage) Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

4 Additional important statistics  Hispanics are a younger population than non-Hispanic Whites  47% of Hispanics are <26 years old (compared with 30% of non-Hispanic Whites)  3 times less likely than non-Hispanic Whites to be >65 years old (6% vs. 18%)  76% of all Hispanics and >90% of Hispanic children are US citizens Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

5 Income/employment statistics  Non-elderly Hispanics as likely as non-elderly, non-Hispanic Whites to have a full-time worker in the family, but more likely to be in low-wage blue-collar jobs and to have low family income  More than half (53%) of non-elderly Hispanics employed in agriculture, service, or construction industries  1 out of 3 Hispanics have family income below poverty level (compared with 1/7 non-Hispanic Whites) Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

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7 Insurance coverage statistics  Hispanics tend to be employed in jobs that do not offer employer-sponsored insurance  When offered, often not affordable  Hispanics account for ~1/3 of total non- elderly uninsured  2011 data: 15.5 million uninsured non-elderly Hispanics (~12.6M adults, 3M children)  7 in 10 uninsured Hispanics are in families with at least 1 full-time worker Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

8 More insurance coverage statistics  Hispanics ~half as likely as non-Hispanic Whites to have private health insurance (39% vs. 71%)  Hispanics >twice as likely as non-Hispanic Whites to be uninsured (32% vs. 13%)  Medicaid  Covers >1/2 Hispanic children  Much more limited role for adults Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

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10 Opportunities provided by ACA  Medicaid expansion: initial plan for expanding eligibility to incomes up to 138% of poverty level  Supreme Court ruling: expansion a state option  Purchase of insurance through health insurance exchanges  Premium tax credits available to help moderate income individuals pay for coverage Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

11 Impact of ACA on Hispanic coverage  Nearly all uninsured Hispanics would qualify for either Medicaid expansion or tax credits  57% have income below Medicaid limit  Additional 38% could receive tax subsidies to purchase coverage through exchanges  But… non-citizen Hispanics face eligibility restrictions  46% of uninsured Hispanics are non-citizens (lawfully present or undocumented immigrants) Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

12 Lawfully present immigrants are…  Subject to 5-year waiting period before eligible for Medicaid and CHIP  ~1/2 states have eliminated waiting period for lawfully present children and pregnant women  These eligibility restrictions remain in place under ACA  Able to purchase coverage on exchanges (and receive tax credits) without a waiting period Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

13 Undocumented immigrants are…  Ineligible for Medicaid now  Ineligible for Medicaid under ACA  Ineligible for premium tax credits under ACA  Prohibited from purchasing exchange coverage at full cost Note: states may provide state-funded coverage to documented or undocumented immigrants, but without federal matching funds Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

14 Numerical impact of ACA on coverage of pre-ACA uninsured population <65 y.o. Uninsured population Before ACA: millions (percent) After ACA: millions (percent) Change: millions (percent) White23.1 (19%)10.8 (6.5%)-12.3 (-7.4%) Black7.4 (21.6%)3.4 (9.8%)-4.0 (-11.8%) Hispanic16.0 (33.3%)10.1 (21.1%)-5.9 (-12.2%) Asian/other3.7 (18.5%)2.1 (10.4%)-1.6 (-8.2%) TOTAL50.3 (18.7%)26.4 (9.8%)-23.8 (-8.9%) Source: Health Affairs. 2012; 31:920-930

15 Impact of HCA on preventive services  Requirement (of most insurance plans) to cover prevention and wellness benefits without cost sharing  Examples of specific services:  Well child visits  BP and cholesterol screening  Pap smears and mammograms  Influenza immunization  HIV screening for individuals at high risk

16 Other impact of ACA on Latinos  Improved chronic disease management through focus on quality/quality metrics  Increased funding for community health centers  Diversifying health care workforce (e.g., tripling number of clinicians in National Health Service Corps (Latino physicians are 21% of NHSC)  Increased focus on health disparities (e.g., PCORI; National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities raised to NIH Institute level) Source: ASPE Research Brief, HHS, 2012

17 Eventual penalty for not complying with coverage requirement  The greater of:  $695/year, up to maximum of 3x that ($2085) per family  2.5% of family income  Exemptions from penalty  Undocumented immigrants  Lowest available premium exceeds 8% of family income  Income is below the tax filing threshold

18 Important implications  Continued efforts to get state expansion of Medicaid are critical, especially in states with large numbers of uninsured Hispanics  Targeted outreach and enrollment assistance is also critical, so that currently uninsured but eligible Hispanics are enrolled for coverage  Challenges: application process, language barriers, confusion about eligibility, fear about immigration enforcement Source: Kaiser Family Foundation


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