The Journal Abstract: November 2012

Health Insurance Coverage in the Houston-Galveston Area Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act  

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 Abstract of Journal Article – November 2012 

Tex Med. 2012;108(11);61.

By Charles Begley, PhD; Ashish Deshmukh, MPH; Karl Eschbach, PhD; Negin Fouladi, MS, MPH; Qian June Liu; and Thomas Reynolds, PhD 

This study projects the number of nonelderly people who could gain coverage under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) for the period from 2014 through 2020 in the 13-county Houston-Galveston area region. The major PPACA provisions aimed at expanding coverage as well as the populations targeted by those provisions are described. Projections of the impact of PPACA on coverage in the area are based on estimates of growth in the size of targeted populations in each county and the anticipated responses of those populations to the major provisions of PPACA. The projections indicate that, if fully implemented, PPACA could cut the uninsurance rate in the region by half, from 26% in 2010 to 13% in 2020. This change translates into health insurance coverage for approximately 2 million additional people, from the current 4.2 million to a projected 5.9 million. The number of Medicaid enrollees could increase by an estimated 600,000 (a 79% increase), although private insurance coverage, which could increase by as much as 1 million enrollees (a 30% increase), will remain the primary source of coverage for most people. Coverage gains from PPACA will vary considerably by county, depending on the age-income-citizenship characteristics of the population, current uninsurance rates, and the rate of population growth.    


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Last Updated On

November 20, 2017

Originally Published On

October 16, 2012