Apr 7 2014
According to Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, consumers who obtained insurance through the federal and state online insurance marketplaces were not simply swapping out other insurance. In many cases, according to the survey, the health law is having its intended effect.
NBC News: Report: 5.4 Million Newly Insured Under Obamacare
More than 5 million Americans who didn't have health insurance before have been able to get coverage since September, according to a new report released Thursday. The report seeks to answer one of the big questions surrounding the government statistics surrounding the law known as Obamacare -; how many people have gained health insurance under the new rules? Early statistics had suggested that many of the people who rushed to buy the plans available on the new health insurance exchanges were just swapping out of other coverage. But the new report suggests the law is having its intended effect of getting people covered who weren't before (Fox, 4/4).
PBS NewsHour: Survey Finds 5.4 Million Americans Gained Insurance Under New Health Law
More than 5.4 million Americans gained health insurance since September, according to a survey released Thursday by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The results are the first indicator of how many uninsured Americans may have benefited from the Affordable Care Act since the insurance marketplaces opened last October. Supporters of the law say it's another reason to be optimistic (Kane, 4/3).
Meanwhile, the Washington Post's fact checker takes a look at President Barack Obama's comments about spending on efforts to oppose during his enrollment "victory lap" -
The Washington Post's The Fact Checker: 'Billions' Spent On Attacking Obamacare
A reader asked us about this comment during the president's victory lap on the Affordable Care Act. Were there really "billions" of dollars' worth of commercials opposing the law? Our initial reaction was that this was just a bit of presidential hyperbole. On the other hand, the president did make this assertion in a major speech. So let's see what the data say (Kessler, 4/4).
This article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
|