News
Vivent Health Statement on Affordable Care Act Enrollment
1. Personal responsibility. 500,000 people and all their family members are taking personal responsibility for their health and wellbeing. Coverage may have been eliminated because of a job loss, health care costs may have become unaffordable, or high quality, care may seem to be unavailable for a host of other reasons. Whatever the cause they have taken the steps necessary to be good health care consumers and they should be applauded for that.
2. Health care costs will go down. People without health care coverage still get health care. They may go to emergency rooms or non-urgent matters or have their health care bills written off as uncollectable. This is called uncompensated care. Uncompensated care is a substantial factor in the high and rising health care costs in our country. Lack of insurance forces individuals to forego earlier, less costly preventative care or forces them to access care in far more costly venue. For all of us, the reduction in the number of uninsured Americans will help stymie the cost of health care. The Vivent Health HIV Medical Home demonstrates the cost savings achievable when everyone is gets care – even if they don’t have coverage – by saving millions of dollars each year.
3. Closing the racial disparity gap. The latest data show that a greater percentage of new enrollees are African American. The health care disparities they face are enormous – Black women died of Covid-19 at a rate 4 times greater than white men. African Americans represent 12% of our country and account for 43% of HIV cases. A driving force, although not the only one, is the lack of health care coverage that the Affordable Care Act can overcome. It can also substantially contribute to closing racial health care disparities.
Good health care news is hard to come by these days. Whether it’s the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, the water crisis in communities like Flint, Michigan, high rates of opioid dependency, or the decreasing life expectancy in the United States, the news can be pretty grim. Let’s use this good news on Affordable Care Act enrollment as a jumping off point. Let’s get even more people enrolled during the ongoing Special Enrollment Period. And, let’s invest in systems that assure full access to care, deliver outstanding outcomes and save dollars.