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Nearly 27 million Americans lost their job-based health insurance in pandemic, study shows


IMAGE: Health Insurance Coverage Before and After Job Loss Among People in a Family Experiencing Job Loss as of May 2, 2020, courtesy kff.org

An estimated 27 million Americans may have lost employer-based health insurance because of pandemic layoffs, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation report released Wednesday.

From CNN:

Not all of those people will be left uninsured, however. Some 12.7 million would be eligible for Medicaid and another 8.4 million could qualify for subsidies to buy coverage on the Affordable Care Act exchanges — though Kaiser notes they would have to sign up for that coverage.

But that would still leave about 5.7 million people who would have to shoulder the full cost of new policies, which could prove too expensive for newly unemployed people. They could continue their employer coverage through COBRA, but would have to pay the entire premium, which totals $7,188 for a single person and $20,576 for a family of four, on average — putting that group at risk for becoming uninsured.

The report is the latest in a series of dire projections of how the steep economic downturn has likely left millions of people without employer-based policies, which cover roughly 153 million non-elderly workers and their dependents.

READ MORE:

Nearly 27 million Americans may have lost job-based health insurance, study shows
[Tami Luhby, CNN, 8:26 AM ET, Wed May 13, 2020]

Eligibility for ACA Health Coverage Following Job Loss
[KAISER FAMILY FOUNDATION, Rachel Garfield, Gary Claxton, Anthony Damico, and Larry Levitt, Published: May 13, 2020]

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