EFTA01202005.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 246.0 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 3 pages
HUFFPOST POLITICS
The Uninsured Rate Just Keeps
Falling, New Survey Shows
The shore of Americans without health insurance has fallen more than 4 percentage points to 12.9 percent since Obomacore
coverage began o year ago, according too new Gallup poll.
Jeffrey Young: January 7, 2015
The share of Americans without HEALTH INSURANCE fell below 13 percent by the end of 2014, a rapid
drop from just a year before and a clear sign that one of Obamacare's primary missions is succeeding,
according to new data from the polling firm Gallup.
In the fourth quarter of last year, 12.9 percent of Americans were uninsured, a steep drop from 17.1
percent a year before. The change was driven mainly by increased coverage through the AFFORDABLE
CARE ACT's HEALTH INSURANCE EXCHANGES and by the expansion of Medicaid access in more than half
the country, the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index shows, based on more than 43,000 interviews
conducted between Oct. 1 and Dec. 30.
President Barack Obama and the congressional Democrats who enacted the Affordable Care Act had
broader aims for the law than just covering the uninsured, including providing stronger consumer
protections for HEALTH INSURANCE customers and curtailing unsustainable increases in national health
care spending. But extending coverage to uninsured people, especially those with low and moderate
incomes eligible for FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE, is the most tangible effect of the law, and survey after survey
shows it's working. These gains are threatened, however, by the newly empowered Republican Congress
and the Supreme Court.
"The Affordable Care Act has accomplished one of its goals: increasing the percentage of Americans who
have HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE," the Gallup report says. "The uninsured rate as measured by Gallup
has dropped 4.2 points since the requirement to have health insurance or pay a fine went into effect. It
will likely drop further as plans purchased during the current open enrollment period take effect."
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EFTA01202005
Percentage of U.S. Adults Without Health Insurance, by Quarter
Do you have health insurance coverage?
Among adults aged 18 and older
II %No
19
t8.0
18
17.1
17 10.4
16 3 16.4
16.1
LG. 3
15.6
16.1 16.1
4 1O 444
13.4
13 13.4
12.9
12
Q1 QI Q1 Q1 Q1 Q1
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 201.4
Quater 12008-Quarter 4 2014
Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index
GALLUP'
The second Obamacare sign-up period began Nov. 15 and ends Feb. 15. As of late December, 6.4 million
people had enrolled into private HEALTH INSURANCE policies for 2015, about 2 million of whom were new
to the Obamacare exchanges.
The Department of Health and HUMAN SERVICES estimates that more than 9 million people will be
covered by private Obamacare exchange plans by the end of the year. In addition, nearly 10 million more
people are covered by Medicaid or the Children's HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM, two joint federal-state
benefits for low-income households, than were covered before Obamacare enrollment kicked off in
October 2013.
The new Gallup survey shows declines in the uninsured rate for all segments of the working-age
population, and the share of people ages 18-64 without coverage stood at 15.5 percent in the fourth
quarter of 2014. The largest decrease was among people ages 18-25, a population that experienced a 6.1
percentage point drop in uninsurance since 2013 to 17.4 percent. Almost all people 65 and older have
coverage through Medicare. Low-income Americans and blacks also saw disproportionate declines in their
uninsured rates, Gallup found.
Other SURVEYS have shown the improvements in the uninsured rate to be geographically uneven.
Southern states with higher-than-average uninsured populations, for instance, rejected the Medicaid
expansion, which the Supreme Court made optional for states in 2012, leaving millions of low-income
residents uninsured.
And OBAMACARE'S COVERAGE expansion is in grave jeopardy this year.
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Republicans newly in control of Congress after the November midterm elections aim to dismantle the law,
starting with a House vote this week on a bill that would weaken the Affordable Care Act's requirement
that large employers provide health benefits or pay penalties. Obama has vowed to resist these efforts.
But the more serious danger for Obamacare, and for the millions who have gained coverage under the
law, is King v. Burwell, a case now pending before the Supreme Court. The plaintiffs claim the federal
government lacks the legal authority to provide health insurance subsidies to people living in states that
didn't establish HEALTH INSURANCE EXCHANGES and allowed the Department of Health and Human
Services to do so instead. A ruling against the Obama administration would invalidate the tax credits 85
percent of exchange enrollees receive, making their insurance policies unaffordable and likely causing
most to drop their coverage.
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