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For Release
Tuesday
April 5, 2011
National health care reform will help 1.3 million Illinois residents obtain health insurance and increase health care spending by state government by about 10 percent when it is fully implemented in 2016, according to a new RAND Corporation study.
The increase in coverage will be caused by a jump in people enrolling in Medicaid and buying policies through a newly created state insurance exchange. Most of the rise in state spending is the result of increased Medicaid costs, according to researchers.
The estimates are from a study of the impact that the major coverage provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will have on Illinois that was conducted by researchers from RAND Health and sponsored by The Council of State Governments, a group that helps state leaders share ideas and insights.
The project examined five states chosen because they represented good geographic distribution and include both large and small states. The other states studied are California, Connecticut, Montana and Texas.
"As states move forward preparing for the many provisions of health care reform, it's important for them to have an adequate forecast of what is ahead," said Christine Eibner, co-author of the study and an economist at RAND, a nonprofit research organization.
"We believe this information will help all states to be better prepared to respond to the challenges posed by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act," said Chris Whatley, Washington director of The Council of State Governments.
Researchers used a microsimulation model developed by RAND to estimate how health reform policies will affect the number of state residents who obtain or change sources of health of insurance, the types of plans they enroll in, and spending in the private and public sectors.
The estimates are intended to help elected officials and policymakers anticipate the choices that will likely be needed by individuals, employers, insurance companies and governments as various provisions of health reform are implemented.
Key findings from the analysis of Illinois include:
The percentage of Illinois residents with health insurance will increase from 85 percent to 97 percent by 2016 under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The number of uninsured non-elderly in Illinois will be about one-fourth of what it would be in absence of the law (390,000 people uninsured compared to 1.75 million people uninsured). By 2016, about 11 percent of non-elderly Illinois residents will obtain their health coverage through an insurance exchange created as a part of health reform. Enrollment in Medicaid will increase by 49 percent, with an additional 770,000 Illinois residents enrolled by 2016. The additional costs to the state would be about $700 million annually by 2016 and $1.3 billion annually in 2020. The cumulative increase from 2011 to 2020 will be an estimated $6.2 billion. There will be no substantial change in the proportion of Illinois workers offered health insurance coverage through their employer by 2016.
The full study can be found at www.rand.org. Other authors of the study are David Auerbach, Sarah Nowak, Jeanne Ringel, Federico Girosi, Elizabeth A. McGlynn and Jeffrey Wasserman.
RAND Health, a division of the RAND Corporation, is the nation's largest independent health policy research program, with a broad research portfolio that focuses on health care costs, quality and public health preparedness, among other topics.
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