By Research Area Children, Families, and Communities Cyber and Data Sciences Education and Literacy Energy and Environment Health, Health Care, and Aging Homeland Security and Public Safety Infrastructure and Transportation International Affairs Law and Business National Security and Terrorism Science and Technology Workers and the Workplace
For Release
Tuesday
October 1, 2013
Out-of-pocket medical expenses will decline for most consumers who become newly insured or change their source of health insurance under the federal Affordable Care Act, according to a new RAND Corporation study.
The study found that overall the Affordable Care Act will have a varied impact on health spending by individuals and families, depending primarily on their income and whether they would have been uninsured in 2016 without the program.
People who will be newly insured and do not qualify for government subsidies are those who are most likely to see increased total spending as they begin paying premiums for health coverage. Uninsured people who become newly insured under Medicaid will see the largest drop in spending.
Studying Florida and Texas in detail, researchers also estimated consumer spending in states that have chosen to not expand Medicaid. Compared to a hypothetical case in which Medicaid is expanded, the study found that overall health spending will increase for low-income people who remain uninsured or purchase private health insurance in the individual insurance market.
“Among the groups we studied, a clear benefit of the Affordable Care Act is that it will reduce the risk of facing catastrophic medical costs,” said Christine Eibner, a study author and a senior economist at RAND, a nonprofit research organization. “Consumers with the lowest incomes will see the most-dramatic reductions of their risks.”
Researchers used an updated version of the RAND COMPARE microsimulation model, which predicts the effects of health policy changes at state and national levels, to estimate how the Affordable Care Act is likely to change the out-of-pocket costs (co-pays and deductibles) as well as overall care spending (including plan premiums) for people who will become newly insured and people who will change their source of health coverage.
The study also examined the likely impact of the Affordable Care Act on out-of-pocket spending and the risk of facing catastrophic health costs for low-income people in Texas and Florida, two states that have decided not to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.
Among the study's findings:
The largest reduction in out-of-pocket spending will be for the 11.5 million consumers who become newly insured under an expanded Medicaid program, with the analysis predicting their annual out-of-pocket medical costs will fall from $1,463 to $34.
The largest increase in overall health costs is expected to be among people who become newly insured on the individual market and have incomes more than four times the federal poverty level. An estimated 3.3 million consumers are expected to spend $7,202 in 2016 under the Affordable Care Act, compared to $5,368 if the law was not in place.
Some low-income people in states that do not expand Medicaid could see higher health spending compared what would happen if Medicaid was expanded. For example, a Texas resident with an income below the federal poverty level who does not qualify for Medicaid will face costs of $1,831 per year, compared to $28 if they were covered by Medicaid.
Nationally, the 11.5 million people who become newly insured by Medicaid will see their risk of spending at least 10 percent of their income on medical costs drop from 45 percent to 5 percent.
The research was sponsored by the Commonwealth Fund.
The report, “Effects of the Affordable Care Act on Consumer Health Care Spending and Risk of Catastrophic Health Costs,” is available at www.rand.org. Other authors of the study are Sarah A. Nowak, David M. Adamson and Evan Saltzman.
RAND Health 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.
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
About the RAND Corporation
The RAND Corporation is a research organization that develops solutions to public policy challenges to help make communities throughout the world safer and more secure, healthier and more prosperous.
Connect Contact Us
Contact Us Locations
I am interested in Jobs at RAND Media Resources Congressional Resources Doing Business with RAND Supporting RAND Educational Opportunities Alumni Association
Follow RAND Corporation on Facebook RAND Corporation on Twitter RAND Corporation on LinkedIn RAND Corporation on YouTube RAND Corporation on Instagram RAND Corporation RSS Feeds RAND Corporation mobile applications
Stay Informed
Subscribe to the weekly Policy Currents newsletter to receive updates on the issues that matter most.
Stay Informed RAND Policy Currents Get weekly updates from RAND.
Email Sign Up
View all email newsletters
Resources Multimedia Latest Reports Browse by Author RAND Classics Databases and Tools Site Information Site Map PRIVACY POLICY Support Policy Feedback Help