• Health insurance remains very expensive. ACA’s marketplaces and Medicaid expansion make health coverage a good deal for those near the poverty line, but for those who just cross the poverty line often struggle to pay health plan premiums, and face deductibles that are much higher than in a typical employer health plan. Premiums were lower than expected and grew slowly in the first three years after …show more content…
Health insurance premiums are expected to rise in 2017. Many insurance companies are dropping out of market or raising premium rates because of their initial low charges to cover the costs they have faced, causing them to lose money. Such reaction left consumers with fewer options to buy insurance, leading to rising premiums. It might be even larger in rural areas, where consumers tend to have fewer options for coverage. Furthermore, there aren’t enough young adults enrolling for the plans that would be financially beneficial to the insurers. Also, the Congressional Budget Office estimates were way off from the start. All these have led to the rising costs of private sector health …show more content…
Specific topic for Health care reform at KFF provides practical solutions for high quality, innovative, and affordable health care throughout the United States. KFF serves as a non-partisan source of facts, conducts research, develops policy recommendations, and provides technical expertise in healthcare strategies. The reason for selecting KFF is its free of charge information sources for educating people and policy makers- from the most research to basic facts, and current health policy news updates. KKF’s interactive tool to compare current plan (ACA) with proposed plans (American health Care Act, Obamacare Replacement Act, Patient Freedom Act etc.) helps to understand the major difference in the reform topic wise. It provides overall approach of selected plans with recent