California Targets African Americans And Latinos In New Round Of Obamacare
Covered California still faces major challenges in enrolling African-Americans and Latinos as the states health insurance exchange launches its third open enrollment period Sunday.
We know weve come up short in whos enrolled today, Covered California Executive Director Peter Lee said at a recent media briefing on the exchanges marketing and outreach plans. Of those who are still uninsured, we want to make sure we reach them.
About 2.4 percent of the exchanges approximately 1.3 million enrollees are African-American, only about half of the blacks considered eligible for subsidies because of their income. Another 30 percent are Latino; 37 percent are considered eligible for subsidies, according to .
In contrast, enrollment of whites and Asians has exceeded eligibility projections, meaning that Covered California was better able to reach those groups. The states enrollment data is not exact, because more than a quarter of enrollees decline to state their race.
While many more California Latinos and African-Americans have become insured since the passage of the Affordable Care Act, including through the states Medi-Cal expansion and employer-based insurance, Covered Californias experience echoes that of other states trying to ensure that their minority populations get the health coverage they need, said Larry Levitt, senior vice president at the Kaiser Family Foundation.
About 55 percent of the nations remaining 32.3 million uninsured under age 65 , including 34 percent who identify as Hispanic/Latino and 14 percent who identify as black, according to Kaiser Family Foundation data. (KHN is an editorially independent program of the foundation.)
In California, about Californians remain uninsured but are eligible for Medi-Cal or Covered California insurance plans, Lee said. They are more likely to be Latino and African-American, and younger and slightly more affluent than current enrollees, who may have qualified for subsidies or Medi-Cal, the states version of Medicaid.
Covered California has earmarked about for marketing and another $13 million for navigators, trained counselors who help people learn about and sign up for coverage. The exchange was expected to unveil its new advertising campaign Friday, including ads specifically targeted to Latinos and African-Americans.s open enrollment runs from Nov. 1 to Jan. 31, 2016.
Explanations for the disproportionately low enrollments of eligible African-Americans and Latinos vary. Weve got people who dont trust the government, said Dan Daniels, coastal area director of the NAACP California State Conference, who oversaw Affordable Care Act outreach in his region.
Daniels also cited attitudes among young invincibles, who are healthy enough to think they dont need coverage and are willing to pay the mandatory penalty for not having health insurance. That penalty will rise in 2016 to or 2.5 percent of income, whichever is higher.
Among some Latinos who are legal residents, there is fear that applying for health insurance through Covered California will jeopardize the immigration status of other family members, Levitt said.
And affordability remains a looming concern for higher-income people of color who may not be eligible for subsidies or Medi-Cal.
For example, Kemisha Roston, a 38-year-old contract lawyer from Riverside, said she makes too much money to qualify for those programs, but not enough to afford Covered California unsubsidized premiums which top $300 per month — while she pays off student debt.
Im living check to check, because the market for attorneys is very saturated, Roston said. My health is pretty good right now, so I dont need to go to the doctor. When I do, I go to free clinics or Planned Parenthood. Im dismayed, because if something does happen and I dont have health insurance, I could be wiped out.
In addition, some community leaders and health advocates have criticized Covered Californias previous marketing and outreach efforts to both African-American and Latino communities as too generalized and impersonal. The exchange has spent more money on marketing and outreach than other exchanges, with less to show for it, said Hector De La Torre, executive director of the Transamerica Center for Health Studies.
You have these challenges in these communities and it takes a lot more than a TV commercial to make them aware of what they need to do you cant do that in 30 seconds, De La Torre said, referring to the need to educate people about the basic value of health insurance. Thats where Covered California has not done as much as it could in reaching out to these folks. Its a face-to-face communication effort that needs to take place.
Charla Franklin, community outreach liaison for Healthy African American Families, an advocacy group in Los Angeles, said Covered California did well in reaching out to Californias black churches and community groups to get the word out. But the advertising campaign in her area was so bland it was ridiculous, she said. The exchange really needed to better inform people about specific community events and places where people could get in-person help with the complicated and time-consuming online enrollment process, she said.
Lee has told reporters recently that Covered California is stepping up its ground game and changing its messaging. Consumer surveys have shown that potential enrollees need more education on how subsidies can lower their out-of-pocket costs, he said. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said it will pursue a similar of publicizing financial help available to many people.
We cannot take it as a given that Californians understand that health care is more affordable because subsidies are available, he said. Well be getting back to basics.
The exchange is also expanding its direct outreach efforts, more than doubling the number of Covered California storefronts where people can get help to enroll to 500, Lee said. The exchange also plans door-to-door canvassing in communities with the highest remaining number of uninsured people, including Culver City, Inglewood, Riverside, Oakland and Richmond.
But while Lee promised a more intense ground game, he also cautioned against overly high expectations for the exchanges third open enrollment season.
We have millions of Californians whove adopted a culture of coping. They dont understand they have subsidies available to them and are making do. Its going to be years to change to a culture of coverage.
supports KHNs work with California ethnic media.