Denise Johnson works two jobs, but neither of them offers health insurance to part-timers like her. She signed up for a marketplace plan this year, but for routine medical care, Johnson still goes to the free clinic near her Charlottesville, Virginia, home.
The problem is her plan鈥檚 deductible of at least $1,000. She can鈥檛 recall the precise figure, but it doesn鈥檛 really matter. 鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely high,鈥 said Johnson, 58. 鈥淲ho can afford that?鈥 She struggles to pay her $28 monthly premium.
By continuing to visit the free clinic where she鈥檚 been a patient for a few years, Johnson said she saves hundreds of dollars a year on blood pressure and diuretic medications, her EpiPen and allergy pills. In addition to the drugs, she also sees a primary care doctor every six months at the clinic to keep tabs on her borderline diabetes and an allergist once a year.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e a working-class person and you鈥檝e got a free clinic near you, buying a bronze plan and using the free clinic for primary care makes sense,鈥 said Sara Rosenbaum, a professor of health law and policy at George Washington University.
Of the 1,300 people who visited the medical clinic at the 聽in the past year, roughly 15 percent have enrolled in insurance through the marketplace, said Colleen Keller, executive director of the clinic. The clinic, which limits services to lower-income people, provides medical, pharmacy, mental health and dental services through a combination of staff and volunteer medical professionals. In addition to serving the working uninsured, the clinic has expanded its target population to include the underinsured 鈥 people who have coverage but whose premium and deductible represents 10 percent or more of their income.
Nicole Lamoureux, CEO of the National Association of Free and Charitable Clinics, said in many states these organizations聽are expanding their mission to make sure they can serve the underinsured.
Courtesy of the Charlottesville Free Clinic
鈥淚 think there definitely is a shift,鈥 she said.聽 鈥淧rior to the [federal Affordable Care Act], we were seeing primarily the uninsured, but since the passage of the ACA, we鈥檙e seeing more of the underinsured.鈥 Clinics define underinsured differently to meet the needs of their local populations, she said.
A found that 23 percent of adults younger than 65 who had coverage all year in 2014 were underinsured. The study considered someone underinsured if their out-of-pocket health care costs, excluding premiums, were at least 10 percent of their income, or 5 percent if their income was less than 200 percent of poverty (which was $22,980 for an individual in a 2014 plan). People whose health insurance deductibles were at least 5 percent of their income were also included.
Some people expected that聽the need for clinics to provide free medical care would wind down as people got coverage under the health law, said Jack Hoadley, research professor at the Georgetown University Health Policy Institute. Undocumented immigrants聽and people who don鈥檛 qualify for Medicaid would continue to rely on them,聽but few others would need to. But that hasn鈥檛 happened. Hoadley coauthored a on the impact of the health law on consumer coverage in Richmond, Virginia, Tampa, Florida, and Columbus, Ohio.
Free clinics in those cities are 鈥渧ery much needed by people who qualify for insurance subsidies but still can鈥檛 afford the copays or deductibles to get care,鈥 Hoadley said.
The health law also expanded eligibility for coverage under the Medicaid program to adults with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level (about $16,000), but the Supreme Court ruled that adoption of the provision was optional. So far, 31 states and the District of Columbia have expanded coverage. The Medicaid expansion has helped ease the burden on free clinics, but sometimes even Medicaid beneficiaries come back.
Cost isn鈥檛 the only factor that the newly insured are grappling with. Some聽people come to free clinics because they can鈥檛 get appointments with providers, especially in rural areas, said Deborah Miller, executive director of the .
鈥淎ccess is a problem across the board,鈥 she said, referring to people in marketplace and Medicaid plans.
Many Ohio free clinics have expanded their missions to serve those who are uninsured, underinsured or without access to care, Miller said.
Then there are those who return to a free clinic after聽dropping their marketplace plan because of the cost.
鈥淭hey may have a penalty for not having insurance, but it鈥檚 lower than their copays,鈥 said Judith Robinson, a health insurance support specialist at the Charlottesville Free Clinic.
The health law requires most people to have insurance or pay a penalty. In 2015, the penalty was the greater of $325 or 2 percent of household income. There are for financial and other hardships. If the least expensive coverage available would cost more than 8.05 percent of someone鈥檚 household income, for example, people aren鈥檛 required to have coverage.
But surprise聽expenses can undermine even the best intentions, Miller said. Someone鈥檚 car breaks down and then they get behind on their electric bill. Suddenly they鈥檙e two months behind on their health insurance premium and they can鈥檛 catch up.
鈥淎ll it takes is one unexpected expense, it鈥檚 life, and they don鈥檛 have a cushion to help with those unexpected things. And then it鈥檚 a crisis,鈥 she said.
And they鈥檙e back at the free clinic.
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