Dubai Telegraph - Panic across US as health insurance costs set to surge

EUR -
AED 4.397733
AFN 77.835597
ALL 96.757965
AMD 453.90648
ANG 2.143578
AOA 1098.08556
ARS 1729.718292
AUD 1.697621
AWG 2.156954
AZN 2.035406
BAM 1.957977
BBD 2.413193
BDT 146.41276
BGN 2.011006
BHD 0.451397
BIF 3549.189914
BMD 1.197476
BND 1.5119
BOB 8.279204
BRL 6.2252
BSD 1.198137
BTN 110.054802
BWP 15.677428
BYN 3.406701
BYR 23470.533006
BZD 2.409689
CAD 1.62082
CDF 2682.346551
CHF 0.91756
CLF 0.02617
CLP 1033.350264
CNY 8.328028
CNH 8.316191
COP 4395.168649
CRC 594.670998
CUC 1.197476
CUP 31.733119
CVE 110.388174
CZK 24.299159
DJF 213.356287
DKK 7.466647
DOP 75.385061
DZD 154.67909
EGP 56.072896
ERN 17.962143
ETB 186.305506
FJD 2.625527
FKP 0.868923
GBP 0.866542
GEL 3.227194
GGP 0.868923
GHS 13.095558
GIP 0.868923
GMD 87.415407
GNF 10513.819382
GTQ 9.192257
GYD 250.668656
HKD 9.343009
HNL 31.619149
HRK 7.535236
HTG 156.904423
HUF 380.416024
IDR 20110.175367
ILS 3.709632
IMP 0.868923
INR 110.259115
IQD 1569.551345
IRR 50443.68401
ISK 144.798317
JEP 0.868923
JMD 187.818789
JOD 0.849014
JPY 183.295885
KES 154.49848
KGS 104.719618
KHR 4816.414497
KMF 493.359953
KPW 1077.65892
KRW 1708.906127
KWD 0.367003
KYD 0.998514
KZT 603.683605
LAK 25812.802569
LBP 107293.120341
LKR 371.003975
LRD 221.657331
LSL 19.051158
LTL 3.535836
LVL 0.724341
LYD 7.524333
MAD 10.833143
MDL 20.09242
MGA 5345.942815
MKD 61.691988
MMK 2514.677582
MNT 4278.153191
MOP 9.628944
MRU 47.829969
MUR 53.994324
MVR 18.513564
MWK 2077.609574
MXN 20.544547
MYR 4.70968
MZN 76.351282
NAD 19.051158
NGN 1672.850271
NIO 44.089564
NOK 11.458877
NPR 176.087483
NZD 1.973417
OMR 0.460425
PAB 1.198132
PEN 4.008957
PGK 5.128766
PHP 70.457091
PKR 335.178801
PLN 4.206321
PYG 8045.910637
QAR 4.356361
RON 5.096099
RSD 117.399135
RUB 91.668755
RWF 1748.043211
SAR 4.491067
SBD 9.672825
SCR 16.470637
SDG 720.281738
SEK 10.556537
SGD 1.511808
SHP 0.898417
SLE 29.09489
SLL 25110.475749
SOS 683.559879
SRD 45.614209
STD 24785.339103
STN 24.527573
SVC 10.483698
SYP 13243.577429
SZL 19.043249
THB 37.272043
TJS 11.196593
TMT 4.191167
TND 3.426523
TOP 2.883235
TRY 51.9896
TTD 8.132074
TWD 37.47982
TZS 3065.53864
UAH 51.215634
UGX 4289.768719
USD 1.197476
UYU 45.340592
UZS 14496.175194
VES 429.266648
VND 31217.006375
VUV 143.303392
WST 3.263552
XAF 656.687006
XAG 0.010186
XAU 0.000217
XCD 3.23624
XCG 2.159309
XDR 0.816708
XOF 656.684261
XPF 119.331742
YER 285.475503
ZAR 18.81055
ZMK 10778.71862
ZMW 23.812571
ZWL 385.586839
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    82.4

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0457

    24.0508

    -0.19%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5500

    16.6

    -3.31%

  • AZN

    -2.3800

    93.22

    -2.55%

  • NGG

    0.3700

    84.68

    +0.44%

  • RELX

    -0.9800

    37.38

    -2.62%

  • GSK

    -0.7000

    50.1

    -1.4%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    14.57

    +0.48%

  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    23.7

    -0.42%

  • BCE

    -0.2500

    25.27

    -0.99%

  • RIO

    0.4600

    93.37

    +0.49%

  • BTI

    -0.1800

    60.16

    -0.3%

  • BCC

    -0.8900

    80.85

    -1.1%

  • BP

    0.0800

    37.7

    +0.21%

  • JRI

    -0.6900

    12.99

    -5.31%

Panic across US as health insurance costs set to surge
Panic across US as health insurance costs set to surge / Photo: RHONA WISE - AFP

Panic across US as health insurance costs set to surge

Rachel Mosley, a Florida pre-school teacher, recently learned her family's health insurance premiums are set to nearly triple to a staggering $4,000 a month next year when US government subsidies expire.

Text size:

Like more than 20 million middle-class Americans, Mosley and her husband until now have benefited from subsidies connected to the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare.

But under US President Donald Trump, these subsidies are set to expire at the end of the year -- and Republicans for now are refusing to negotiate their extension.

The explosive issue is core to the budget standoff between Republicans and Democrats, which has triggered a shutdown that has paralyzed the American federal government for a month.

And on November 1, insurance renewals and enrollments open -- leaving households across the country to learn their new rates with terror.

"I had some tears on my front porch," Mosley -- a mother of five kids, who makes around $24,000 a year as a teacher -- told AFP.

Combined with her salary and her husband's work as a physician's assistant, she said "it's a third of our income."

"I can't possibly imagine how we could pay it."

Mosley, 46, works part-time because she had a heart attack last year -- she thought she was in perfect health but nearly died.

So canceling insurance altogether isn't an option: if "I have to go to the hospital for a heart attack or stroke...how would I pay the bill?"

"I really wouldn't be able to pay."

It's an impossible choice with rippling effects nationwide.

Audrey Horn, a 60-year-old retiree from Nebraska, is in similar panic.

Her premium is currently fully covered by the federal government, but it is set to go from more than $1,740 to more than $2,430 -- and that substantial subsidy is in limbo.

Horn's husband works for a small construction company and is paid by the hour. She said they're already feeling the impact of inflation and simply do not have the budget to absorb such a health care increase.

"I balance my checkbook to the penny," she told AFP, saying they share a very small house and drive old cars.

"We don't have a lot."

- Societal 'burden' -

In the US, about half of American workers receive health insurance through their employers.

The rest -- employees of small businesses, self-employed individuals, people working part-time, and those working multiple jobs or doing contract work -- are largely covered through "Obamacare."

The program's subsidies were created with the goal to "bridge the gap" between the enormous price of US health insurance and what people can actually pay, explained Mark Shepard, a Harvard economist and public policy expert.

The subsidies got a boost during the worst of the Covid-19 pandemic, but are now set to decrease or even disappear -- even as the cost of living continues to soar.

KFF, a health policy think tank, said the expiration would mean the average premium cost of $888 in 2025 would spike to $1,906 next year.

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that dramatic increase will mean 4 million Americans will lose their health insurance.

"There's going to be a burden on the overall society," said Shepard, because people will still show up uninsured, frequently to emergency rooms.

When that happens people accumulate debts that can easily amount to tens of thousands of dollars -- and when they're unable to pay, "the hospitals or local governments or state governments end up bearing the burden of that cost," he said.

Mosley has called and written to her Republican senators in recent days, urging them to reconsider their positions.

She hasn't received a response.

On the other side of the country, Claire Hartley, who owns a California yoga studio, is making similar calls -- and asking her Democratic representatives to "stand firm."

Hartley received notice that premiums for her, her husband and their 18-year-old daughter would go from $1,100 a month to $2,022 next year.

"The longer the Republicans wait, the more people are going to get these notices," she told AFP, voicing hope that people will become more aware of the political battle and what's at stake.

She's urging people to contact their reps and say "'wait, I can't afford this. You can't cave to these demands.'"

Y.Amjad--DT