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Who are the 26 million Americans without health insurance?

Evan Wyloge on

Published in Slideshow World

Drazen Zigic // Shutterstock 1/6

Who are the 26 million Americans without health insurance?

Many ominous ills are likely curable, especially if you have insurance. Without it, patients can find themselves facing life-threatening consequences, as physician Ricardo Nuila, an associate professor of medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, told Public Health Watch. Nuila had a stage 1 cancer patient who lost his insurance just as he was to receive treatment.

"Without insurance, [my patient] was given the run-around for months by his doctors," Nuila said. By the time his patient was seen at a hospital where he could be treated without insurance, the cancer had already spread.

Delayed diagnosis and care, increasing medical debt, and higher mortality rates are some of the outcomes for uninsured patients. However, 2 in 25 Americans (approximately 26.2 million people) did not have health insurance as of 2023, according to the most recent available Census Bureau data.

While this represents a significant drop from the almost 4 in 25 people uninsured rate in 2010—when the Affordable Care Act was enacted, cutting the rate nearly in half—major coverage gaps remain.

Younger adults, Hispanic or Latino people of any race, foreign-born populations, part-time workers, and residents of states that have not expanded Medicaid were found to be disproportionately uninsured, according to the Census Bureau's 2023 Health Insurance Coverage in the United States report. The rate of Hispanic adults (of any race and aged between 19 and 64) who lacked insurance was about twice the rate for Black adults. The disparities that still exist highlight the pervasiveness of systemic hurdles facing health insurance coverage for many, despite the aims of such a major health care reform.

CheapInsurance.com examined the demographics of the uninsured population in the U.S. using data from the Census Bureau to see who is slipping through the cracks of the American health care system. The American Community Survey was used for historical and state estimates, and estimates for different demographics as of 2023 are from the Current Population Survey.

Editor's note: CheapInsurance.com and Stacker recognize that Hispanic and Latino are not interchangeable terms. The usage of Hispanic and Latino are in accordance with the language of the sources included in this story. Additionally, Census Bureau data was collected using a binary understanding of sex and gender, which excludes important information about gender-diverse professionals. The impact of this exclusion means that this story's coverage may lack nuance related to biased language and nonbinary individuals.

Visit thestacker.com for similar lists and stories.


 

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