The Obama administration announced Thursday that 7.5 million Americans have signed up for health insurance using the private exchanges — and that number is expected to keep going up.
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius revealed the updated numbers at a Senate Finance Committee hearing to discuss the budget, noting that the number could grow while people who began but did not complete enrollment before the March 31 deadline finish the process.
“Last week we announced that 7.1 million Americans have signed up for private insurance through the marketplace. As of this week, 400,000 additional Americans have signed up and we expect that number to continue to grow,” Sebelius said, later adding that more than 2 million of those sign-ups occured in the final two weeks of enrollment.
The Congressional Budget Office originally projected 7 million people would sign up during the six-month open enrollment period, but it scaled back that prediction to 6 million following HealthCare.gov’s highly troubled launch last fall. The CBO also predicted that 8 million more Americans will enroll in Medicaid this year.
A recent Gallup poll found the rate of Americans without insurance dipped to a five-year low in the first quarter of 2014. A RAND Corp. study released this week found 9.3 million people gained health insurance under the law.
While many Democrats and White House officials have highlighted the enrollment numbers going above projections, Republican critics have repeatedly pointed to the cases in which Americans had their plans canceled because they did not meet the minimum standards set by the Affordable Care Act.
The RAND study noted that less than 1 million people who previously had individual market insurance became uninsured recently. “While we cannot tell if these people lost their insurance due to cancellation or because they simply felt the cost was too high, the overall number represents less than 1% of people between the ages of 18 and 64,” analysts wrote.









