The percentage of Americans without health insurance dropped to its lowest rate in more than six years in the month of April, according to a new survey.
The Gallup report released Monday found the uninsured rate among American adults continued to decline in the final weeks of open enrollment under the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance exchanges, with the overall rate dropping to 13.4%. According to Gallup, the April information “better captures the impact of late sign-ups since all interviewing occurred” during the final days of the extended enrollment period.
The uninsured rate peaked at 18% in the third quarter of 2013, but quickly began falling as the open enrollment period began dropping by to 15% in March and continuing to fall to what is now the lowest rate Gallup has found since it began tracking the data in January 2008.
The White House revealed last month that according to its data approximately 8 million Americans signed up for health insurance using the exchanges mandated by the Affordable Care Act. During the same week, the Congressional Budget Office released revised estimates on the potential costs of the law, lowering the expectations by billions of dollars.









