There is a contingent within American politics that looks for bad news related to the health care system, hoping to prove that the Affordable Care Act is failing. Those folks probably haven’t enjoyed the summer.
Though Republicans’ political antics have pushed consumer costs higher, the system itself is on a winning streak. Higher profits point to a stable market; “Obamacare” has never been more popular; and the number of “bare” counties without participating private insurers has dropped to literally zero, despite some GOP rhetoric to the contrary.
As CNBC reported yesterday, even the latest data on the uninsured rate, by way of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, offers encouraging news.
The nation’s rate of people without health insurance was at historically low levels during President Donald Trump’s first several months in office, at the same time he was pushing hard for the elimination of Obamacare, new federal data show.
In the first three months of 2017, just 8.8 percent of Americans — or 28.1 million people — lacked health insurance, the CDC said…. There are now 20.5 million fewer people without health insurance than there were in 2010, when Obamacare, as the ACA is popularly known, began taking effect, the agency said.
The full report from the CDC is online here (pdf).









