(Press-News.org) PITTSBURGH, May 23, 2025 — Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh, University of South Carolina and Emory University have published findings in JAMA Health Forum from a recent study on coverage retention and plan switching among Americans who obtain their health insurance through HealthCare.gov.
Looking at data from 2022 through 2024, the authors found that losing the option to automatically reenroll into a zero-premium plan reduced enrollment. Reenrollment decreased by about 7% among those affected, indicating that an estimated quarter of a million Americans likely lost their Marketplace health insurance coverage and became uninsured in 2024.
“Administrative burdens can critically undermine people’s ability to maintain health insurance coverage. That includes needing to start making a premium payment on January 1 after not having to in the previous year, as we study here. This is especially problematic for people enrolling in Marketplace coverage, who often have relatively little prior experience with the complexities of health insurance,” said lead author Coleman Drake, Ph.D., associate professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management at Pitt’s School of Public Health.
The Affordable Care Act has enabled 24.2 million uninsured Americans to obtain coverage through the Health Insurance Marketplace (HealthCare.gov). Since 2021, the American Rescue Plan and Inflation Reduction Act increased affordability and coverage for low-income households, making zero-dollar premium plans broadly available to HealthCare.gov enrollees with incomes below 175% of the federal poverty level (approximately $27,000 for an individual or $56,000 for a family of four in 2025).
The researchers analyzed data from 36.7 million HealthCare.gov enrollees across 29 states from 2022 to 2024 (following the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act), examining year-to-year changes in enrollment resulting from enrollees being defaulted to new plans as insurers exited the Marketplace.
In counties where returning enrollees were defaulted from zero-premium plans to plans with premiums with a new insurer, enrollees had to start making a premium payment or switch to a different zero-premium plan, if available, or lose their coverage altogether. Being forced to either reenroll or select a new plan can have positive impacts, such as giving participants the nudge they may need to choose a plan that better fits their household’s health needs. However, in many cases, the administrative burdens required to actively enroll each year can result in a total loss of coverage, the study showed.
“Increasing administrative burdens on Marketplace enrollees will lead to loss of coverage and an increase in uninsurance. The current budget resolution in the House of Representatives would require all Marketplace enrollees currently in zero-premium plans to make a premium payment at the start of the year,” said David Anderson, Ph.D., assistant professor at the University of South Carolina Arnold School of Public Health. “This would expose millions more Marketplace enrollees to the administrative burdens we study here and, as such, lead to substantial coverage losses in 2027.”
Other authors on the study were Dylan Nagy and Sarah Avina, of Pitt; and Daniel Ludwinski, Ph.D., of Oxford College of Emory University.
This research was supported by The Commonwealth Fund (23-23531) and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (1R01HS030083-01).
# #
About the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health
Founded in 1948, the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health is a top-ranked institution of seven academic departments partnering with stakeholders locally and globally to create, implement and disseminate innovative public health research and practice. With hands-on and high-tech instruction, Pitt Public Health trains a diverse community of students to become public health leaders who counter persistent population health problems and inequities.
About the University of South Carolina Arnold School of Public Health
Established in 1975 as the 19th school of public health in the nation, the Arnold School of Public Health at the University of South Carolina is the only accredited school of public health in South Carolina. In 2008, the Arnold School was among the first in the United States to offer a baccalaureate program in public health and continues to be the largest in the country. In 2024, the school attracted 2,793 bachelor’s students and 802 graduate students to our 38 degree programs. Nearly 400 faculty and staff serve these students across six departments and research centers and institutes.
# # #
www.upmc.com/media
END
A recent study on the application of Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) found that mNGS can achieve early detection of pathogens and accelerate the development of targeted anti-infection treatment plans, thereby improving treatment outcomes and patient prognosis.
The research, conducted by the Department of Clinical Laboratory, the Second Affiliated Hospital of Nanchang University and BGI Genomics, was published in the journal Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology early in May.
The mNGS Outperforms Traditional Methods
Conventional microbiological tests (CMTs) rely ...
The expression of symptoms of viral infections is a byproduct of complex virus-host molecular pathways. These remain largely unknown, especially in the case of fungus-virus pathogen systems. Fungal antiviral responses involve three known mechanisms: RNA interference (RNAi), a post-transcriptional mechanism that inhibits viral replication; transcriptional reprogramming; and recognition of self versus non-self, which limits cell-to-cell transmission of viruses within fungi. While many fungal viruses (mycoviruses) cause asymptomatic infections in their hosts, the mechanisms ...
About The Study: Although the global age-standardized burden rates of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) more than halved over the last 3 decades, SAH remained one of the most common cardiovascular and neurological causes of death and disabilities in the world, with increasing absolute case numbers. These findings suggest evidence for the potential health benefits of proactive public health planning and resource allocation toward the prevention of SAH. Nontraumatic SAH represents the third most common stroke type after ischemic stroke and intracerebral hemorrhage, accounting for 5% to ...
New research published in Communications Biology has uncovered the earliest known use of the medicinal and psychoactive plant Peganum harmala, commonly known as Syrian rue or harmal, in fumigation practices and inhaled as smoke. The findings offer unprecedented insight into early Arabian therapeutic and sensorial practices, revealing that native plants were already being deliberately used for their bioactive and psychoactive properties nearly 2,700 years ago.
Led by Dr. Barbara Huber (Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology) and Professor ...
Wouldn’t it be amazing if we could continuously monitor the molecular state of our body? Consider the solutions that could enable, from optimized drug delivery to early detection of deadly diseases like cancer. For the last two decades, research has aimed to make this a reality by developing devices that measure a chemical or biological reaction in our bodies and send their measurements as a signal readable from outside the body. These devices, called biosensors, can now spot tiny molecules like drugs in real time, but they work only briefly. There is still no single reliable biosensor that can monitor many different substances in our bodies over long stretches.
To address ...
A new international study led by researchers at Tulane University shows that the El Niño and La Niña climate patterns affect nearly half of the world's mangrove forests, underscoring the vulnerability of these vital coastal ecosystems to climatic shifts. Mangroves are shrubs or trees that grow in dense thickets mainly in coastal saline or brackish water.
The research, published in Nature Geoscience, is based on nearly two decades of satellite data from 2001 to 2020 and is the first study to demonstrate global-scale patterns in how El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) influences ...
Improving energy conversion efficiency in power electronics is vital for a sustainable society, with wide-bandgap semiconductors like GaN and SiC power devices offering advantages due to their high-frequency capabilities. However, energy losses in passive components at high frequencies hinder efficiency and miniaturization. This underscores the need for advanced soft magnetic materials with lower energy losses.
In a recent study published in Communications Materials, a research team led by Professor Mutsuko Hatano from the ...
While moderate touristification can bring economic benefits to cities, overtourism has adverse social effects on residents and visitors. To prevent this, it is necessary to understand the disrupted balance between tourist accommodations and residential housing.
Junior Associate Professor Haruka Kato investigated the spatial patterns and geographic characteristics of tourism-accommodation hotspots in proximity to tourist locations in Kyoto, one of the most famous tourist cities in the world. In this study, the tourism-accommodation intensity index was calculated using the ratio of the number of accommodation rooms to that of households.
The results revealed that ...
Plants require phosphorus to grow and survive. In environments with low levels of available soil phosphorus, plants need to adjust to stay alive.
The pincushion hakea is a large woody, evergreen shrub native to southwestern Australia, an area that has amazingly low levels of soil phosphorus. This plant has adapted to these conditions by forming cluster roots—a large number of smaller rootlets extending from the root axis that resemble a bottlebrush—to extract the small amount of phosphorus in the soil.
Cluster roots help plants in low-nutrient soils by increasing the amount of root surface area in contact with the soil, improving ...
A survey on larvae of Japanese wasps revealed that not only is their diet more diverse than previously thought, it also showed that wild colonies prey on more species of vertebrates than had been reported in the past. The Kobe University study highlights the potential for management practices that are sustainable both ecologically and culturally.
The wasp species Vespula shidai has long been reared for its edible larvae, a delicacy in central Japan. The rural woodlands of Japan which these wasps inhabit are areas of high biodiversity. Though this ...