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With many losing jobs during pandemic, Covered California nears 1.6M enrollment

The Covered California website is displayed during a healthcare enrollment fair at the office of SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West on March 18, 2014, in San Francisco. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Nearly 1.6 million people have purchased health insurance through Covered California, state officials said Tuesday, a number that reflects the state’s high unemployment rate as millions of people have lost their jobs — and their employer-sponsored health coverage — during the pandemic.

Altogether, nearly 200,000 more people have purchased health insurance this year compared with the same time period last year, a 14% increase. The deadline to purchase coverage is Jan. 31.


“I anticipate we will end this year with more people than ever insured through Covered California, which is not great news for for people who have lost their jobs,” Covered California Executive Director Peter Lee said. “They may have lost their jobs, but they don’t need to lose coverage.”

Covered California’s enrollment declined three years in a row until 2020, when a new state law took effect that imposed a tax on people who don’t have health insurance. That same year, California spent millions of dollars on subsidies to help middle-income earners pay their monthly health insurance premiums — the first and only state to do that.

Enrollment surged again last summer, peaking at 1.53 million people after an additional 289,000 people purchased coverage during a special enrollment period because of the coronavirus. The new number announced Tuesday — 1.57 million — comes after the state again imposed a stay-at-home order on most of the state following a surge of new cases. California surpassed 30,000 coronavirus-related deaths on Monday.

Federal law lets people who don’t have health insurance through their jobs purchase coverage from private insurers through a state marketplace. Most states let the federal government run their marketplace for them. But California has its own marketplace, called Covered California.

For people who buy a plan through the marketplace, the federal government will help some of them pay a portion of their monthly premiums, depending on how much money they make. California is the only state to also offer assistance, meaning families of four that make up to $154,500 per year could be eligible for subsidies.

Nearly 90% of people with health plans through Covered California get some type of financial help. On average, Lee said that assistance covers 80% of a what the premium cost.

Covered California says about 2.7 million of California’s nearly 40 million people don’t have health insurance, and of those about 1.2 million are either eligible for subsidies or could get government-funded health insurance for free through Medicaid.

Most of those people, about 718,000, live in Southern California, where the coronavirus outbreak is at its worst.

Dr. Tom Lawrie, chief medical officer at Sharp Memorial Hospital in San Diego, said he had five COVID-19 patients in the intensive care unit last weekend, all in their 30s, 40s or 50s, hooked up to heart-lung machines, which he described as “a last-ditch effort.”

“Without this type of technology, they wouldn’t be with us,” Lawire said.

But the technology isn’t cheap, costing “in the neighborhood of $200,000 to $250,000 a week.”

“To think about having the insult of financial ruin piled on the injury of surviving a terrible illness like this seems unimaginable to me,” he said. “Anybody who doesn’t have insurance should go out and get it now. It is crucial for you and your families.”

Covered California’s budget comes from a small surcharge it collects on premiums. It has spent hundreds of millions of dollars in recent years on marketing and outreach, which include TV ads and paying social media influencers to tell their followers how to sign up for coverage.

While Covered California is on pace to set a record for the number of people enrolled in health plan, Lee said its number of new enrollees has declined from last year, when a record number of new people purchased coverage to avoid a new state tax and take advantage of new subsidies.