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New healthcare law could create coverage gaps

As family incomes change, so too will eligibility for public insurance programs, potentially resulting in a massive game of health coverage pingpong

By Anna Gorman
Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES, Calif.— When the national healthcare law takes full effect next year, millions of Americans risk disrupted health coverage because of common life events: getting married or divorced, having children or taking on a second job.

As their family incomes change, so too will their eligibility for public insurance programs. And if nothing is done, policymakers warn, many low-income patients will lose access to their doctors and medications during this massive game of health coverage pingpong.

Policymakers and healthcare industry leaders across the nation are paying close attention to the issue and working to close the coverage gaps before Jan. 1, said Alan Weil, executive director of the National Academy for State Health Policy.

Full story: Some could have gaps in medical coverage under new law