by Maureen May, For The Inquirer | Read Full Article
If Congress allows this to happen — and given the Senate’s baffling refusal to act last week, the danger is very real that it will — health insurance premiums will double for many working families in Pennsylvania.
Households across the state will face increases of hundreds, and in many cases more than a thousand dollars, every single month.This isn’t theoretical. It isn’t “a hoax.” It’s going to be here, all across Pennsylvania, New Year’s Day, 2026.Every one of us is going to suffer.
I’ve been a bedside nurse for more than 40 years. Let me tell you what’s going to happen:First, tens of thousands of people across Pennsylvania will lose coverage. Thousands already have. When people lose insurance, they don’t magically stop getting sick. They delay care. They skip medications. They hope problems will resolve on their own.Most of the time, that doesn’t happen. Treatable conditions become emergencies. Those emergencies land in ERs and hospital beds, where care is more expensive, more dangerous, and often unpaid. Patients wait longer for care, and hospitals, already struggling, are forced to absorb the costs of uncompensated care. That means hospitals have to do more with less, and the cost of care goes up for everyone else.
Patients suffer first. Hospitals suffer next. Communities suffer last, but they suffer the most.
If Congress does not renew the Enhanced Premium Tax Credits for Pennie, the Pennsylvania state marketplace, healthcare in Pennsylvania will be deeply destabilized. Hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvanians, including laboring mothers, trauma patients, and people battling chronic or life-threatening illness, will be priced out of lifesaving care.
Average premium increases will exceed 100%. A family of four maybe forced to pay $800 to $1,400 more each month just to keep their coverage. Many simply won’t be able to. Pennie estimates 150,000 Pennsylvanians will lose insurance if Congress fails to act.
At the same time Congress is dithering over whether to extend ACA tax credits and maintain access to healthcare for millions of Americans, cuts to Medicaid have already been passed and are set to go into effect next year.
Medicaid is a major source of hospital funding. Medicaid reimbursements already fall short of the cost of care, and those gaps are growing. So letting ACA tax credits expire right now would mean removing coverage at the exact moment hospitals are already absorbing financial losses, with more on the way.
That isn’t sound policy. It’s insanity.
This is how healthcare deserts are created — and once access is lost, it is incredibly difficult to restore.
Nurses across Pennsylvania are calling on Congress to act now to extend the Affordable Care Act premium tax credits — and to stop compounding the damage being done to our healthcare system.
This shouldn’t be about politics. It’s about access to care. It’s about hospital stability. And it’s about preventing a crisis that’s already taking shape.
The patient — our entire healthcare system — is in acute distress. Nurses take an oath to do no harm. We are calling on Congress to do the same: Protect patients. Protect access to care. And stabilize the system before the damage becomes irreversible.
We use our collective strength to advocate for things like safe staffing, universal access to healthcare, and prevention of harassment and violence against healthcare workers. Our advocacy was instrumental in passing Act 102, Pennsylvania's ban on mandatory overtime for healthcare workers.
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