Talk:Health insurance in the United States/sandbox

Massachusetts
As of 2017, Massachusetts reports the highest rate of insured citizens in the United States at 97%. However, because of much of the 97% "insured" number in Massachusetts is from people covered under Medicaid and expanded Medicaid, and because Massachusetts does Medicaid estate recovery for ordinary health insurance expenses for people who were 55 or older when they were covered, (who can therefore, in one view, be considered not insured, but rather as having just a loan for uninsured medical expenses.      ), it can be argued that the true "insured" rate is perhaps 4% lower than reported.

Public health care coverage
Medicaid benefits are, depending on the type of benefit and state, subject to Medicaid estate recovery. Federal Medicaid law requires states to recover long-term-care-related expenses, and also gives them the option of recovering all other expenses, including ordinary health-insurance expenses, from people 55 and over.

Certain states (including, but not limited to, MA, NJ, IA, NV, NH, ND, OH, RI, IN, ID, UT, and MD, as well as the District of Columbia  ) currently recover non-long-term-care-related Medicaid expenses, including for the ACA's expanded Medicaid. Other states do not.

it can be viewed that in states that recover non-long-term-care-related Medicaid expenses, people 55 or older covered through Medicaid or the ACA's expanded Medicaid really have no health insurance at all, in the ordinary conception of "insurance". Medical expenses are paid for the person now, but all medical expenses that were paid out can be recovered from the estate of the person when they die. The Medicaid coverage is in some views most accurately classified as a loan until death. (However, the U.S. Census Bureau does currently count people with all forms of Medicaid as "insured", regardless of whether medical bills paid are subject to estate recovery.)

In 2011, there were 7.6 million hospital stays billed to Medicaid, representing 15.6% (approximately $60.2 billion) of total aggregate inpatient hospital costs in the United States.