<Ol> <Li> A six - year - old federal - government waiver as to how Massachusetts administered its Medicaid program was expiring . Unless the waiver was extended or amended, a large number of people would lose Medicaid coverage as the state reverted to Federal regulations . </Li> <Li> Reforms made in 1997 to the portion of the insurance market that related to the individual purchase of insurance had failed . In 2000, over 100,000 Massachusetts residents (about 1.5% of the population) were covered by individually purchased insurance but the number had dropped to under 50,000 by the time of the reform debate . </Li> <Li> As illustrated in the state report referenced in the previous sentence, the price of insurance that covered about 600,000 people in the small group market (about 10% of the population) was rising faster than the prices for the vast majority of the non-senior - citizen population, most of which were--and still are--covered by self - insured group insurance from large employers (self - insured plans are not subject to state regulation). </Li> <Li> There was a widespread feeling that emergency rooms were misused for non-emergency medical care (the misuse was and is undeniable, not unique to Massachusetts, and continues; the relation to healthcare insurance or lack of it was less clear and apparently did / does not exist). </Li> <Li> The taxes that fed the state's "free care pool", which covered uninsured emergency room visits as well as uninsured hospital admissions (as well as funding community health centers), consistently underfunded the pool and had to be raised almost annually (with differences made up by appropriations from general revenue). The combination of issues four and five was dubbed by Romney and others the free - rider problem although subsequent to the passage of the law, it is argued that the free - rider problem did not really exist . Almost all people who did not have insurance could not afford it, but since they were still using the good it is considered free riding . </Li> <Li> Advocacy groups wanted a long list of non-traditionally covered (e.g., vision care) or under - covered (e.g., mood - altering pharmaceuticals) healthcare procedures and goods mandated . </Li> <Li> Large employers--even large employers that were self - insured--were increasingly dropping health insurance as an employee benefit and / or restricting it to "full - time employees such that the "take up rate" of healthcare insurance by employees was dropping . However, the drop in take - up rate actually accelerated after passage of the law although there is no demonstrable relationship between the law's passage and the accelerated drop . </Li> </Ol> <Li> A six - year - old federal - government waiver as to how Massachusetts administered its Medicaid program was expiring . Unless the waiver was extended or amended, a large number of people would lose Medicaid coverage as the state reverted to Federal regulations . </Li> <Li> Reforms made in 1997 to the portion of the insurance market that related to the individual purchase of insurance had failed . In 2000, over 100,000 Massachusetts residents (about 1.5% of the population) were covered by individually purchased insurance but the number had dropped to under 50,000 by the time of the reform debate . </Li> <Li> As illustrated in the state report referenced in the previous sentence, the price of insurance that covered about 600,000 people in the small group market (about 10% of the population) was rising faster than the prices for the vast majority of the non-senior - citizen population, most of which were--and still are--covered by self - insured group insurance from large employers (self - insured plans are not subject to state regulation). </Li>

Do you have to have health insurance in massachusetts