You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments 1 point
To be honest I don’t think this is a very good metric. It’s a combination of something good (number of people insured) and something bad (debt per insured person).
As an example, if you increased the number of people with insurance, and reduced the debt per uninsured person, you’d expect this to happen.
Not to say that things have actually gotten better, just that we should use more meaningful metrics.