Originally posted September 30, 2013 by Alex Nussbaum on https://eba.benefitnews.com
Just don’t expect the usual ending to an election: a clear winner at the end of the day.
While the exchanges are expected to open on time, that milestone is unlikely to settle the 3 1/2-year grudge match over the Affordable Care Act. A long enrollment season, complicated by a threatened U.S. government shutdown and a growing list of technical glitches, means it may be as late as April before it’s known how many uninsured Americans sign up under the law.
While the shutdown won’t stop the roll-out, which is largely funded through mandatory appropriations that can’t be curtailed by congressional inaction, it’s an open question whether it will lessen public enthusiasm to enroll. In the meantime, technical glitches are beginning to surface.
People in Oregon, for example, won’t be able to enroll in a plan for the first few weeks unless they go through a broker or designated nonprofit groups, and the exchange in the nation’s capital won’t include premium prices until mid-November.
The Obama administration says other glitches are inevitable as the system starts up. The question is how serious and how long it takes the exchange to fix any issues. An extended crash or a problem calculating subsidies could be an embarrassment for the White House — and sour consumers just as the administration tries to convince them to enroll.
‘In Between’
“Is it going to be a train wreck, a complete failure? The answer is no,” said Dan Schuyler, a director at Leavitt Partners, a Salt Lake City-based health care consultant. “Is it going to be completely seamless and instantaneous? No. It is going to be somewhere in between.”
The exchanges are at the heart of the law’s efforts to cover more of the 48 million uninsured Americans. About 7 million people will use the system to buy subsidized insurance by the end of the first open enrollment period on March 31, according to congressional projections.
Republicans will spotlight any problem as proof the law is a disaster. Democrats say they’ll overcome technical glitches and the law will sell itself as the uninsured gain benefits. Polls show most Americans side with the skeptics.
“The lights will go on Oct. 1, but they may flicker,” said Jocelyn Guyer, a director at the Washington-based consultant Manatt Health Solutions. “I worry the most about people making premature judgments on the first couple of weeks.”
The Breakdown
Here’s a primer on what to look for, based on interviews with consultants, insurers, analysts and state and federal officials:
Q: Who runs the exchanges?
A: Fourteen states have their own on-line exchanges, with the rest run in whole or part by the U.S. government.
Q: Who will use them?
A: The exchanges are open to people who buy coverage on their own and employees of businesses with 50 or fewer workers, as well as those currently shut out of insurance because of cost or a medical condition.
Subsidies are available, on a sliding scale, to those making as much as four times the poverty level, which is $11,500 for a single person and $24,000 for a family of four. Those making less than 138% of poverty will be eligible for Medicaid if they live in one of the 26 states set to expand the program.
Sign-Up Numbers
Q: How many people will sign up early on?
A: Call it lowering expectations or a realistic assessment: either way, supporters say they don’t expect a flood of enrollees this week.
Insurance buyers have to pay their first month’s premium within 30 days of choosing a plan and the policies don’t take effect until Jan. 1. As a result, the Obama administration says most people will wait until late November or December. Another surge may come in March as the end of the enrollment period nears.
A: The exchanges will march on. That’s because the 2010 law relies primarily on mandatory spending, which congressional inaction can’t stop. It’s the budget category used for benefits such as Medicare, the U.S. health plan for the elderly and disabled, and Social Security.
The U.S. Health and Human Services Department said in a Sept. 27 memo it “would continue large portions of ACA activities, including coordination between Medicaid and the marketplace” in the event of a temporary shutdown.
Core Unaffected
“Many of the core parts of the health-care law are funded through mandatory appropriations and wouldn’t be affected,” Gary Cohen, the director of the Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight at HHS, told reporters on Sept. 24.
Q: Okay, so most of the exchanges will be up and running on time. How do you access them?
A: If all goes as planned, those not covered through work will be able to go on line or dial a call-in center, learn if they’re eligible for tax credits and choose from a menu of private plans. The exchanges can be found atwww.healthcare.gov.
Q: Who won’t use them?
A: Most of us. People who have insurance through their jobs, about 55% of Americans, aren’t directly affected by the law and are automatically in compliance with its mandate that everyone be insured. So are older Americans covered through Medicare.
Individual Mandate
Q: Do I have to buy insurance?
A: Yes, or pay a fine. The law requires that most Americans be insured starting Jan. 1. That can be through work, a government program like Medicare or Medicaid, or by buying on the exchanges. Those who opt out face a penalty starting next year at $95 or 1% of household income, whichever is higher. By 2016, it rises to $695 per individual or 2.5% of household income, whichever is greater.
Q: Is the technology for the exchanges in place?
A: Building the exchanges has been a massive technical lift, requiring computer systems with real-time links to dozens of state and U.S. agencies and private carriers. The administration says the system is ready to go, albeit with delays and reduced capabilities in places like Oregon and Washington.
Company Mandate
Q: Has anything else been delayed?
A: The law requires that large companies offer benefits to anyone working more than 30 hours a week. In July, that rule was postponed until 2015 to ease the burden of compliance.
Last week, officials said a Spanish-language version of the federal website won’t be ready until mid-October and an exchange for small business workers won’t take enrollments until November. Nevada and California also won’t transmit names of new customers to insurers for about a month, Schuyler said.
Q: Will the coverage be affordable?
A: It depends on who you are and where you live. Six in 10 uninsured people will find insurance for less than $100 a month because of subsidies and expansions to Medicaid, the administration said last week. Those who make too much for assistance may be in for sticker shock: the same report said even bare-bones coverage, known as a bronze plan, will average almost $3,000 a year for individuals.
For families, the cost of mid-level coverage, a silver plan, ranges from $559 a month to $1,216 a month in 36 states where the federal government controls the exchanges. Tax credits will reduce the cost for many: a family earning $50,000 a year may find the price of a bronze plan cut to zero in some states.
Young and Healthy
Q: How will insurers cover the costs for all those added sick people?
A: By signing up the young and healthy. The administration said it needs about 40% of new enrollees to be in this group to help balance costs from older, sicker customers and keep premiums stable.
A: No. The polls indicate consistent confusion. Three in five say the law will raise medical costs, and more say they’ll be worse off under it than better, according to a Bloomberg National Poll conducted Sept. 20-23. Half also said Republicans should back off on demands to defund the law, a schizophrenic view that’s persisted for months.
Q: So does anybody like this law?
A: Yes. Sixty-one percent of Hispanics and 91% of blacks, according to a September poll by the Pew Research Center and USA Today. That could make the sales pitch easier because those two groups comprise the bulk of the uninsured in the U.S. – 47% of the total, according to an analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation. The law also is designed to benefit people with pre-existing medical conditions: insurers will no longer be able to deny them coverage.
Big States
Q: What’s happening in the big states?
A: Supporters have focused on states such as Texas, Florida, Ohio and New Jersey, where many uninsured live and Republican governors refuse to help in enrollment. California, which has the most uninsured, is spending $100 million to promote its exchange while New York plans to spend $27 million to train community groups and brokers to assist consumers.
Q: How much help do consumers get?
A: The administration is spending $67 million to train health workers, hospitals and other groups, called navigators, to help people enroll. Grants didn’t arrive until August, though, and many began a two-week training course this month. If they’re not up to the task, enrollment may suffer.
“You’re going to have tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of individuals who have never been exposed to health insurance before — don’t know what a premium is, what a deductible is,” said Schuyler, the Leavitt Partners consultant.
Changes Needed
Q: Do Democrats think the law needs to change?
A: Some have called for changes: Families of workers whose company plan doesn’t include dependents can’t get subsidies. A tax credit for small businesses has been criticized as ineffective. And there are bipartisan bills in Congress to change a provision that may encourage businesses to cut workers’ hours to avoid insuring them. A quick fix seems unlikely: Republicans say they won’t tinker with a law they consider fundamentally flawed.
Q: What’s happening with Medicaid?
A: While the government health program for low-income Americans is expanding under the law, about half the states have opted out. The Obama administration last week agreed to let Arkansas use the money to help poor citizens buy private insurance on its exchange. The deal could entice other states where Republicans have opposed the expansion.
Expense Rising
Q: Is Obamacare making health-care more expensive?
A: Time will tell.
Medical costs have moderated in the U.S. the past three years, offering some relief to the public and private sectors alike. Prices for medical care rose 1% in July compared with a year earlier, the lowest growth rate since the 1960s, according to U.S. Commerce Department data.
There’s a debate among economists about how much credit to give the health law compared with a weak economy and employer moves to curtail benefits. Obamacare supporters say at least some of the slowdown is thanks to regulations and pilot programs in the act aimed at reducing waste in the medical system.