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Friday, Oct 28 2016

Full Issue

Dwindling Choices In Health Law Marketplace May Be Trickier Issue Than Spiking Premiums

Subsidies provide a safety net for most customers, but there's not a backup plan if insurers completely pulling out of the marketplace. Meanwhile, President Barack Obama paints a sunny picture of his signature law in the face of negative news about the premiums.

Americans in the health insurance markets created by President Barack Obama's law will have less choice next year than any time since the program started, a new county-level analysis for The Associated Press has found. The analysis by AP and consulting firm Avalere Health found that about one-third of U.S. counties will have only one health marketplace insurer next year. That's more than 1,000 counties in 26 states 鈥 roughly double the number of counties in 2014, the first year of coverage through the program. (10/28)

President Obama said Thursday that most people will be 鈥減leasantly surprised鈥 by the cost of their health insurance plans this year despite the deluge of negative headlines about rising premiums. In a national call with healthcare groups and activists, the president painted a sunny outlook of ObamaCare as he sought to combat the tide of negative attention on his healthcare law this week. 鈥淭he bottom line is most people are going to be pleasantly surprised by just how affordable their options are, if we can just get them to see for themselves,鈥 Obama said, adding the vast majority of people would find plans that cost less than $75 per month with the help of tax credits. (Ferris, 10/27)

The White House is planning a major ObamaCare enrollment push in 11 states this fall, nearly all of which are led by GOP leaders who remain firmly opposed to the law. The administration is pouring resources into 15 cities in 11 states, including Texas, Florida, North Carolina and Georgia, it announced Thursday. All but two of the states 鈥 Missouri and Pennsylvania 鈥 are led by Republican governors. In both of those states, however, Republicans are in control of both legislative chambers, which can constrain a governor鈥檚 office from actively promoting this year鈥檚 sign-up period. (Ferris, 10/27)

President Barack Obama is telling workers and volunteers signing up customers for health insurance coverage that the enrollment season comes at a critical time in the Affordable Care Act's history. In a conference call, Obama is challenging workers to ensure the insurance program is in a position of strength when the next president comes into office. (10/27)

President Barack Obama on Thursday urged more than 25,000 volunteers and advocates who dialed in to a White House conference call to pull out the stops to boost the number of people signing up for Obamacare health insurance plans. Obama warned it will be challenging to overcome the skepticism about the plans given an onslaught of headlines about surging premium prices, but he said the stakes are high. (Rampton, 10/27)

Meanwhile, an analysis looks at the difference between plans sold on and off the health law exchanges聽鈥

Three years after opening their online doors, the health insurance marketplaces remain under intense scrutiny, but individual health plans that are not sold through these exchanges have largely escaped attention. New research聽sheds some light on what these plans are like and how they fit into the overall individual market. (Andrews, 10/28)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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