Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Florida Surpasses California In Obamacare Sign-Ups
Florida has eclipsed California to become the state with the highest number of consumers buying health coverage through new insurance markets under the Affordable Care Act, according to federal statistics released Wednesday. Florida's roughly 1.6 million enrollees include both first time enrollees and some of the nearly 1 million Floridians who enrolled last year. California led the country last year with 1.2 million consumers, but lagged behind this year with a total of 1.4 million 鈥 300,000 fewer than the state's goal. The state has struggled to target hard-to reach populations including Latinos. (Kennedy, 2/18)
The second year of Maryland鈥檚 health insurance marketplace was much more successful than its first. During its second enrollment period, which began Nov. 15 and ended Sunday, the Maryland Health Connection enrolled 119,096 people in private insurance plans and 145,149 in Medicaid, the government-funded insurance program for the poor. The Maryland Health Connection is the state-run system that allows residents to shop for health insurance plans made possible by the federal Affordable Care Act. ... The Web site that Maryland built for [2014] was so technically flawed that it barely functioned for several months, making it difficult for Marylanders to sign up for insurance. During that six-month period, about 63,000 people signed up for private plans. (Johnson, 2/18)
Maryland officials continue to work on recouping money from contractors involved in the state鈥檚 badly flawed initial rollout of its health exchange website, the health exchange鈥檚 executive director said Wednesday. Carolyn Quattrocki declined to elaborate in a conference call with reporters, saying lawyers have asked her not to go into details. 鈥淲e are very actively engaged in that effort,鈥 Quattrocki said, adding 鈥渨e will hear about it at the appropriate time.鈥 (2/18)
Covered California came close to its stated goal of 500,000 enrollees for its second open enrollment period -- and Tuesday's extension of the deadline until Feb. 22 for "hundreds of thousands" of potential enrollees will certainly push the exchange past its goal, Covered California officials said Tuesday. (Gorn, 2/18)
Powered by a late surge, Georgia鈥檚 enrollment in the 2015 health insurance exchange easily surpassed the half-million mark. Federal officials said Wednesday that 536,929 Georgians selected a plan or were automatically re-enrolled in the state exchange. The Affordable Care Act provides for exchanges in all 50 states, and this is their second year of operation. (Miller, 2/18)
More than 384,000 people in Virginia signed up for health plans through the Affordable Care Act marketplace by last Sunday鈥檚 open enrollment deadline, surpassing a target set by state officials and consumer advocates. (Smith, 2/18)
Nearly 400,000 Virginians have purchased health care through the government鈥檚 health insurance marketplace. The 384,612 consumers signed under the second year of open enrollment or were automatically re-enrolled. The numbers were announced Wednesday by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2/18)
Arizona health insurance sign-ups surged by 70 percent during the Affordable Care Act's second annual enrollment period that ended Sunday, with more than 204,000 Arizona residents either renewing plans or signing up for new coverage, according to preliminary figures. (Alltucker, 2/18)
Almost 206,0000 people in Wisconsin signed up or were re-enrolled in health plans sold on the marketplace set up under the Affordable Care Act during the second open-enrollment period, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said Wednesday. (Boulton, 2/18)