Why Insurers Cancel Policies, And What You Can Do When It Happens
Many people are receiving cancellation notices as the health law transforms the individual insurance market.
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Many people are receiving cancellation notices as the health law transforms the individual insurance market.
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But while Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Marilyn Tavenner said in her Capitol Hill testimony Tuesday that some website subcontractors hadn't met expectations, she offered few other details on the problems. KHN's Mary Agnes Carey and Politico Pro's Jennifer Haberkorn discuss.
An information session at a beauty salon in the heart of St. Paul's Latino community helps clear up confusion but yields no enrollments so far.
After bouncing through seven insurers in 13 years, a freelance writer hopes the system will keep him covered for good.
Some consumers may be attracted to these policies, which can run several months or as long as 364 days, because the premiums are lower.
"You are definitely enrolled," the director was told after a lengthy signup process. But she is still awaiting confirmation from Independence Blue Cross.
Only about half the states so far are planning to expand Medicaid coverage to thousands of low-income adults. Pennsylvania's Republican governor has a plan to do that, with caveats.
A subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group, which built the federal data hub, will oversee the fixes.
Insurance columnist explains that the essential health benefits that all new individual and small-group health plans must offer reflect a core package that experts thought everyone should have access to.
For more than four hours in a Capitol Hill hearing Thursday, House Energy and Commerce Committee members grilled contractors who helped build the health law's problem-plagued online insurance marketplace. KHN's Mary Agnes Carey and Politico Pro's Jennifer Haberkorn discuss the next steps.
Mom-and-Pop shops give way to large group practices that often accept discounted rates from insurers.
Despite the president's urging that frustrated consumers use call centers, advocates say they're not "a realistic alternative" for comparing and selecting coverage.
The health law gives consumers until March 31 to sign up for health insurance, but it may be weeks before coverage begins. So the administration says it will not penalize anyone who signs up by that date.
Websites like eHealthInsurance.com that were planning to start selling new, subsidized Obamacare policies on Oct. 1 still can't offer them to customers.
Using health law subsidies, many will be able to afford health coverage for the first time. But the insurance they'll be buying comes with caveats.
Consumer columnist Michelle Andrews answers questions about the insurance landscape under the new health law.
"Nobody is madder than me" about the problems consumers have had with the federal insurance marketplace, Obama said in a Rose Garden speech, "which means it's going to get fixed."
Many physicians and hospitals have been unable to determine which health plans offered in the health law's insurance marketplace include them in their provider networks.
Insurers say the old policies fail to meet the law's requirements, but some consumers complain about being forced to buy more expensive policies.
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