Health-Insurance Exchanges Are Falling Behind Schedule
From The Wall Street Journal:
Government officials have missed several deadlines in
setting up new health-insurance exchanges for small businesses and consumers—a
key part of the federal health overhaul—and there is a risk they won't be ready
to open on time in October, Congress's watchdog arm said.
The Government Accountability Office said federal and
state health officials still have major work to complete, offering its most
cautious comments to date about the Obama administration's ability to bring the centerpiece of
its signature law to fruition.
"Whether [the government's] contingency planning will
assure the timely and smooth implementation of the exchanges by October 2013
cannot yet be determined," said the GAO in twin reports to be released
Wednesday.
The 2010 Affordable Care Act created two exchanges,
seeking to provide coverage for many Americans who now go without health
insurance. President Barack Obama has said the exchanges will be ready on
schedule in October, offering coverage to take effect Jan. 1, 2014, but he has
cautioned that "glitches and bumps" are likely.
Around two million people are projected to receive
insurance through the small business exchanges and seven million people will be
enrolling in the individual insurance exchanges in 2014, according to the
Congressional Budget Office.
The small-business exchanges in particular have had some
early setbacks. The federal government said in April that contrary to initial
plans, it wouldn't allow workers in the first year to choose between a range of
insurance options offered through employers. For the first year, companies will
select one plan to offer to workers.
In some states, only one insurance carrier has expressed
interest in the small-business exchange. In Washington state, officials have had
to postpone the exchange altogether because they couldn't find a carrier willing
to offer small-business plans for all parts of the state.
Seventeen states are running their own small-business
exchanges, with the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services carrying
out the task on behalf of the remaining 33 states.
The GAO report on the small-business exchanges said
officials still have big tasks to complete including reviewing plans that will
be sold and training and certifying consumer aides who can help companies and
individuals find plans.
It said that the 17 states running their own exchanges
were late on an average of 44% of key activities that were originally scheduled
to be completed by the end of March. "While interim deadlines missed thus far
may not impact the establishment of exchanges, any additional missed deadlines
closer to the start of enrollment could do so," the report said.
The Obama administration has long said that it expects
to be ready on Oct. 1. "We have already met key milestones and are on track to
open the marketplace on time," said Joanne Peters, a spokeswoman for the
Department of Health and Human Services.
"This GAO report confirms our suspicions about the
implementation of the health care law," said Rep. Sam Graves (R., Mo.), chairman
of the House Committee on Small Business. "With each passing day it appears the
creation of the exchanges are very much in doubt."
The administration has welcomed signs that the growth of
health-care costs has tempered recently. Some economists believe that may be
partly due to the new health law encouraging more cost-effective care. The Labor
Department said Tuesday that its price index for medical care fell a seasonally
adjusted 0.1% in May, the first monthly drop in almost four decades.
The administration and liberal groups are stepping up
efforts to prepare people to enroll for coverage. For the economics of the
exchanges to work, they must attract healthy people to balance the risk of those
who have chronic diseases.
Enroll America, an administration-backed nonprofit
group, opened its "Get Covered America" campaign Tuesday. "We are at a place
where…78% of the uninsured aren't even aware of what's coming their way," said
Anne Filipic, the group's president.
Republicans who oppose the health-care law are poised to
highlight any glitches in the rollout, and many believe implementation of the
law could be a key issue in 2014 elections.
Regulators in New Hampshire have said they received
applications from only one carrier, Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield, a unit of
WellPoint Inc., WLP +1.10%to sell
small group plans or individual policies through the exchange next year.
Small-business owner Nancy Clark of North Conway, N.H.,
said she was disappointed more carriers didn't apply because Anthem is already
one of just two carriers that doctors in her area accept.
"I was hoping more [insurance] providers would step up
to the table," said Ms. Clark, whose firm, advertising agency Glen Group Inc.,
has 10 employees and has offered benefits to full-time staff since 1997 to
attract and retain talented workers. "I had these rose-colored glasses on,
thinking that doctors in our area would then accept more insurance plans, truly
giving everyone a choice."
Ms. Clark said she also worried that without more
carriers in the exchange, the cost of a group health plan wouldn't stabilize or
go down as she had anticipated. She said her premiums have increased every year
by double digits despite her work force's good health.
Some Democratic members of Congress also are beginning
to express concerns about particular aspects of the law relating to employers.
Sen. Joe Donnelly of Indiana, who voted for the law as a member of the House, on
Wednesday is expected to become the first Democrat who backed the law to support
changing a requirement that larger firms must provide coverage to employees
working 30 hours a week or more, his staff said.
Joe Trauger, vice president of human resources policy
for the National Association of Manufacturers in Washington, D.C., said the
trade group's 12,000 members are "deeply concerned" about the lack of
information available about the state exchanges. "It comes up in every meeting
I'm in," he said.
Backers of the law say that over time, competition
between carriers and new restrictions barring insurers from setting small group
premiums based on members' medical history will keep costs in check for business
owners and enable them to keep offering coverage.
Michael Brey, president of Brey Corp., a toy retailer in
Laurel, Md., that does business as Hobby Works, said he was looking forward to
being able to shop for a small-group plan from a variety of carriers through his
state's exchange. Currently he can choose from just three carriers. "I have some
degree of confidence that it will be a good move for us," he said.
Mr. Brey also said he expected to get a better deal
through the exchanges. He covered 100% of the cost of premiums for his staff
when he bought the business in 1992, but he said he can only afford to
contribute 50% now, and only for full-time employees.
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