The White House and health officials did not respond to a request for comment on any plans they have to promote Affordable Care Act enrollment.
The administration is instead touting a plan to tap hospital stimulus funds to pay people’s bills if they get coronavirus and need treatment — but the details haven’t been spelled out, including whether the money would cover hospital bills only or the full range of care including all doctors’ bills. It certainly wouldn’t cover other health care needs, just Covid-19.
That leaves it to insurers, insurance agents and Obamacare advocates with sparse resources to try to get out the enrollment message amid the pandemic that has upended Americans’ lives. Meanwhile, most of the 12 states and the District of Columbia that run their own ACA exchanges have reopened their markets.
Ordinarily, people can only sign up for insurance during the regular open enrollment season — and the next one won’t happen until the fall. But when people have a change in their coverage from something like a job loss or big shift in income, they can still qualify for special enrollment.
Yet that’s not widely known — and other than scattered comments such as those offered by Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar at the White House task force press conference Friday night, it’s not information that the White House is widely telegraphing.
“If you are employed and had insurance through your employer, and you have lost your job and lost that insurance coming in, now you do have an enrollment period where you can enroll in the individual exchanges for the Affordable Care Act,” Azar said. “That is existing law.”
The law has gained popularity since the GOP’s failed bid to repeal it, although Trump still promises to get rid of it as he campaigns for reelection. Still, he hasn’t put forth a replacement proposal and his administration is supporting a lawsuit from Texas and other conservative states to overturn the entire ACA.
For those advocacy groups or insurers who do try to spread the word, the enrollment task is made even more challenging by steep cuts the Trump administration made to the government’s Obamacare outreach. That started soon after Trump took office and intensified right through the most recent open enrollment, which ended in mid-December.
The scale of people losing insurance is likely to keep growing as each week shatters a new record in jobless claims and the economic crisis spawned by the pandemic threatens major upheaval in America’s employer insurance system.
Even low-end estimates predict that at least 12 million workers and families could lose job-based coverage, and that number could go as high as 35 million in the worst-case scenario. The analysis from the consulting firm Health Management Associates also showed Medicaid rolls swelling, especially in expansion states, and a steep climb among the uninsured
States dependent on HealthCare.gov who are trying on their own to spread the word are largely flying blind on who they’re reaching. They can’t track their own enrollment data since it all funnels through the federal government’s hub. The health agency in charge of that information only releases enrollment snapshots during the open enrollment period.
But for advocates and officials trying to make sure people are covered in the pandemic, even a meaningful effort from the administration to publicize current options falls far short of a general special enrollment period for anyone who needs coverage.
That’s because the usual red-tape involved in getting people who qualify for special sign-ups into ACA plans has only grown more complicated and cumbersome in the time of social distancing — when people can’t just present the documents they need to an insurance broker and fill out the necessary forms in real-time. The process is even harder if the person trying to get covered doesn’t have access to a computer. During normal signup seasons, people can call for help, go use a library computer, or get help from a broker or ACA navigator.
The Trump administration says its plan to pay Covid-19 hospital bills is better, as it promises to make direct payments for care.
But critics note that’s not health insurance. It won’t help a newly uninsured person who breaks a leg, has a heart attack, or is undergoing chemotherapy.
“They’re not going to just get Covid-19, they’ll have other diseases — and they won’t have health insurance because they’ve lost it connected to their job,” said Rep. Donna Shalala (D-Fla.), who ran HHS in the Clinton administration.
People who lose jobs can get COBRA, meaning they can extend their job-related insurance after being laid off. But that is massively expensive — particularly for anyone who has just lost their livelihood.
About 29 million people lacked health insurance before the coronavirus breached the country, and a substantial portion of the 10 million people who’ve filed unemployment claims in the past two weeks have likely joined their ranks — along with their spouses and children. By some projections, the number of uninsured may grow to 35 million or 40 million by the time the virus is done ravaging the economy.
Jodi Ray, head of the nation’s largest federally funded Obamacare outreach group in Florida, said it’s already hard enough to make people aware of the regularly scheduled HealthCare.gov open enrollment period each fall, even with some marketing help from the federal government. Trying to spread the word about special enrollment without a coordinated outreach effort from the Trump administration will be even more challenging, she said.
“Why are we assuming that everybody knows?” Ray said. “Everybody doesn’t know.”
People have just 60 days after losing job-based coverage to get documentation in order and figure out a new plan.
That’s the kind of red-tape Arizona’s GOP Gov. Doug Ducey complained of when in late March he formally asked Azar to open up Healthcare.gov.
“At this time when health insurance is of critical importance and so many people are experiencing a loss of employment, opening a special enrollment period will cut unnecessary red tape and lift a paperwork burden off individuals who are already facing challenges from a sudden and significant change in circumstances,” Ducey wrote.
HealthCare.gov states are trying to get the word out themselves — with a public awareness push on the deadlines people have if they’re losing their workplace plans, said Eireann Sibley of New Hampshire’s department of insurance. She’s issuing press releases to tell people their options for both ACA plans and Medicaid, but doesn’t know how well word is spreading.
In one odd twist, some of the working poor who normally can’t get Medicaid in states that didn’t expand might be able to qualify for Obamacare because aid they will get from the federal stimulus package might help them meet the income threshold. It’s an option that could be particularly helpful for swathes of working poor adults throughout the South — including people on the front lines of the disease now, people who can’t telecommute because they work as a store cashier or in a fast food restaurant.
Technically, people who can make this income jump also qualify for a special enrollment period under current law — but it’s proven extremely difficult and time-consuming to apply for, and most people don’t know about it, said Shelli Quenga of the South Carolina’s nonprofit brokerage firm Palmetto Project.
“It’s not quick,” Quenga said. “Typically I’m not working with someone who’s worried about a life-threatening virus, and I tell them to be patient and it’ll take a month or so. But what if I’m dealing with someone who doesn’t have a month?”
Source: politico.com
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