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The Long View on Health Insurance Reform

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Much has been written about the rough rollout of Obamacare. It's been front page news for the past month as every piece of the Healthcare Exchange rollout has gone under an intense level of scrutiny. Those who hated the program have lined up for another parting shot while supporters of the program have unleashed their own frustration, namely at Kathleen Sebelius, the current Cabinet Secretary for Health and Human Services.

*So...... is all of this bad for the President and health insurance reform? Not so fast.*

I'll predict in 6 months we'll all look back on this as a blip that momentarily fouled a landmark program.

*The first gift that the Obama White House gave Republicans was the train wreck of a roll out. *Today, we all know is that The Healthcare.gov site had not been thoroughly stress-tested by computer programmers prior to the launch. That goof was horribly embarrassing for all involved. Worse, it gave a Christmas gift to those who hated any idea of health insurance reform. However, when HHS wanted to fully fund the website creation and launch, they could not get an extra nickel from a Republican Congress and instead had to beg, borrow, and steal from their own internal programs to fund the site's construction. They were hobbled from the start. In that sense, the GOP continues to be part of the problem and skillfully deflected blame to the Obama White House.

We should also put things into perspective. We live in a nation where people will camp outside an Apple store for the latest and greatest in iPhones but are left furious when it takes a little longer than necessary to walk through a website that might save their lives. There is a cognitive dissidence I find troubling.

Going forward, the narrative will be all about improvements in online access. We are already seeing daily improvements in speed, bandwidth, and decreased hold times. People are being routed faster to the right places. The site goes offline for four hours in the middle of the night so that upgrades and patches can be administered. The "Technical Surge" to fix the problem is in full swing.

*The second gift the President gave to the Republican Congress was the constant assurance that anybody who had their current coverage would be able to keep it.* When the insurance industry mailed off an avalanche of cancellation notices, the White House was caught off guard by both the number of cancellations and to Republican glee, and again, Christmas came early politically.

Like any internet launch, bugs will emerge from the woodwork and be solved with an army of technical help. That's what is going on now and those who predict or proclaim its early death will look foolish in several weeks when the ease of access forces them to eat their words or contradict their earlier statements.

However, when you get beyond the false outrage, something interesting emerges. First, those impacted by the cancellations had health insurance plans that were simply substandard, normally only for catastrophic care. Thankfully, the days of shoveling hundreds of dollars per month to Aetna to address catastrophic care will be gone because they do not address the root cause of healthcare increases. The best way to keep costs low is to route people to the right healthcare locations. Sending poor families into Emergency Rooms is the most expensive way to handle problems but sending them to a doctor with smaller copays can generate better results at lower costs.

However, the big improvement is that nobody can be denied for having pre-existing conditions and these were traps set by insurance companies to remove "at risk" clients from their bottom line. Before Obamacare, 45,000 per year would die without healthcare insurance.

For example, one of Ron Paul's main campaign advisors from is 2008 campaign, Kent Snyder, died of viral pneumonia after a long battle with cancer. Because he was repeatedly denied health insurance because of his "preexisting condition," he died broke with $400,000 in medical bills. While friends tried to raise funds to help, it was only a drop in the bucket. Kent Snyder was one of the 50 million without a safety net of health insurance access. He might even be alive today with Obamacare and that must be a bitter irony for his family and his belief systems.

Today low incomes earners are able to find better replacement policies often at a much lower cost because of government subsidies. However, that narrative has only begun to get some traction in the last week, after Healthcare.gov's website woes controlled the news cycles for several days. Now people are seeing the benefits.

People forget that this is par for many other industries. Detroit has a volume of regulations when it comes to building cars. We hope that all cars come with four wheels, a steering wheel, a gas pedal, and much, much more in working order. However, there are a raft of safety and environmental regulations that repair the harm to our environment and keep our passengers safe. We are a better nation for that and that same approach will translate into intelligent health insurance reform.

Perhaps the Obama White House can be found guilty of sugarcoating details as we transition to a smarter health insurance reform. Oversimplifying the argument by saying that nobody would lose their healthcare probably kept the reform package from blowing up in Congress. Now he has got to redraft his argument to say that even if you lose your coverage, you will find a better solution through Healthcare.gov. Once people see the success of that taking place, the arguments will die down--for now.

*Big Programs often have early missteps.* When John Kennedy inspired us "to go to the Moon in this decade and do the other things--not because they were easy but because they were hard," the first rocket ships blew up on the pad or exploded midair into a spectacular fireworks display because they needed to work out the bugs in the circuitry. For those first years, it did not appear that any of our astronauts would return alive and there would be a Soviet flag on the moon. Well, thanks to Neil, Buzz, NASA, and a generation of engineers and scientists, we got there first and have gone on to build other great things.

Social Security and Medicare were created to make sure that we did not consign the old into poverty. Medicaid did the same for the poorest of the poor. However as the middle class hollows out and the benefits our parents received is replaced by bottom line profitability, somebody has to step up for middle class families who are one illness away from going broke. Barack Obama did just that.

Today Social Security and Medicare are highly popular programs, some might say too much so. For all of the whining that took place when they were enacted, there would be rioting if they were to disappear. Just ask George W. Bush, who wanted to privatize Social Security after winning the election in 2004. It ruined his second term. The first government shutdown was all about Medicare costs and Clinton held firm while Newt Gingrich fell to pieces. In the end, those who called either program "Socialized Medicine" might whistle a different tune now that they receive it.

In a world where we are living far longer than when either Social Security and Medicare were created, we will have go back and tinker with things to ensure long term solvency. However as we look ahead to a new age of health insurance reform, we can address the solvency of many middle class families who can now get insurance when pre-existing conditions or shoddy plans made health insurance out of reach for them.

The best news of all is that as we move to a new world of health insurance reform, according to Aon Hewitt, a healthcare consultancy, in 2013 overall healthcare costs only increased by 3.3%, which down from 4.9% in 2012 and 8.8% in 2011. That is good news for everybody. Reported by Huffington Post 12 hours ago.

Dayton rejects Obama's health insurance policy change option

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Siding with Minnesota health insurers, Gov. Mark Dayton said Monday that the state won't follow President Barack Obama's lead and let people renew individual health insurance policies that don't comply with the federal Affordable Care Act. Reported by TwinCities.com 1 day ago.

EveryMove Releases Its Quarterly EveryMove 100 Health Insurance Index

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Captures Recent Improvements Made by Health Insurance Companies to Actively Engage and Support Consumers

Seattle, WA (PRWEB) November 19, 2013

EveryMove, Inc. an innovator in health rewards-based marketing and incentives, released today the updated EveryMove 100 Health Insurance Index™ which ranks the top 100 health insurance companies in the U.S. based on how well they engage with and empower consumers to manage their own health. This update includes additional data points and data compiled for the third quarter of 2013.

The EveryMove 100™ ranks both regional and national health insurance companies by analyzing over 50 data points across key indicators such as their mobile-friendly websites and mobile apps, their self-service tools, their incentive program offerings, their community involvement and their commitment to social engagement. The data is normalized to account for the wide variety of health insurance company sizes. The EveryMove 100™ does not incorporate either the cost or the specific health care services covered by any plan, as that information is presented to consumers through the federal and state exchanges.

“The EveryMove 100 gives all of us an easy way to see pockets of improvement from health plans and this quarter is no exception,” said Russell Benaroya, EveryMove’s Co-founder and CEO. “We saw great strides in consumer strategy around website updates, mobile apps and social interactions and we are encouraged by these early signs.”

For the second edition, The EveryMove 100™ has been expanded to include more data points, including app store rankings and a satisfaction survey conducted with more than 5,000 health insurance customers. The updated ranking also includes changes and activities health insurance companies have made on their social, mobile and web platforms between July and September 2013. Common improvements captured include more consumer-friendly website redesigns, increased social engagement, and the launch of new community programs.

The top health plan for the Q3 2013 EveryMove 100 Health Insurance Index™ is Cigna which has demonstrated success this past quarter actively engaging consumers consistently across multiple measured indicators.

Rounding out the top ten list are:

1. Cigna
2. Kaiser Permanente of California
3. Premera Blue Cross
4. Humana
5. Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield
6. Independence Blue Cross
7. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina
8. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois
9. CareFirst
10. BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee

To see the top 100 ranked health insurance companies and filter by state, visit http://www.everymove.org/everymove-100.

About EveryMove - EveryMove is changing the way companies and communities recognize and reward active individuals. Our patent-pending, actuarially based system awards points based on an activity’s long-term health impact so consumers can compare and earn rewards from retailers and employers. We enable health plans to sponsor challenges and activity-focused campaigns to supplement their marketing and member engagement. We support hundreds of different physical activities and are the leading integrator of fitness-tracking apps and devices. Join the EveryMove movement at http://www.everymove.org. Reported by PRWeb 4 days ago.

Fitch: Health Insurance Policy Extension a Negative for Insurers

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NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Fitch Ratings believes the decision by the Obama administration to enable insurers to extend health insurance policies that had recently been cancelled as part of the Affordable Care Act's (ACA) roll-out is a net credit negative for health insurers. The policy extensions could lead to deterioration in the risk pool characteristics of the ACA's health insurance exchanges that were not contemplated when the exchanges' premium rates were set, Fitch says. This would likel Reported by Business Wire 3 days ago.

Avoid Wasting Money on the Wrong Health Insurance

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Avoid Wasting Money on the Wrong Health Insurance ORANGE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Avoid wasting money on the wrong health insurance by considering more than cost. It's important to also consider provider access, insurance company ratings, and more. Reported by Business Wire 3 days ago.

Zane Benefits Publishes New Information on Employer Sponsored Health Insurance

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What is employer-sponsored health insurance?

Park City, Utah (PRWEB) November 20, 2013

Today, Zane Benefits, the number one online small business health benefits solution, published new information on employer sponsored health insurance.

According to Zane Benefits’ website, employer-sponsored health insurance refers to any health insurance paid for by an employer on behalf of its employees. Employer-sponsored health insurance is commonly referred to as "employee health benefits,""job-based health insurance," or "group health insurance."

Employer-sponsored health insurance goes back to the early 1940's. During WWII workers demanded wage increases that were prohibited by wartime wage and price controls. To grant a concession to labor without violating wage and price controls, Congress exempted employer-sponsored health insurance from wage controls and income taxation—in effect allowing "off-the-books" raises for employees in the form of non-taxable health benefits.

This created an enormous tax advantage for employer-sponsored health benefits over health insurance purchased by employees with after-tax dollars (e.g., like auto insurance). Prior to 2014 the only way for some employees to have access to quality, guaranteed issue health insurance was through work. Much of this is changing with health reform's changes to individual health insurance and the growth of defined contribution solutions.

Of the small employers not offering health insurance, the majority (61%) say cost is the primary reason.

Employer-sponsored group health insurance is broken because it costs too much for most small businesses and employees, employees don’t get a choice, and employees lose their health insurance when they switch jobs. As a result, most employees pay too much for health insurance, have no idea what the plan actually covers, and don’t take the time to learn how health insurance works.

It's not surprising then that 85% of Americans don’t understand how co-pays, deductibles, co-insurance, networks, and out-of-pocket maximums work. Arguably, it's this disconnection between the consumer and the product that contributes to the unsustainable cost and nature of employer-sponsored health insurance.

Click here to read the full article.

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About Zane Benefits
Zane Benefits was founded in 2006 to provide a revolutionized SaaS (Software-as-a-Service) administration platform ("ZaneHealth") for defined contribution health care. The flagship software provides a 100% paperless administration experience to small businesses and insurance professionals that want to offer better health benefits without a traditional group health insurance plan at lower costs. For more information about Zane Benefits, visit http://www.zanebenefits.com. Reported by PRWeb 2 days ago.

Ruh roh: Dog mistakenly gets health insurance

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The Colorado health care exchange has processed applications for thousands of people ... and now one dog.

Shane Smith, of Fort Collins, says his dog Baxter received a letter informing him that a health insurance account had been opened in his name through Connect for Health Colorado.

"I thought, 'Wow, this is so awesome,'" Smith said with a laugh. "They have gone out of their way to insure my 14-year-old Yorkie."

Smith had called Connect for Health Colorado to sign himself up for insurance because his old plan was cancelled due to "Obamacare."

He's not sure exactly how the confirmation letter went to his dog, but he says he thinks it's because of a series of security questions a representative asked him over the phone.

"There was some kind of code or something, so I gave them my dog's name," Smith said. "They must have just put it in the wrong slot or something."

After hearing about all the headaches with Obamacare nationally, Shane says this mistake doesn't seem so bad.

"It was pretty funny. Typical Obamacare, that they would insure your dog by mistake," Smith said.

Smith says he was able to call and correct the mistake fairly quickly.

"They fixed it ... I think they fixed it," he said.

After having his original policy cancelled, followed by this, Smith says he won't believe it until he sees it.

"There's been a lot of headaches that's come from all of this. All the phone calls. All the nonsense. They ended up giving me good coverage I think, but who knows if they're going to take it away," Smith said. "As long as Baxter's covered that's all the counts."

Connect for Health Colorado couldn't comment on the specific letter sent to Baxter, but a spokesperson did release this statement:

"In general, our letters to customers are generated according to information that is provided by the customer into the system either online or over the phone. In other words, our system does not make up a name when generating a letter. As with any new system, mistakes are possible and when notified by customers, we work quickly to resolve the situation." Reported by Click Orlando 2 days ago.

Marlin Steel Owner Testifies to U.S. Senate on Impact of Health Insurance Cost Increases on Small Manufacturers

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Drew Greenblatt, president of Marlin Steel Wire Products in Baltimore and an executive board member of the National Association of Manufacturers, testified before members of the U.S. Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship about how health insurance cost increases are harming small U.S. manufacturers.

Washington, D.C. (PRWEB) November 20, 2013

Drew Greenblatt, president of Marlin Steel Wire Products and an executive board member of the National Association of Manufacturers, testified today (Nov. 20) before members of the U.S. Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship about the negative impact of health insurance cost increases on small U.S. manufacturers.

“My old plan was a good, quality product that I liked very much, but we were forced to give it up because it was no longer affordable due to mandates, taxes and fees required under the Affordable Care Act,” Greenblatt told the senators. “As an employer with fewer than 50 employees, I was repeatedly assured the ACA did not apply to me and that I would be able to keep my plan – that is simply not my experience.”

The hearing, titled “'Affordable Care Act Implementation: Examining How to Achieve a Successful Rollout of the Small Business Exchanges,” examined challenges small business owners are facing in the implementation of the Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) Exchanges. Greenblatt was speaking as a board member of the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), the nation’s largest manufacturing trade association. NAM represents 12,000 member companies who employ 12 million people in every industrial sector and state.

“When I think of health care reforms we need, and I think this is true of any businessperson, cost is the main issue,” he said. “Cost directly addresses the access issue. If we reduce the cost of care in a meaningful way, we make the health delivery system more efficient and we increase access to services. Driving up costs and then providing subsidies just camouflages the underlying problem -- cost.”

Marlin Steel Wire Products LLC is a privately held company in Baltimore, Maryland that manufactures precision-engineered wire basket and sheet metal fabrications for material handling for medical, aerospace, military, energy and telecommunications clients. Marlin Steel recently was named the 230th fastest growing private manufacturer in the country by Inc. magazine. The company recently passed 1,800 consecutive days without a lost-time accident. Reported by PRWeb 2 days ago.

Why Isn't It Big News When Republicans Deny 5 Million People Health Insurance?

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You've probably never heard of Sherilyn Horrocks.

A 61-year-old woman with autoimmune disease, she was profiled by The Salt Lake Tribune before the governor of Utah's health summit in September, as an example of someone who would benefit from Medicaid expansion but wasn't being asked to speak at the event. Horrocks hasn't had insurance since about 2000, when her husband's company stopped offering spousal coverage.

Her condition is incurable.

"But there are medicines and procedures that would prolong my life if I could afford them," she told the Tribune's Kirsten Stewart. "I have a feeling I'm going to be one of those who falls through the cracks."

Her story certainly has ended up between the cracks. She didn't get to speak to the governor and her story never made it out of Utah.

Welcome to America, where one middle-class woman in Florida having to pick a new plan is a bigger deal than 5 million poor people being denied Medicaid expansion.

You may have heard of Dianne Barrette.

She's the 54-year-old Florida woman who was the subject of a "bombshell" report about the unintended consequences of the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

"What I have right now is what I am happy with and I just want to know why I can't keep what I have," Barrette told CBS's This Morning. "Why do I have to be forced into something else?"

There actually turned out to be an excellent answer to that question.

Barrette was paying $54 a month, more than she would pay as a tax for not being insured during the first year of the individual mandate, to essentially be uninsured. Her plan doesn't cover hospitalization -- or much of anything except $50 toward her doctor visits. One serious illness could have easily bankrupted her.

The New Republic's Obamacare Whisperer Jonathan Cohn spoke to Barrette and let her know that for about $100 a month she could get a plan that primarily covers wellness visits but would cap her costs at $6,250 a year, possibly preventing her financial ruin.

"I would jump at it," she told Cohn. "With my age, things can happen. I don't want to have bills that could make me bankrupt. I don't want to lose my house."

Not every story where someone in the individual market is forced to find a new plan, despite the president's best efforts, turns out so well.

Lee Hammack and his wife JoEllen Brothers are Obamacare supporters who find themselves in the group of approximately 2 million Americans who will be paying more for a policy that covers the same as or less than what they had before.

The reasons why this couple from San Francisco lost their plan are complex. They've only had it since 2011. The plan selects participants based on their health status and doesn't cover all the benefits required under the new health law. Kaiser Permanente could have kept the plan in place, Pro Publica's Charles Ornstein discovered. But it didn't for -- you guessed it -- business reasons.

Hammack and Brothers are healthy and earn just over the 400-percent-of-the-poverty-rate threshold for subsidies. And they will have to pay more for what they currently have because of Obamacare.

To a liberal, they're the perfect argument for a public option, which would reduce the deficit by multiples more than raising the Medicare eligibility age by lowering insurance rates.

But that's cold comfort to those who have to pay more.

A small group of middle-class Americans is being asked to subsidize the poor and people with pre-existing conditions in a more direct way than they're currently subsidizing tax breaks for corporate jets, big oil, vacation homes and hedge fund managers who pay lower tax rates than nurses. In exchange, their insurance can have no lifetime caps, will have to spend 80-85 percent of premiums on care or offer rebates, and will be far more like group insurance plans, which typically offer more customer satisfaction than the often crappy private insurance plans that most people keep for only two years. But that's a subtle, hard-to-quantify tradeoff.

It's easy to have compassion for people who have had their plans canceled or have to pay more for health insurance -- even Republicans are suddenly doing it.

Millions of Americans are facing cancelations that insurance companies seem to be using to upsell their current customers to more expensive plans. Most of these people haven't been able to easily get online and shop for new plans due to the disastrous rollout of Healthcare.gov.

So finding stories that justify the narrative that this is Obama's KatrinaIraqWhitewaterWatergateTeapotDome scandal is fun for the press, especially for Fox News. Mediaite's Tommy Christopher is trying to give himself another heart attack by fact-checking the parade of "Obamascare" victims; middle-class people forced to pay more -- more! -- for health insurance.

But it seems like something is missing from the story, doesn't it?

Could it be Sherilyn Horrocks? Or anyone who is among the more than 5 million Americans in 25 states -- including Texas, which has the highest uninsured population in the country -- who are being denied fully subsidized health insurance through the Medicaid expansion?

Medicaid, which is the one success story in the rollout of the ACA, is nearly completely absent from mainstream press coverage. The expansion of the program has proven effective at reducing Oregon's uninsured population by 10 percent in just weeks. Nearly 400,000 people have taken advantage of the program, many of them eligible before expansion and just never got around to signing up.

The media focus on middle-class losers over the poor winners should surprise exactly no one. The press goes for whatever gets viewers/clicks/corporate sponsorships.

The real story is the inexcusable callousness coming from the Republicans who are celebrating denying the poor health insurance.Great news from Alaska -- Parnell won't expand Medicaid. This is how it's done, John Kasich. http://t.co/9ESJrIaqmf

-- Philip Klein (@philipaklein) November 15, 2013
LOL.

Forget the cruelty of celebrating refusing health insurance to 40,000 people who earn too much for Medicaid. Denying Medicaid expansion is denying your state money to balance its budget, create jobs and support its most vulnerable hospitals. It also raises the cost of health insurance for the rest of the state by as much 9.4 percent.

But Republicans don't like giving poor people/takers free stuff -- "gifts," as Mitt Romney called them.

So put it this way: Republican governors are canceling millions of people's insurance and making them pay more for a new plan.

But apparently that's only a big story if President Obama is involved -- or it isn't happening to poor people.Get the latest from Jason Sattler AKA @LOLGOP in the National Memo's free daily newsletter. Reported by Huffington Post 2 days ago.

Buck Consultants’ Private Health Insurance Exchange Serves 400,000 Participants for 2014 Health Care Enrollment

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Buck Consultants’ Private Health Insurance Exchange Serves 400,000 Participants for 2014 Health Care Enrollment NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--RightOpt, the private health insurance exchange from Buck Consultants, A Xerox Company, is servicing more than 400,000 active participants during the fall open enrollment period. Reported by Business Wire 2 days ago.

As Affordable Care Act Sputters Out of the Gate, Medicationdiscountcard.com Offers Survival Tips for Those Forgoing Health Insurance Coverage in 2014

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The slow, rocky beginnings of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) have raised concerns about what might happen if millions of people choose to remain uninsured.

X (PRWEB) November 21, 2013

Arlington, T| The slow, rocky beginnings of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) have raised concerns about what might happen if millions of people choose to remain uninsured. The early numbers paint a troubling picture—not enough people are signing up through the Health Insurance Marketplaces to make the program sustainable. For those that go without insurance, Medicationdiscountcard.com provides a backup for dealing with at least one aspect of healthcare costs: the high price of prescription drugs.

The prescription discount card has no eligibility requirements, and printing out a prescription discount card takes only minutes. Users simply show the card to their local pharmacist, who enters the necessary data one time; after the first visit, users will see discounts of up to 75% on a laundry list of medications, both brand name and generic. Prescription discount cards are accepted at all major, national pharmacies, including Wal-Mart, Walgreens, CVS, and Rite Aid.

Jeremy Duboys, spokesperson for Medicationdiscountcard.com, framed the issue this way: "People without health insurance will still be faced with enormous bills in the event of a serious illness, especially one requiring long-term treatment. Prescription drugs can quickly erode a family budget. http://Medicationdiscountcard.com is one option for cutting these costs."

Without health insurance, the importance of healthy living is magnified: a balanced diet, regular exercise and 7 to 8 hours of sleep a night are essential to keeping the immune system humming along smoothly. Of course, even the healthiest people get sick from time to time. "Don't get sick" isn't a healthcare policy that works in the long run.

For the chronically uninsured, hospitals that accept Medicare cannot legally deny care. Similarly, free clinics are expected remain a part of the landscape in many corners of the nation. Yet, there's no significant program for helping people deal with expensive prescriptions. To that end, Medicationdiscountcard.com may mean the difference between prescriptions being affordable or just out of reach.

Duboys added: "People are skeptical when I say there's no catch to using our card. But when they try it, they find out it's a foolproof way to ease the burden of prescription drug costs."

Data released by the Department of Health and Human Services indicates that national enrollment in marketplace-based health insurance plans is falling well short of expectations. From October 1 through November 2, slightly more than 100,000 Americans selected a health plan. Another million had gone through the application process but had not yet decided upon a plan. The sign-up rate through this period was about 20% of what the Obama administration had hoped for.

The so-far paltry enrollment rates on the Health Insurance Marketplace will eventually become an issue even for those who have selected a plan. The law depends upon a certain level of participation to be self-sustaining. If the numbers don't balance out soon, Congress may have just the ammunition it need to strike down the ACA, meaning that the uninsured population will balloon once more. Should that happen, the demand for cost-saving measures, like those available through Medicationdiscountcard.com, will certainly rise.

About Medicationdiscountcard.com

Medicationdiscountcard.com was started to provide discounts on prescription drugs to those who need it most. Our goal is to provide you with the largest savings possible when compared to other cards. We invite you to compare the savings our card will provide to other leading providers. Reported by PRWeb 2 days ago.

Health Insurance Exchanges Available on the Insurance4Dallas Website

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Use Insurance4dallas to bypass Affordable Care Act website headaches.

Lewisville, TX (PRWEB) November 21, 2013

Insurance4Dallas is pleased to announce their Health Insurance Website for Texans with the same health insurance coverage that is on Healthcare.gov. Therefore, to bypass the website issues of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), go to http://www.insurance4dallas.com and listen to Genevieve, then follow the instructions. Visitors will have access to “On the Exchange” and “Off the Exchange” policies. The differences between the two exchanges are:

With “On the Exchange” policies, applicants may qualify for subsidies based on the price of insurance and their income. Also, “On the Exchange” policies may have limited carriers and networks. With “Off the Exchange” policies, applicants will not qualify for subsidies. Also, applicants will have a larger selection of insurance carriers as well as networks.

On the Exchange policies must have completed applications by December 15th to get an effective date of January 1, 2014. These plans will have a maximum out of pocket expense which will include deductibles and co-insurance totaling $6350.00 for an individual and $12,700.00 for a family. On the Exchange policies will also contain the “10 Essential Health Benefits,” which include pediatric dental and vision care.

Off the Exchange policies can have an effective date up to the middle or the end of December, depending on the health insurance company. If applicants do not qualify for a subsidy, policies applied for with an effective date prior to January 1st, may be less expensive because they do not have to include all mandates in the Affordable Care Act. However, upon renewal in 2014, the renewed policy will include all mandates in the Affordable Care Act.

About Insurance4Dallas
The Thornton Insurance Agency, which uses Insurance4Dallas.com (I4D) as its URL, is an online source of health insurance for individuals, families and small businesses. Insurance4Dallas removes the intricacy out of selecting medical insurance by providing data in an objective, easy to read format, enabling the research, analysis, comparison and purchase of health and life insurance products that best meet consumers’ needs.

Insurance4Dallas.com has developed partnerships with many of the major insurance carriers, offering competitive insurance products online. I4D has worked hard with insurance carriers to provide a seamless and secure connection electronically that gives us real time and direct connectivity to the Carrier’s application process. This decreases the time considerably for processing your insurance application.

Insurance4Dallas.com provides consumers with detailed information and the ability to apply for insurance online. I4D provides a full spectrum of health, life and dental insurance plans with a selection of price and benefit options, complemented by personable customer service. Available via phone, email or fax, Insurance4Dallas answers consumer questions throughout the process of purchasing and using health insurance.

The Thornton Insurance Agency was founded by John Thornton, who has been licensed and selling Insurance since 1986. He lends his expertise in the continued focus of customer satisfaction by becoming Texas’s number one online source for Life and Health Insurance. The Thornton Insurance Agency is headquartered in Lewisville, TX. Reported by PRWeb 2 days ago.

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City Selects Pulse8’s Commercial Health Insurance Analytics Platform

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The largest locally based health insurance provider in the Kansas City area will implement Pulse8’s Reveal8™, Business Intelligence8™, and Detector8™ products and solutions.

Annapolis, MD (PRWEB) November 21, 2013

Pulse8, LLC - a cutting-edge big data and healthcare analytics company focused on Risk Adjustment solutions for the Health Insurance Marketplace announced today that Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City (Blue KC) has chosen Pulse8’s Risk Adjustment Analytics and Technology products, as well as its Risk Accuracy and Mitigation products for its Commercial Health Insurance Marketplace population.

Pulse8 will implement its Reveal8™ risk adjustment analytic solution to drive precision and accuracy into Blue KC’s Commercial Marketplace population applying unique Member and Provider Profiling so that Blue KC can quickly assess and assist its individual members in finding the most appropriate care, ultimately closing documentation gaps and improving quality. Reveal8™ will monitor the 3Rs (reinsurance, risk corridor, and risk adjustment) enabling Blue KC to easily measure financial performance.

“Blue KC will gain valuable insight into our population through Pulse8’s Business Intelligence tools and dashboards,” said Jason Grau, Vice President of Enterprise Strategy at Blue KC. “Pulse8’s solutions will further assist us with identifying the appropriate outreach to our physicians and members, to ensure access to the right care at the right time.”

Pulse8’s Detector8™ product will provide Risk Accuracy and Audit Readiness ensuring Blue KC is prepared, with key features such as: analysis of conditions most susceptible to documentation issues, identification and prioritization of condition sources, and provider specialty patterns and sequencing for inappropriate diagnoses.

“Blue KC’s mission is to improve the health and wellness of its members. Pulse8 is honored to be a part of this mission,” said John Criswell, Pulse8 CEO.

About Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City:

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City, the largest not-for-profit health insurer in Missouri and the only not-for-profit commercial health insurer in Kansas City, has been part of the Kansas City community since 1938. *Ranked by J.D. Power and Associates in 2013 as “Highest Member Satisfaction among Commercial Health Plans in the Heartland Region, Two Years in a Row,” Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City provides health coverage services to more than one million residents in the greater Kansas City area, including Johnson and Wyandotte counties in Kansas and 30 counties in Northwest Missouri. Our mission: to use our role as the area's leading health insurer to provide affordable access to health care and to improve the health and wellness of our members. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City is an independent licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association. For more information on the company, visit its website at BlueKC.com.· Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City received the highest numerical score among commercial health plans in the Heartland region (AR, IA, KS, MO, NE, OK) in the proprietary J.D. Power and Associates 2012-2013 U.S. Member Health Plan StudySM. 2013 study based on 33,533 total member responses, measuring 11 plans in the Heartland Region (excludes Medicare and Medicaid). Proprietary study results are based on experiences and perceptions of members surveyed December 2012-January 2013. Your experiences may vary. Visit jdpower.com.

About Pulse8:

Pulse 8 is a cutting-edge big data healthcare technology and analytics provider that delivers an unprecedented view into risk adjustment so health plans can achieve the highest financial impact in the Commercial Health Exchanges. Its proprietary algorithms move beyond traditional methods and data sources to make predictions about what individual members require next, ultimately closing gaps in care and increasing precision with risk adjustment initiatives. Pulse8 offers innovative and unique methodologies to ensure its clients outperform the marketplace. Its transparent and flexible business intelligence tools give real-time visibility into member and provider behaviors allowing clients to apply the most cost-effective and appropriate interventions. Pulse8 Every Number is a Life™. For more information, please visit http://www.pulse8.com

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### Reported by PRWeb 2 days ago.

Minnesotans lacking health insurance seek less care says study

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Minnesotans who lack health insurance were less likely in 2011 to receive clinic and in-patient hospital care than those with private or public health insurance, according to a state health department report released Thursday. Reported by TwinCities.com 1 day ago.

Most small businesses fear they won't be able to afford good health insurance

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More than 60 percent of small business owners aren't confident they'll be able to get health insurance that's both affordable and comprehensive in 2014, according to a survey by the National Association for the Self-Employed. The online survey of 498 small business owners and self-employed individuals was conducted Nov. 7-20. Slightly more than half of these people have visited HealthCare.gov, the federal insurance exchange that launched Oct. 1. Of these only 9 percent said they successfully enrolled… Reported by bizjournals 1 day ago.

California Health Insurance Exchange Will Not Extend Plans Cancelled by Obamacare

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California Health Insurance Exchange Will Not Extend Plans Cancelled by Obamacare In a 5-0 unanimous decision, Covered California, the state’s health insurance exchange, broke with President Obama and voted against extending one million healthcare plans that are cancelled under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The plans did not fall within the acceptable guidelines prescribed by the ACA. 

Last week, in a controversial move, President Obama, by what could be considered executive decree, altered the law and announced that insurance companies could offer renewals into 2014 for all policyholders who were cancelled. Obama's turnaround came about as a mea culpa for his misleading millions of Americans into thinking that they could keep their existing plans, as he had promised.

California state leaders decided against the extensions because a loss of customers at the exchange might create funding shortages, driving insurance rates upwards. Susan Kennedy, a Covered California board member, admitted the loss of existing policies will bring hardship for some people, "but delaying the transition won't solve a single problem.”

California is not the only blue state to decline. Washington and Minnesota have also rejected Obama’s latest fix. Josh Earnest, a White House spokesman, when quizzed by Washington reporters about states rejecting Obama’s request, said, “It is up to individual states to decide. That is as much as we can do.”

 

 
 
 
  Reported by Breitbart 20 hours ago.

Zane Benefits Publishes New Information on Small Biz Health Insurance

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Creating All-Star Small Biz Health Insurance

Park City, Utah (PRWEB) November 22, 2013

Today, Zane Benefits, the number one online small business health benefits solution, published new information on small biz health insurance.

According to Zane Benefits’ website, HR professionals are responsible for wearing many hats at small businesses, including employee health benefits administration, hiring and retention, training, payroll, and employee satisfaction. On top of that, HR is required to balance the company's expectations with employees' expectations. Keeping everyone happy can feel like walking a tight-rope, but a job well done means you're a company all-star small biz health insurance success.

For the 65% of small businesses who do not offer health insurance, there is one emerging small biz health insurance solution that is picking up traction because of its ability to save businesses and employees money:

The biggest concern of small businesses with health insurance is the cost -- both the cost of entry when starting to offer health insurance, and the costs increases many businesses face at annual renewal time.

Creating cost and liability controls is vital to any business's predictability and scalability. And yet, being able to set, control, and predict all health benefits costs is revolutionary for many businesses because traditional health insurance does not offer these controls.

With "pure" defined contribution health benefits, the business offers employees healthcare allowances ("defined contributions") to use on individual health insurance. There is no small group health insurance plan. Employees can purchase any qualified plan and receive reimbursement up to the amount of their allowance. Out of all small business health insurance solutions out there, "pure" defined contribution achieves the most controllable costs.

According to Zane Benefits’ website, defined contribution stretches the business's health benefits dollars farther. On the individual market, health plans are much less expensive than group coverage. And in 2014 eligible employees can access health insurance tax subsidies.

In the past, group health insurance was the best way for small businesses to provide quality health insurance to employees. Today, group health insurance is a source of frustration with declining benefits and increased costs. Small businesses need solutions to offer the same quality of coverage, but with controllable cost and sustainable administrative effort. "Pure" defined contribution health benefits provide this solution.

Click here to read the full article.

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About Zane Benefits
Zane Benefits was founded in 2006 to provide a revolutionized SaaS (Software-as-a-Service) administration platform ("ZaneHealth") for defined contribution health care. The flagship software provides a 100% paperless administration experience to small businesses and insurance professionals that want to offer better health benefits without a traditional group health insurance plan at lower costs. For more information about Zane Benefits, visit http://www.zanebenefits.com. Reported by PRWeb 10 hours ago.

NH extends high risk health insurance pool

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CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — The state has issued an order allowing nearly 3,000 New Hampshire residents with health insurance through the state's high risk pool allowed to keep their coverage until alternatives are fully available under the federal health care overhaul law.
 
 
 
  Reported by Boston.com 3 hours ago.

Obamacare's Flaws Put Progressive Politics in Jeopardy

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If the Obama administration can't quickly fix the rollout of the Affordable Care Act, not only is President Obama's second term in jeopardy. Progressivism itself is in jeopardy.

Progressivism's fundamental mission statement is that the government is essential to counterbalance free markets and can help solve social and economic problems from retirement security, to the environment, to health care. American voters are ambivalent. It's often said that a majority of voters are philosophically conservative and operationally liberal: It you ask them whether they support bigger or smaller government in the abstract they support smaller government. If you ask them whether they support specific government programs like Social Security, Medicare, disaster relief, or environmental protection, they support the specific government programs.

The danger is that if Obamacare continues to be an unforced error it will also reinforce the bias of many Americans -- amplified by 30 years of right-wing propaganda -- that government is the problem and not the solution to pressing social and economic problems and will make it difficult to sell American voters on any progressive reforms for years to come.

Moreover, Republicans could increase their majority in the House and retake the Senate in 2014, making it Obama a lame duck.

While most progressives and liberals welcomed Obamacare as the fulfillment of the hundred-year old progressive dream of providing health care as a right to all Americans, the tragic irony is that Obamacare is not really a progressive program but a fundamentally conservative one hatched by the right-wing Heritage Foundation.

Not only is it NOT government run health care, as its Republican critics dishonestly charge (except for Medicaid expansion for low-income Americans which Republican governors in nearly 30 states have turned down). It's not even government run health insurance. It's PRIVATE health insurance which is means tested for partial subsidies. In fact it looks suspiciously like the voucher system that Paul Ryan and House Republicans want to convert Medicare itself into.

But for most of the voting public -- egged on by Republican propaganda and unrefuted by the mass media -- Obamacare is a form of government run health care. Its failure to work well just confirms to them that government doesn't work well.

In fact, Obamacare is the bastard child of two incompatible strains of political philosophy. The first is the long-held progressive principal that access to basic health care should be a right and not a privilege. The second is the long-held conservative principal that the only solution to social problems is the "free market" (before conservatism abandoned any notion that solving social problems is a worthwhile goal at all) and the way to all reform is through private enterprise -- in this case private insurance with means tested partial subsidies.

Combining the two is like asking a pig to fly.

This incestuous combination is the essence of Clinton and Obama corporate neoliberalism -- not of real progressivism -- and, as the rollout of Obamacare is proving, it doesn't work, or at least doesn't work very well.

Medicare -- which is simply single-payer health insurance for everyone over 65 -- is the true progressive solution and works very well. You can sign up for it in 10 minutes. And extending it to every American from birth to death -- which is essentially the system in other advanced capitalist countries like Canada, France and Sweden that provide better health care than America at half the cost -- is the simple and elegant solution to providing health care security to all Americans.

But that would require confronting the power of the private health care industry. And confronting powerful private business interests is antithetical to Clintonism and Obamaism which has made its peace with the domination of politics by big money setting the limits of permissible reform.

As an analysis in The New Republic early in Obama's first term described it,
To put it simply, and perhaps over-simply, on a variety of fronts (most notably financial restructuring and health care reform, but arguably on climate change as well), the Obama administration has chosen the strategy of deploying regulated and subsidized private sector entities to achieve progressive policy results. This approach was a hallmark of the so-called Clintonian, 'New Democrat' movement, and the broader international movement sometimes referred to as 'the Third Way,' which often defended the use of private means for public ends... To put it more bluntly, on a widening range of issues, Obama's critics to the right say he's engineering a government takeover of the private sector, while his critics to the left accuse him of promoting a corporate takeover of the public sector.
Or as David Brooks wrote in The New York Times,

[Obama and Clinton] Democrats learned never to go to war against the combined forces of corporate America. Today, whether it is on the stimulus, on health care, or any other issue, the Obama administration and the Congressional leadership go out of their way to court corporate interests, to win corporate support and to at least divide corporate opposition.

The defective roll-out of Obamacare is not simply an accident. While some of the technical flaws may eventually be remedied, fundamental problems are baked into the Rube Goldberg contraption that is the Affordable Care Act.

Take the problems with the Obamacare website that's making headlines, empowering Republicans and freaking out wobbly Democrats. As Mike Konczai has pointed out on the Next New Deal blog, it's not a function just of faulty computer programming but of the unnecessary complexity of a system that has to means test applicants based on their income and other factors and then match them to a choice of approved private insurance policies.

You can sign up for Medicare online in minutes. But signing up for Obamacare
requires substantial coordination between multiple government agencies with very different infrastructures. As the GAO notes, the data hub is to verify an applicant's Social Security number with the Social Security Administration (SSA), and to access the data from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) that are needed to assess the applicant's income, citizenship, and immigration status. The data hub is also expected to access information from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), Department of Defense (DOD), Office of Personnel Management (OPM), and Peace Corps to enable exchanges to determine if an applicant is eligible for insurance coverage from other federal programs that would make them ineligible for income-based financial subsidies.
But that's not all. The website then needs to match this data from multiple government agencies with the various policy offerings of multiple private insurers with multiple offerings, each with their own computer system and rates.

You can see why this is no easy task. And obstructionism of Republican governors who have refused to set up their own exchanges has only compounded the problem.

But still, it's an unforgivable unforced error by the Obama administration that had 2 years since the ACA was passed to foresee these problems, come up with solutions, and test them before the website was rolled out to the public.

And Obama's retreat in letting people keep their current defective policies in the individual market for another year will only compound Obamacare's problems. People who currently have individual policies are relatively healthy -- Otherwise their pre-existing conditions would have prevented them from getting individual policies in the first place. These are the very people who need to be part of the risk pool of the policies sold on the exchanges. If the people who do buy policies on the exchanges are older and sicker, the premiums will go up next year. This will lead more healthy people to avoid buying Obamacare policies -- possibly even paying fines and going uninsured -- which could lead to a death spiral of rising costs leading to fewer healthy applicants leading to even higher costs.

And what about that claim that "if you like your insurance, you can keep it"? It was actually disingenuous slogan concocted by advocates of Obamacare to fend off advocates of Medicare-For-All. Before Obama's election, several polls showed majority support for Medicare-For-All. In a December, 2007 AP/Yahoo poll, 65 percent preferred a Medicare For All-type system while 64 percent preferred keeping the current system in which some people get health insurance from their employers and some have no insurance. According to a 2007 NBC News/Wall Street Journal Poll, 53 percent said they would be willing to pay higher taxes so that everyone can have health insurance, while 40 percent disagreed.

But neoliberal supporters of what became Obamacare -- who didn't want to challenge the power of the private health care industry -- argued that the public would reject Medicare-For-All because they "liked" their current health insurance and would be afraid to lose it. So they urged Obama to adopt the slogan "if you like your insurance, you can keep it" which they knew wasn't really true.

Now it's come back to bite them.

As a Medicare-For-All activist and as someone who wrote over a dozen pieces in the Huffington Post criticizing Obamacare before it was passed and exposing the behind-the-scenes deals with big PHarMa and the private hospital lobby designed to neutralize corporate opposition, it's tempting to gloat at the failures of Obamacare and say "I told you so".

But as a progressive, I have to hope and pray that the Obama administration can quickly fix the Affordable Care Act's most glaring problems in the face of steadfast Republican opposition. I'd like to think that Obamacare's failure would lead towards Medicare-For-All. More likely, it would lead back to a dog eat dog world in which millions lack health care at all. Millions of real people will suffer real harm

Even more crucially, if Obamacare can't be fixed well enough to become a modest success despite its flaws and limitations, the chances for real progressive reform may be drastically diminished for decades to come. Reported by Huffington Post 4 days ago.

New Analysis Reveals Extent Of Obamacare 'Rate Shock'

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WASHINGTON -- Only a small sliver of the Americans who buy their own health insurance plans and may be seeing them canceled under Obamacare will pay higher premiums, according to an analysis released Thursday.

More than seven in 10 Americans who purchase health plans directly will get subsidies to help pay for coverage under the Affordable Care Act, according to the report by Families USA, a Washington-based organization that supports the health care reform law.

The report comes as President Barack Obama is under fire for breaking his vow that consumers who liked their health plans could keep them. It shows that even if some people do lose their current health plans, most won't pay more for insurance and millions more will gain access to coverage.

"It is important to keep a perspective about the small portion of the population that might be adversely affected," said Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA. "That number is a tiny fraction of the 65 million non-elderly people with pre-existing health conditions who will gain new protections through the Affordable Care Act. It is also a small fraction of the tens of millions of uninsured Americans who can also get help."

The impact of Obama's health care reform law on the price of health insurance has been hotly contested, especially as many households are learning that their current policies won't be available next year and that, in some cases, replacements will be costlier. But these hardships aren't as common as they seem, the Families USA analysis suggests.

Financial assistance provided by Obamacare will mitigate most premium increases linked to strengthened benefits and consumer protections required by the law, Pollack said. "In the vast majority of instances, the subsidy will more than make up for it, but it won't be in every single case," he said.

Among the roughly 15 million working-age Americans in the health insurance market for those who don't get health benefits from their employers or a government program like Medicare, 71 percent, or 10.8 million, have incomes low enough to qualify them for subsidized private insurance or Medicaid coverage, the Families USA analysis concludes.

That leaves 29 percent of the customers in this market, or more than 4 million people, who may see higher rates go up without the benefit of financial assistance.

Individuals who buy private health insurance using the Obamacare exchanges can qualify for three kinds of financial assistance. Tax credits for insurance premiums are available on a sliding scale to people who earn between the poverty level, which is about $11,500 for a single person this year, and four times that amount, or about $46,000. In addition, people who make up to 250 percent of poverty, or around $29,000 for a single person, are eligible for subsidies to cut their out-of-pocket costs, like deductibles and copayments. Medicaid also will be opened next year to people who earn up to 133 percent of poverty, or about $15,300 for an individual, in about half of states where the program is expanding under Obamacare.

Millions of consumers across the U.S. have been receiving letters from their health insurance carriers in recent months advising them that their current plans don't meet Obamacare standards and won't be available next year. In many cases, these customers are told that replacement plans will cost significantly more, although insurers aren't always advising people to shop around for lower prices or to seek financial assistance via the health insurance exchanges.

"For anyone receiving a termination notice, especially if they have not yet found an alternative that is at least as good, it obviously is a concern and one that we take seriously. But I believe that this concern has been blown significantly out of proportion," Pollack said.

Coverage in this segment of the market wasn't stable before Obamacare, in part because insurance companies routinely modified or eliminated health plans and in part because people cycled into the individual health insurance market temporarily when they lost jobs or health benefits before returning to the employer-based system, Pollack said.

Sixty-five percent of individual health insurance plans are in place for less than a year, and the median duration of a plan is eight months, according to the report. Based on that historical trend and the data on the size of the individual market and the incomes of its customers, Families USA estimates that 0.6 percent of the U.S. population faces the prospect of canceled plans and higher rates without subsidies.

"That's approximately 1.5 million people, and that's not trivial and I don't in any way suggest that we shouldn't be concerned about that group," Pollack said. "But ... the number of people at risk of this becoming a problem is considerably smaller than the tens of millions of people who are going to get substantial help."

Families USA based its findings on data from the U.S. Census Bureau and on research conducted by the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, the Urban Institute and the University of Minnesota's State Health Access Data Assistance Center. Its report breaks down these data for each state.

Obama has asked state regulators and health insurance companies to allow consumers to renew their canceled plans for one year, but this proposed fix won't be taken up in every state or by every insurer.

Further complicating the situation for people who must find new health plans are the ongoing problems with HealthCare.gov, the federal portal to health insurance in more than 30 states, and the state-run health insurance exchanges in places like Maryland and Oregon. This is preventing consumers from seeking alternatives and applying for financial assistance. The Obama administration maintains that HealthCare.gov will be reliably usable by the end of the month. Reported by Huffington Post 3 days ago.
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