Showing posts with label Enrollees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Enrollees. Show all posts

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Data Shows 15-20 Percent of ACA Enrollees Haven"t Paid Premiums

Blue Cross Blue Shield has data that shows 15 to 20 percent of Americans that are signed up for Obamacare have not paid their premiums, making the actual number of sign-ups closer to 6 million.

National Journal reports that 80 to 85 percent of people who enrolled with the insurance company through the Obamacare exchanges paid their first month’s premium. The rest have not paid, meaning they are not actually covered under any insurance plan.


Other insurance companies have reported similar numbers, according to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.


“Insurance companies… tell us from their initial customers it’s somewhere between 80, 85, some say it’s as high as 90 percent have paid so far,” Sebelius said. “Lots of companies have different timetables for when their new customers have to send their first payment. You are not fully enrolled until you pay your premium.”


National Journal estimates that if the national average of non-paying Obamacare enrollees is between 80 and 85 percent, the overall number of Americans covered under the Affordable Care Act is between 5.7 and 6 million — not the 7.1 million that have reportedly signed up.


On Thursday, the Obama administration announced the final day to enroll in an insurance plan through the Obamacare exchanges will be April 15. People who started to fill out an application online are being granted the extension to complete the process.


“For those in line on the 31st, we encourage consumers to finish the process as soon as possible,” Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services spokesman Aaron Albright said, the Wall Street Journal reports.


“They must complete their enrollment by no later than the 15th for coverage this year.”


The later deadline is seen by some Obamacare critics as a way to get more people to sign up for healthcare plans, since there will not be a way to verify if someone actually tried to sign up before the March 31 deadline.


Deadlines to sign up for plans have been fluid since the website rollout last fall. The deadline to get coverage for Jan. 1 was changed from Dec. 15 to Dec. 23, and then the March 31 date became a soft deadline.


Open enrollment for 2015 is set to begin Nov. 15, a change from the initial date of Oct. 15.


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Data Shows 15-20 Percent of ACA Enrollees Haven"t Paid Premiums

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

From RealClearPolitics: Obamacare Enrollees; Fox News and The White House; Pope Discusses Abortion;


Good morning. It’s Tuesday, January 14, 2014. Congress came back in session with a bang, as a group of bipartisan, bicameral congressional negotiators produced a 1,582-page budget blueprint last night that is expected to pass both the House and the Senate.


The $ 1.1 trillion spending bill restores some cuts to social programs such as Head Start, gives federal workers a paltry 1 percent raise, and keeps the government running through the end of Major League Baseball’s regular season. (And they wouldn’t shut the government during the World Series, would they?)


Speaking of which, the National League team in Barack Obama’s adopted hometown of Chicago has unveiled a new Cubs mascot to scathing reviews. The White House has not yet commented. Meanwhile, the president’s schedule includes lunch with Joe Biden, hosting the 2013 NBA champion Miami Heat in the East Room and meeting early this evening with Maria Shriver to discuss her report on the status of women in America.


As far as tomorrow goes, the president is heading to North Carolina. In his absence RCP is hosting a noon event at the Newseum focusing on America’s energy future with Sen. Joe Manchin as the keynoter. (If you wish to attend, clickhere to RSVP.)


Today’s date is a signature day in the history of television. Sixty-two years ago today, the incomparable Dave Garroway opened a live broadcast from New York City with the words “Well, here we are.”


Sporting a huge lavalier microphone around his neck, he got up from behind his desk and walked around the studio and said, “Good morning to you–the very first good morning of what I hope and suspect will be a great many good mornings between you and I. Here it is—January 14, 1952, when NBC begins a new program called ‘Today.’ And if it doesn’t sound too revolutionary, I really believe this begins a new kind of television.”


And so it did. I’ll have more on the Today Show and Dave Garroway’s influence on the medium in a moment. First, I’d point you to our front page, where we aggregate an array of stories and columns spanning the political spectrum. We also offer a full complement of original material from RCP’s own reporters and contributors, including:


* * *


Top 10 Lawmakers on Energy. As part of RCP’s weeklong focus on the issue, Caitlin Huey-Burns and Tim Hains collaborated on this slide show.


Just 24 Percent of ACA Enrollees Are Under 35. Alexis Simendinger reports on the data, released yesterday, which show a sign-up trend skewing older than hoped for.


A Second Look at Medicaid Enrollment Numbers. Sean Trende revisits the figures he explored last week, only this time using more precise — and revealing — data supplied by one state.


Christie Faces Tall Task in Reasserting Agenda. Amid fallout from last week’s “Bridgegate” revelations, the New Jersey governor will try to change the subject with his state-of-the-state address today. Scott Conroy has a preview.


Brett Baier on Fox News’ Relationship With the White House. Check out the latest installment of “RCP’s Morning Commute.”


Poll: 23 Percent Say U.S. Headed in Right Direction. Adam O’Neal has thenumbers.


Pope Ratchets Up Rhetoric on Abortion. Adam reports on the pontiff’s surprisingly strong words on the subject Monday in his State of the World address.


N.Y. Congressman to Wed Same-Sex Partner. Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney of New York is engaged to be married. Adam has the details.


Human Rights Buried Under $ 51 Billion Sochi Games. Mark Cunningham wonderswhether the international community will turn a blind eye next month to Russia’s oppression.


* * *


With his bow tie, horn-rimmed glasses, and everyman looks, Dave Garroway was perhaps an unlikely television star. His secret was his amiable manner and preternatural calmness—on live television, no less, amid a clattering newsroom—and his love of the subject material, whatever that happened to be.


TV critic Tom Shales has ruminated that the early television performers and producers were creators in the truest sense of the word. “Inventing TV—the machine—was not that hard,” he wrote. “Dave Garroway helped invent what you put on it once you’ve got it.”


When Garroway died by his own hand in 1982, Shales penned a poignant obituary. “Dave Garroway was very important to television,” he wrote. “If this were theater we were talking about, his death would be like all the Barrymores dying at once; everyone who’s come after him has owed him something.”


At the NBC studios in New York, they know this. Two years ago, on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of “Today,” they paid him due homage.


“Dave Garroway was a master communicator,” said Al Roker. “He could talk to people. He, in a sense, was a showman. You know, the ‘window’ was his ring.”


“I grew up with Dave Garroway; it was a revelation,” added Tom Brokaw. “I lived in such a remote part of the country that we didn’t get television until 1955, and for that to come into our living room—I was going off to school, my mother to work—and we would sit and watch Dave Garroway, who was a maestro at what he was able to do.”


This was a maestro whose cast in the early years included a pet chimpanzee who frequently bit Garroway and was eventually eased off the show. At first, television writers didn’t know what to make of the mishmash of news and entertainment, but the show made money for the network, and Garroway’s relaxed work won over the critics.


“He does not crash into the home with the false jollity and thunderous witticisms of a backslapper,” New York Times critic Richard F. Shepard wrote in 1960. “He is pleasant, serious, scholarly looking and not obtrusively convivial.”


Garroway’s trademark was signing off by saying, “Peace,” while extending the palm of his hand. After this term became devalued by overuse in the political tumult of the times, he switched to “Courage,” something adopted years later by CBS anchorman Dan Rather.


In those early days of live television, Dave Garroway’s official title wasn’t “anchorman” or “host.” It was “communicator,” and it couldn’t have been more apt.


‘”He could look at the camera,” said Barbara Walters, who was hired by Garroway, “and make you feel he was talking only with you.”


Carl M. Cannon
Washington Bureau Chief
RealClearPolitics
Twitter: @CarlCannon


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From RealClearPolitics: Obamacare Enrollees; Fox News and The White House; Pope Discusses Abortion;

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Wal-Mart offers 30 days of prescriptions to backlogged Obamacare enrollees


Visitors wait to speak with Certified Application Counselors about Affordable Care Act insurance, known as Obamacare, at the Borinquen Medical Center in Miami, Florida October 2, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Joe Skipper




Reuters: Politics



Wal-Mart offers 30 days of prescriptions to backlogged Obamacare enrollees