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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Nov 16 2017

Full Issue

Despite Dire Predictions, This Year's ACA Sign-Ups Continue To Surge Past Last Year's Pace

But with a small enrollment window, it's too early to tell what the final numbers will look like.

The Associated Press: 'Obamacare' Sign-Ups 45 Percent Ahead Of Last Year's Pace

Sign-ups for Affordable Care Act health plans are running more than 45 percent ahead of last year's pace, according to government data released Wednesday. The numbers from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services come as Republican senators are pushing to pay for tax cuts by repealing the "Obamacare" requirement to carry coverage. (Alonso-Zaldivar, 11/15)

Reuters: Nearly 1.5 Million People Signed Up For Obamacare Plans So Far: Officials

More than 800,000 people signed up for Obamacare individual health insurance plans in the second week of open enrollment, U.S. government health officials said on Wednesday, bringing the total number of sign-ups to nearly 1.5 million so far. (Abutaleb, 11/15)

The Washington Post: ACA Federal Enrollment Surges By At Least 47 Percent This Year, CMS Says

The portion of new consumers enrolling in ACA plans is slightly down this year, according to the latest federal report. Those Americans accounted for 23 percent of enrollees between Nov. 1 and Nov. 11, as opposed to 24 percent in the early days of 2016. (Eilperin, 11/15)

The Hill: Nearly 1.5 Million Sign Up For ObamaCare In First 11 Days

There are also more new consumers signing up for plans this year, the data show. In the first two weeks of open enrollment, 345,719 new consumers have signed up for plans, compared to 246,433 during the same time period last year. (Hellmann, 11/15)

Modern Healthcare: Sign-Ups Hit 1.5 Million In First Two Weeks Of ACA Open Enrollment

Prior to the start of open enrollment, many experts feared sign-ups would lag this year because of deep cuts in federal funding for Obamacare marketing and outreach, and enrollment assistance through certified navigators. The first two weeks of the enrollment period suggest those concerns may have been overblown. (Livingston, 11/15)

Politico: Defying Gloomy Predictions, Obamacare Enrollment Surges

In other words, there might be no such thing as bad news for Obamacare. “As P.T. Barnum would say, as long as my name is in the papers and it’s spelled correctly, it’s all good,” said Michael Marchand, chief marketing officer for Washington state’s Obamacare marketplace, which saw its website traffic increase by 24 percent during the first week of enrollment. “I think there’s some truth to that.” The conventional wisdom was that enrollment would dip significantly as a hostile administration gutted outreach and marketing. (Demko, 11/15)

Bloomberg: Obamacare Signups Are Up 47% From Last Year So Far

It’s hard to gauge what the acceleration means for the Obamacare marketplaces overall, because consumers have only half the time to enroll in plans on healthcare.gov this year. Even a stronger-than-expected start could end with fewer people signing up by the time the window closes Dec. 15. (Tozzi, 11/15)

Pioneer Press: MNsure Sign-Ups ‘Off To A Good Start,’ On Pace For At Least 5 Percent Growth

Health insurance sign-ups through MNsure, the state’s individual insurance marketplace, are off to a strong start in the first two weeks of open enrollment. As of Tuesday, 91,623 people had signed up through Minnesota’s exchange for the federal Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare. Most of those sign-ups were from existing customers who renewed plans or who chose different coverage. (Magan, 11/15)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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