North Carolina Sees 10% Drop In Health Law Enrollment Numbers
Amid uncertainty surrounding the future of the Affordable Care Act, state and national numbers for sign-ups have slipped from last year. Media outlets also report on health law news from Connecticut and Colorado.
North Carolina Health News:
Exchange Sign-Ups Down As White House Ends ACA Support
North Carolina ended the Affordable Care Act insurance exchange’s open enrollment period with more than a half-million enrollees for coverage this year – still, the number represented a significant decrease from last year. The 549,158 who signed up for North Carolina exchange coverage by Jan. 31 represents a 10.5 percent drop from the 613,487 who enrolled during open enrollment in early 2016. (Hoban, 2/7)
The CT Mirror:
CT Obamacare Exchange Enrollment Down 3.9 Percent
The open enrollment period for Connecticut’s health insurance exchange ended with 111,524 people signed up for private health plans – approximately 4,500 fewer than last year. That’s a 3.9 percent drop in enrollment in individual-market insurance sold through Access Health CT, the marketplace created by the federal health law. (Levin Becker, 2/7)
Denver Post:
Bill To Repeal Colorado Health Insurance Exchange Clears First Test
A bill to shut down the state’s marketplace where people buy health insurance plans under the Affordable Care Act passed its first committee vote Tuesday. Senate Bill 3 would push people and small businesses currently shopping for plans on Connect for Health Colorado to the federally run HealthCare.gov starting in 2018 — assuming there still is an Affordable Care Act then. The bill passed the state Senate Finance Committee on a 3-2 party-line vote, with Republicans supporting it and Democrats opposed. (Ingold, 2/7)