Wednesday, April 16, 2014

New York exceeds Obamacare enrollment expectations by 60 percent, premiums halved


http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/04/14/1292034/-New-York-exceeds-Obamacare-enrollment-expectations-by-60-percent-premiums-nbsp-halved?detail=email

Wilbert Jones helps local residents sign up for the Affordable Care Act, widely referred to as
attribution: REUTERS
New York might very well be the most successful of all the states in implementing Obamacare. It had a bit of a head start, since it had already regulated insurers to prevent discrimination against people with existing medical problems. But the whole of New York's remarkable success—more than 900,000 signed up in both private and government plans and premiums cut in half—came with more tough choices in regulating insurers.
The state’s success was no accident. It began with a receptive customer base and the benefit of experience, since New York already had some of the country’s most generous insurance coverage for the poor and sick. Resistance to the health exchange among Republicans in the state may, oddly enough, have helped make it more successful. […]
[T]he exchange had a rough start. Republicans in the State Senate tried to block it by refusing to support the creation of an independent authority to run it. New York could have followed 36 other states in simply joining the exchange set up by the federal government, whose numerous problems were not yet evident. Instead Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo established the state’s exchange by executive order, deeding it to “seasoned stagehands,” as Mr. Newell put it, in the Health Department.
 That Republican opposition meant that the team Cuomo put in charge by executive order to create the exchange was experienced and could craft an exchange that meant tight regulations for consumers and insurers alike, resulting in a successful—though not entirely popular—
 program. They decided to require all insurers to offer the same type of coverage in the plans they sold off the exchange as those they sold on it. The end result is that none of the state's insurers offered out-of-network coverage for individuals, an effort to keep their costs down.
 The downside for consumers there is that they're restricted to providers. The upside for consumers is that this means their premiums are greatly reduced: "Individual premiums for Manhattan residents, for instance, dropped from $1,534 for a standard health maintenance organization, or H.M.O., in 2013 to $621 for a comparable exchange plan now."

dosen't it really feel good to see and hear the media pick up the good positives about ACA it truly shows ObamaCares and Americans believe it, and obviously have rejected the lies and propaganda, like Pres. said "i don't understand why they would fight so hard not to give Americans health care, that's crazy" paraphrased