News

Insurance marketplace enrollment nears 10 million


 

References

The Health Insurance Marketplaces have a nationwide enrollment of about 9.9 million consumers, according to the latest data release from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

As of June 30, the 37 federally facilitated marketplaces had an enrollment of 7.2 million and the 13 state-based marketplaces plus the District of Columbia had an enrollment of 2.7 million. That adds up to nearly 10 million effectuated policies – government-speak meaning that the premiums had been paid and the accounts were active.

The state with the highest marketplace enrollment was California, with almost 1.4 million consumers effectuating themselves into a policy. The state with the highest percentage of its population (6.6%) enrolled, however, is Florida, which has just over 1.3 million enrollees among a population that is less than half of the Golden State’s. Idaho and Vermont were tied for second at 5.3%, with Maine (5.0%) and Montana (4.7%) right behind, the CMS data show.

Marketplace enrollees are a little harder to find in Hawaii, which had the lowest percentage of its population enrolled at 0.6% – just 8,802 effectuaters among the state’s 1.42 million residents. Next lowest was Minnesota at 0.9%, followed by Iowa (1.3%), Ohio (1.6%), Arkansas (1.7%), and West Virginia (1.7%).

The CMS also noted that, nationwide, 83.7% of marketplace enrollees – about 8.3 million consumers – receive an advanced premium tax credit worth an average of $270 a month. About 56% of enrollees also receive cost-sharing reductions, but the value of those reductions was not included in the report.

rfranki@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Fee schedule update includes advance care planning, PQRS changes
MDedge ObGyn
21st Century Cures bill passes House
MDedge ObGyn
HHS finalizes religious exemptions in ACA contraception mandate
MDedge ObGyn
GAO: Undercover agents effectively scammed healthcare.gov
MDedge ObGyn
AMA Town Hall: Doctors call for meaningful use delay
MDedge ObGyn
Good news, bad news in the Medicare trustees report
MDedge ObGyn
Bill to overhaul mental health system introduced in Senate
MDedge ObGyn
Caps on malpractice damages
MDedge ObGyn
Online resource launched to prevent inpatient hospital falls
MDedge ObGyn
HHS: Expand antidiscrimination protections to transgender patients
MDedge ObGyn