HHS falls short of pre-existing coverage prediction by 97.8%

HHS falls short of pre-existing coverage prediction by … 97.8%
POSTED AT 10:55 AM ON NOVEMBER 12, 2010 BY ED MORRISSEY

255 million: The number of Americans with existing health insurance coverage.

20 million: The number of Americans without any health coverage at all due to economic circumstances.

375,000: The number of Americans with pre-existing conditions HHS said would apply for coverage in the first year of ObamaCare, one of the main political arguments for its implementation.

8,011: The number that actually did.
To judge by President Obama’s rhetoric, the insurance industry’s victims have been wandering the country like Okies in “The Grapes of Wrath.” Thus ObamaCare gave the Health and Human Services Department the power to design and sell its own insurance policies. The $5 billion program started in July and runs through 2014, when ObamaCare’s broader regulations kick in.

Mr. Obama declared at the time that “uninsured Americans who’ve been locked out of the insurance market because of a pre-existing condition will now be able to enroll in a new national insurance pool where they’ll finally be able to purchase quality, affordable health care—some for the very first time in their lives.”

So far that statement accurately describes a single person in North Dakota. Literally, one person has signed up out of 647,000 state residents. Four people have enrolled in West Virginia. Things are better in Minnesota, where Mr. Obama has rescued 15 out of 5.2 million, and also in Indiana—63 people there. HHS did best among the 24.7 million Texans. Thanks to ObamaCare, 393 of them are now insured.

States had the option of designing their own pre-existing condition insurance with federal dollars in lieu of the HHS plan, and 27 chose to do so. But they haven’t had much more success. Combined federal-state enrollment is merely 8,011 nationwide as of November 1, according to HHS.

This isn’t what HHS promised in July, when it estimated it would be insuring 375,000 people by now, and as many as 400,000 more every year. HHS even warned that it would bill private carriers for any claims if HHS decided that they had cancelled coverage to dump costs on the government. That outcome would certainly be in keeping with Mr. Obama’s caricature of rampant discrimination against the sick.
That comes to a success rate for that prediction of just under 2.2%. The Wall Street Journal points out that the program operates at a loss — which means that consumers who qualify for the program in essence have partial subsidies by entering it. And yet, despite the billions of dollars committed to funding it and the efforts of 27 states to duplicate it, only eight thousand people have bothered to apply for the program.

The Obama administration and its allies in the Nancy Pelosi Congress revamped one-sixth of the American economy, created new federal mandates, and created chaos in system that worked for the vast majority of Americans, just to deal with eight thousand people? Perhaps they should have tested the issue by creating the program separately first and determining whether the demand required a complete overhaul of a health-care system that mainly worked for the rest of us, instead of arrogating to themselves the task of dictating the shape of a market they clearly don’t understand.
 
The prices of the current pre existing plan is unaffordable for most.In 2014 when insurance companies cant deny coverage, cant charge more due to pre existing conditions ,and families with up to 91,000 in income will pay a max of 5-10 % of their income on health insurance is when the real benefit takes effect
 
Quote from Range Rover:

The prices of the current pre existing plan is unaffordable for most.In 2014 when insurance companies cant deny coverage, cant charge more due to pre existing conditions ,and families with up to 91,000 in income will pay a max of 5-10 % of their income on health insurance is when the real benefit takes effect

My monthly expense is just about the same I pay for my mobile phone bill. Which, for the person who "can't afford it", is way more important than having to pay for health insurance.

The problem isn't cost. It the unwillingness of people wanting to pay for it.

Those spinners are way more important.
 
Quote from bugscoe:

My monthly expense is just about the same I pay for my mobile phone bill. Which, for the person who "can't afford it", is way more important than having to pay for health insurance.

The problem isn't cost. It the unwillingness of people wanting to pay for it.

Those spinners are way more important.

This is a lot more then most phone bills.





Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan: Florida


On July 1, eligible residents of Florida will be able to apply for coverage through the state’s Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan program run by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.



Below are the monthly PCIP premium rates for Florida by the age of an enrollee.

Ages 0 to 34: $363

Ages 35 to 44: $435

Ages 45 to 54: $556

Ages 55+: $773



In addition to your monthly premium, you will pay other costs. You will pay a $2,500 deductible for covered benefits (except for preventive services) before the plan starts to pay. After you pay the deductible, you will pay a $25 copayment for doctor visits, $4 to $30 for most prescription drugs, and 20% of the costs of any other covered benefits you get. Your out-of-pocket costs cannot be more than $5,950 per year. These costs may be higher, if you go outside the plan’s network.

 
Quote from bugscoe:And yet, despite the billions of dollars committed to funding it and the efforts of 27 states to duplicate it, only eight thousand people have bothered to apply for the program....
So how is the Tea Party-Republican health care plan coming along?
 
Quote from tmarket:

So how is the Tea Party-Republican health care plan coming along?

Not so good now that the public sector has about 50% of the GNP going through their sticky fingers. If we reduce that to a figure of about 5% then everybody will be able to afford health insurance and those that don't have it, well some people.....
 
Quote from tmarket:

So how is the Tea Party-Republican health care plan coming along?

About as well as the democratic/marxist plan to pay for social security.
 
Quote from bugscoe:

HHS falls short of pre-existing coverage prediction by … 97.8%
POSTED AT 10:55 AM ON NOVEMBER 12, 2010 BY ED MORRISSEY

255 million: The number of Americans with existing health insurance coverage.

20 million: The number of Americans without any health coverage at all due to economic circumstances.

375,000: The number of Americans with pre-existing conditions HHS said would apply for coverage in the first year of ObamaCare, one of the main political arguments for its implementation.

8,011: The number that actually did.That comes to a success rate for that prediction of just under 2.2%. The Wall Street Journal points out that the program operates at a loss — which means that consumers who qualify for the program in essence have partial subsidies by entering it. And yet, despite the billions of dollars committed to funding it and the efforts of 27 states to duplicate it, only eight thousand people have bothered to apply for the program.

Perhaps they should have tested the issue by creating the program separately first and determining whether the demand required a complete overhaul of a health-care system that mainly worked for the rest of us, instead of arrogating to themselves the task of dictating the shape of a market they clearly don’t understand.

Oh, "they understand" all right. The primary function of the Obama/Tyranny health care bill was NEVER about "health care"
 
Back
Top