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AMA urges quick action to stabilize individual insurance market

With the window quickly closing to properly price individual insurance products for 2018, the American Medical Association (AMA) is urging President Trump and Congressional leaders to commit to continued funding for the cost-sharing reductions that are critical to stabilizing the individual market. AMA, along with other groups representing insurers, hospitals, health plan purchasers and physicians, sent a letter urging quick action to deliver short-term stability and affordable coverage while broader marketplace stabilization efforts are developed. Nearly 60 percent of all individuals who purchase coverage via the exchange receive financial assistance to ...

Be prepared for Covered California changes in 2017

In 2016, Covered California, California's health benefit exchange, enrolled approximately 1.4 million individuals in qualified health plans. It is critical that physician practices understand their participation status, which products are being offered and what changes to expect in 2017. Some of the most significant changes for Covered California in 2017 are: All Covered California enrollees, including those with a PPO or EPO, will be assigned to a primary care physician. The assignment will either happen by January 1, 2017, or within 60 days of the enrollee’s ...

Have you received a request to confirm provider directory information from BetterDoctor?

The California Medical Association (CMA) has received an increasing number of inquiries over the past few weeks from practices concerned about the validity of requests for information from a company called BetterDoctor. SB 137, the new provider directory accuracy law, took effect July 1. The new law requires payors to ensure that their physician directories are accurate and up-to-date. BetterDoctor is a vendor working on behalf of 10 plans on a pilot project to ensure the accuracy of their physician directories, as required under the new law. Practices are encouraged ...

Covered California announces sharp rate hike

Covered California has announced an average 13.2 percent hike in insurance premiums for 2017, a sharp increase that is likely to reverberate nationwide in an election year. The California Medical Association (CMA) is concerned the premium increases may hinder the ability of some patients to obtain insurance and access necessary medical treatment. The rise in Covered California premium rates was driven largely by its two biggest insurers, which account for about half of its enrollment. Blue Shield of California said its average rate hike is 19.9 percent, the biggest statewide ...

Ask the expert: If an exchange patient is in the 90-day grace period and fails to pay the premium, is the plan required to pay for services provided?

Maybe. Under the Affordable Care Act, exchange enrollees who receive federal premium subsidies to help pay their premiums are entitled to keep their insurance for three months after they have stopped paying their premiums. Insurance ID cards for exchange enrollees do not indicate whether the enrollee is subsidized, but Covered California recently reported that 90 percent of California exchange patients are receiving subsidies, so the likelihood of encountering a patient receiving subsidies is very high. In the first month of the grace period, federal law and California regulations require ...

Be prepared for Covered California changes in 2016

In 2015, Covered California, California's health benefit exchange, enrolled approximately 1.3 million individuals in qualified health plans. With Covered California estimating it may enroll an additional 300,000-plus during the 2016 open enrollment period (running November 1, 2015, through January 31, 2016), and two new plans in the mix, it is critical that physician practices understand their participation status, which products are being offered and what changes to expect in 2016. To help physicians understand the changes taking place and how they will affect their practice, the California Medical Association ...

California has the most exchange enrollees in the U.S.

California has enrolled more people through its Affordable Care Act (ACA) health insurance exchange of any state, with about 1.4 million enrollees as of June 30, according to new federal data. California surpassed Florida – with 1.3 million exchange enrollees as of the end of June – to have the highest exchange enrollment. Nationwide, 9.9 million U.S. residents signed up for the ACA. About 7.2 million consumers purchased coverage through the federal exchange and 2.7 million purchased coverage through state-based exchanges. Of those who purchased coverage in California, 9,302 people who ...

Gallup poll says rates of uninsured continue to drop in most states

According to a Gallup poll released Monday, the national uninsured rate has fallen to 11.7 percent, down from 17.3 percent in 2013. The poll shows that states that have expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act – and have at least helped in the running of their health insurance marketplaces, rather than leaving it entirely to the federal government – have seen larger drops in uninsured rates. In the 22 states that took both of those measures, including California, the uninsured rate dropped to an average of 7.1 percent. California's uninsured ...

Anthem Blue Cross begins medical chart reviews in July

In July, Anthem Blue Cross will begin chart reviews on enrollees who purchased Affordable Care Act (ACA)-compliant plans in either the individual and small group insurance markets (both on and off the exchange, known as “Covered California”). The records requests are a result of the commercial risk adjustment program created by ACA Section 1343. The primary goal of the risk adjustment program is to spread the financial risk borne by payors more evenly in order to stabilize premiums and provide issuers the ability to offer a variety of plans to ...

Covered California board proposes to cut budget because of slower enrollment

Due to tepid enrollment numbers, Covered California’s board of directors has proposed to spend $58 million less in 2016, slashing its marketing and outreach program by 33 percent. Open enrollment in Covered California fell short of its goal of 1.7 million this year, ending with the number of enrollees at 1.4 million. Additionally, the exchange must pay its own way in the future after receiving $1 billion in federal money. And while it still has some $290 million in reserve for 2016, the exchange projects that fewer than 1.5 million ...