Category: Implementing the Affordable Care Act
Back to Basics: A Reminder of What the ACA is all About
Update on Health Care Sharing Ministries: Exempted from the ACA’s Individual Mandate – and State Consumer Protections
The Obama Administration has asked health care sharing ministries to step forward to determine whether they qualify under the Affordable Care Act for an exemption from the individual mandate. What are health care sharing ministries and how are they regulated? Sabrina Corlette provides some background.
Health Affairs Podcast Discusses Early Enrollment Experience in the Health Insurance Marketplaces
Don’t Be Fooled – ACA Coverage is a Better Deal for Just About Everyone
Some are questioning the adequacy of health insurance on the new marketplaces. But such concerns neglect to mention that these new plans will be a far better deal compared to what, up to now, has been available. Sabrina Corlette takes a look at the comprehensiveness of health insurance coverage, pre- and post-ACA.
Measuring ACA Enrollment: Lessons from Medicare Part D
The criticisms of the launch of the ACA’s marketplaces continue to roll in, with some charging that enrollment is anemic. But what enrollment expectations are reasonable, and within what time frame? Georgetown University Health Policy Institute’s Jack Hoadley looks at the enrollment experience in Medicare Part D for some historical perspective.
Clear the Path to the Federal Marketplace
Indiana, a state with a federally facilitated health insurance marketplace, is also home to health care giants Wellpoint, Inc. and Eli Lilly and Company. In a column she wrote for the October 7 edition of the Indianapolis Business Journal, CHIR faculty member Sally McCarty, a former Indiana insurance commissioner, makes a case for allowing Indiana residents to enroll in the federal marketplace without obstruction.
How Does ACA’s First Week Compare to Medicare Part D’s?
The new health insurance marketplaces created under the Affordable Care Act had a bumpy launch this week, overwhelmed with traffic, and with many interested shoppers facing technical glitches comparing plans and enrolling in coverage. But this wasn’t the first time an administration faced challenges rolling out a key domestic policy priority. Jack Hoadley of Georgetown University’s Health Policy reminds us in this blog that Medicare Part D’s web-based plan comparison tool faced similar technical problems.
PBS Program Looks at Early Experience in the Health Insurance Marketplaces
Health Insurance Exchanges Fulfill Both Liberal and Conservative Goals
Amid the controversial launch of the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance marketplaces, it is not easy to envision that liberals and conservatives might find common ground. However, Brookings scholar Henry J. Aaron and CHIR expert Kevin Lucia make a persuasive case in this blog, originally posted on the Harvard Business Review, that these marketplaces hold the key ingredients for both sides to achieve their objectives.