Monday, December 23, 2013

Healthcare sign-up deadline near, but payment can wait

Healthcare sign-up deadline near, but payment can wait, Most Americans signing up Monday for individual health plans that take effect Jan. 1 will have until Jan. 10 to make their first payment, a trade group says.
But to be safe, healthcare advocates recommend people make their first payment by Dec. 31.

America's Health Insurance Plans, the industry's largest trade group, say its members will give consumers until Jan. 10 to pay their January premium, provided they choose a plan by the Monday night deadline.

The White House encouraged insurers to relax the Dec. 31 payment deadline and provide coverage retroactive to Jan. 1 for people who paid later in the month.

Some state-based exchanges say they're sticking with the Dec. 31 deadline.

Healthcare advocates recommend if people want to be sure they're covered in January, they should pick plans by Monday and pay the first month's premium by Dec. 31, unless they can confirm they have the 10-day grace period for making the first month's premium.

The administration has stressed, and reiterated Sunday, consumers have until March 31 to buy coverage for 2014 and avoid any penalty.

Ron Pollack, executive director of non-profit healthcare advocacy group Families USA, said it was important for some groups of people to make sure they have coverage in January.

Those groups include people whose pre-existing condition insurance plans end Dec. 31, those who lost coverage when insurers canceled plans that didn't meet minimum Affordable Care Act standards and people in states where Medicaid is scaling back, he told USA Today.

Medicaid is the state-run health program for low-income families and individuals.

"There's been a special outreach to the people in the high-risk pools and who received termination notices," Pollack told the newspaper. "For those who have not had coverage in the past, but haven't needed coverage, they may not feel quite the same sense of urgency."

President Barack Obama said Friday more than a million people signed up for insurance through the federal and state marketplaces, most of them this month.

"So, all told, millions of Americans, despite the problems with the website, are now poised to be covered by quality, affordable health insurance come New Year's Day," Obama said in a year-end news conference.

The federal agency running HealthCare.gov, the insurance website serving 36 states, said nearly 750,000 people visited the site over the weekend through noon Sunday.

Julie Bataille, a spokeswoman for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which oversees the website, told USA Today the government expected to be able to handle the volume created by the deadline.

Healthcare.gov can handle at least 800,000 people a day, she said.

In addition, the government has added 800 people to telephone call centers, so more than 12,000 people are available to answer questions.

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