It's because many insurance
counselors will be extra busy this fall helping more than 300,000 Medicare
beneficiaries pick a new health plan.
By Christopher Snowbeck Star Tribune
JULY 18, 2018 — 7:35PM
GLEN STUBBE – STAR TRIBUNE
The
state’s MNsure health exchange has extended the open enrollment period for 2019
coverage because many insurance counselors will be extra busy this fall helping
more than 300,000 Medicare beneficiaries pick a new health plan.
MNsure
officials said Wednesday that the annual open enrollment period will run Nov. 1
through Jan. 13, 2019. That’s about one month longer than the sign-up period on
the federal government’s Healthcare.gov website, which serves as the insurance
exchange in most states.
Minnesota
has the flexibility to adjust the sign-up calendar because the state opted to
create its own health exchange under the federal Affordable Care Act.
“Shopping
for health coverage is a complex process, and Minnesotans rely on the free
in-person assistance offered by MNsure’s assister network,” said Nate Clark,
the acting chief executive at MNsure, in a statement. “This year our assisters
face additional challenges given the amount of change coming to Minnesota’s
Medicare plans.”
More
than 300,000 Minnesotans will be changing Medicare health plans next year when
a federal law eliminates certain health insurance options in the Twin Cities
and across much of the state.
For
more than a year, insurers have been sizing up the shift with Medicare Cost
plans, a specific type of coverage that’s distinct from Medicare Advantage
plans that are more common outside Minnesota. This summer, insurers that sell
Medicare Cost plans are sending several hundred thousand letters to consumers
about the transition, explaining that details about coverage options will be
coming in late summer or early fall.
People
don’t use MNsure to sign up for Medicare coverage, but many insurance agents
that work with Medicare clients also help people sign up for individual market
coverage. The exchange is an option for the roughly 150,000 state residents in
the individual market — primarily people under age 65 who are self-employed or
don’t get job-based coverage.
People
at certain income levels who buy individual coverage via MNsure can quality for
federal tax credits that discount premium costs. People also can sign up via
MNsure for coverage in the state’s Medicaid program.
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