CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 25, 2019
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CMS Issues the 2019 Exchange Open Enrollment Period Final Report
Agency also extends the policy allowing issuers to continue “grandmothered” plans
The Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) today released the Health Insurance Exchanges 2019 Open Enrollment Report.
With the Trump Administration’s focus on making healthcare more affordable,
the report confirms another successful open enrollment period coinciding with
a stabilization of premiums after years of substantial increases.
Specifically, the report shows plan selections in Exchange plans in the 50
states and D.C. remained steady at 11.4 million. This represents a minimal
decline of around 300,000 plan selections from the same time last year. Also,
as outlined in the report, average total premiums for plans selected through
HealthCare.gov dropped by 1.5 percent from the prior year, the first decline
since the Exchanges began operations in 2014.
In addition to this
report, as part of the Administration’s commitment to ensure access to
affordable coverage options, CMS is also issuing guidance extending for one
additional year, the non-enforcement policy to allow issuers to continue
certain health plans, often referred to as “grandmothered” plans, which do
not meet all the many mandates and restrictions in the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (PPACA). These plans can be more affordable for people
who choose to renew coverage with them. Extending these grandmothered
policies will allow consumers to maintain more affordable coverage than they
would have access to through PPACA plans.
“Not extending the
grandmothered plan policy would cancel plans that are meeting people’s needs
today and, as a result, force people to decide between buying coverage they
cannot afford on the individual market or going uninsured,” said CMS
Administrator Seema Verma. “By extending the grandmothered plan policy, we
are following through on our commitment to protect those left behind by
Obamacare.”
While the overall number
of plan selections decreased from the previous year, this decrease in plan
selections could likely be attributed to a lower demand for Exchange
coverage. The strong economy and growing employment likely increased the
number of people with access to employer-sponsored coverage and, in turn,
reduced demand for subsidized health coverage offered on the Exchanges.
Another factor that reduced demand for Exchange coverage, were the roughly
100,000 people who were enrolled in the Exchange in Virginia at the end of
2018 and reported incomes that would make them eligible for the new Virginia
Medicaid expansion in 2019.
Demographic data provided
in the report also demonstrate stability on the Exchanges. The percent of
young adults aged 18-34 who selected a plan through HealthCare.gov remained
unchanged from the prior year at 26 percent. The demographic proportions by
gender, race, income, and rural and non-rural also remained largely
unchanged.
“Another year of stable
enrollment through the Exchanges directly reflects the strong work CMS staff
put into ensuring that Exchange consumers experience a seamless enrollment
process free from unnecessary hurdles and IT glitches,” said Administrator
Verma. “It is no coincidence enrollment remained strong when the Exchange
call center maintained a record high 90 percent satisfaction rate and no
waiting rooms were needed in the final, busiest days of enrollment.”
The report also shows the
average monthly premiums for plans purchased through HealthCare.gov before
taking advantage of advanced payments of the premium tax credits available to
eligible consumers was $612, down from $621 for the previous open enrollment
period (OEP). After these advanced payments are applied, the average premium
was $87 compared to $89 for the prior OEP.
This decline in premiums,
however, follows a 23 percent average premium increase in 2017 and another 31
percent increase in 2018. Such large premium increases in previous years made
premiums substantially less affordable for people who do not qualify for
subsidies. This small decline in premiums in 2019 moves in the right
direction, but, for unsubsidized people, premiums remain considerably higher
than before the PPACA’s main requirements were implemented in 2014.
Recognizing individual
health insurance premiums are no longer affordable for a great many
Americans, the Trump Administration is committed to expanding more affordable
coverage options to this group of people left behind by the PPACA, which
spurred recent actions to expand access to association health plans and
short-term health plans, as well as the extension of the grandmothered plan
policy issued in guidance today.
To view the OEP Final
Report, click here: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/health-insurance-exchanges-2019-open-enrollment-report
To view the guidance on
‘Grandmothered’ plans, click here: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/Limited-Non-Enforcement-Policy-Extension-Through-CY2020.pdf
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Monday, March 25, 2019
CMS Issues the 2019 Exchange Open Enrollment Period Final Report
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