HHS Unveils Simplified Insurance Form Amid Attacks on Obamacare
By Charles S. Clark
April 30, 2013 - Government Executive
The Health and Human Services Department team implementing the Affordable
Care Act on Tuesday unveiled a shortened and simplified application
form to enter state health insurance exchanges established by the law.
Republicans critics, meanwhile, continued efforts to repeal the law.
At a news conference, officials from HHSfs Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services rolled out sample forms for individuals with and without financial
assistance and for families.
gConsumers will have a simple, easy-to-understand way to apply for health
coverage later this year,h said CMS acting Administrator Marilyn Tavenner. gThe
application for individuals is now three pages, making it easier to use and
significantly shorter than industry standards. This is another step complete as
we get ready for a consumer-friendly marketplace that will be open for business
later this year.h
CMS said the online application for individuals and the form for families
both are gmuch shorter than industry standards for health insurance applications
today.h Consumers can apply online, by phone or using paper when open enrollment
begins Oct.1, 2013, and the state exchanges are to launch Jan. 1, 2014.
At a separate briefing Tuesday, President Obama said the application had
come down from an original 21 pages after the focus group participants gsat
around the table and said: Well, this is too long, especially, you know, in this
age of the Internet, people aren't going to have the patience to sit there for
hours on end. Let's streamline this thing.h
Seguing to the larger subject of implementation of the controversial law,
which will add 30 million uninsured to the rolls, Obama praised the HHS team.
gDespite all the hue and cry andc.sky-is- falling predictions about this stuff,
if you've already got health insurance, then the part of `Obamacaref that
affects you, it's pretty much already in place -- and that's about 85 percent of
the country," he said. "But it's still a big undertaking. And what we're doing
is making sure that every single day we are constantly trying to hit our marks
so that it will be in place.h
A monthly tracking poll on the health care law released Tuesday by the Kaiser
Family Foundation showed continued division and confusion about the law.
Forty-two percent of Americans are unaware that the ACA is still the law of the
land, and 49 percent say they lack sufficient information to understand its
impact on their own family. Some 35 percent approve of the law while 40 percent
disapprove, with 24 percent undecided. More Democrats than Republicans approve
of it.
The new application form was welcomed by health care activist Ron Pollack,
executive director of Families USA. Having criticized the earlier drafts of the
forms, he called the changes very positive. gWith tens of millions of uninsured
people eligible for new help in securing affordable health coverage – either
through substantial premium tax credits that will make private health insurance
much more affordable or through the expansion of Medicaid – it is crucial that
the enrollment process is as simple and consumer-friendly as possible," Pollack
said. "The new, improved forms are a huge step in that direction.h
Republicans, meanwhile, kept up a barrage of attacks on the law as a
cumbersome burden on businesses. The House Ways and Means Committee majority on
Tuesday released a statement saying 71 percent of small businesses cite the
health care law as a major obstacle to job creation.
The committee chairman, Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., along with five colleagues,
introduced a bill requiring the government to offer only plans created under the
health care reform law or through a health insurance exchange to the president,
vice president, members of Congress and federal employees.
gIf the ObamaCare exchanges are good enough for the hardworking Americans and
small businesses the law claims to help, then they should be good enough for the
president, vice president, Congress and federal employees,h a Camp spokeswoman
said.
Camp said his bill would exclude active-duty military and postal
workers.
By Charles S. Clark
April 30, 2013
http://www.govexec.com/management/2013/04/hhs-unveils-simplified-insurance-form-amid-attacks-obamacare/62896/