Obama Cites Health Plan Tally of 11.4 Million
By ROBERT PEAR
FEB. 17, 2015 - New York Times
WASHINGTON — President
Obama said Tuesday that 11.4 million people had selected private health
insurance plans or renewed their coverage under the Affordable Care Act in
the enrollment period that ended Sunday.
gIt gives you some sense of how
hungry people were out there for affordable, accessible health insurance,h Mr.
Obama said in a video
released by the White House.
Administration officials said the
numbers would grow in the next week as insurance marketplaces, or exchanges,
signed up people who had tried to enroll but encountered technical problems on
HealthCare.gov or state insurance websites.
The White House celebrated the
latest numbers as evidence of the success of the health law, which was adopted
in 2010 without any Republican votes.
gThe Affordable Care Act is
working,h Mr. Obama said. gItfs working a little bit better than we anticipated
— certainly, I think, working a lot better than many of the critics talked about
early on.h
More than a million people
selected health plans in the last nine days of the latest open enrollment
period.
gOn the final day,h said Sylvia
Mathews Burwell, the secretary of health and human services, gwe had more
consumers sign up than wefve every had, last year or this year.h
Many people cited the threat of tax
penalties as a reason for obtaining insurance.
Federal health officials
emphasized that the latest numbers were preliminary. People are not formally
enrolled until they pay the first monthfs premium. Some people who gain
insurance and pay the initial premium lose the coverage because they do not pay
their share of premiums in later months.
Ms. Burwell had set a relatively
modest goal for 2015, saying she wanted to have 9.1 million people signed up and
paying premiums at the end of the year. The Congressional Budget Office had
projected enrollment of 12 million for 2015.
The administration has had
difficulty establishing a firm count of people gaining insurance under the
health law.
In April 2014, Mr. Obama announced
that eight million people had signed up in the initial enrollment period that
had ended March 31. By October, that number had declined to 7.1 million because
some people failed to pay premiums or were found ineligible because of
unresolved questions about their citizenship or immigration status.
The number shrank again in
November, to 6.7 million, as congressional investigators discovered that the
administration had overstated enrollment by including about 400,000 people with
dental insurance.