High Court’s Health-Law Decision
Last Updated: September 1, 9:30 AM
- Load more posts
- We said we couldn’t spend much more time assessing the Obamacare health exchange web sites, but we thought we should at least try to keep track of the biggest, and what is proving to be the most onerous, of them all.
HealthCare.gov, the clearinghouse for applications under the Affordable Care Act for 36 states, is clearly the most popular of all 16 exchange web sites. It’s probably also the most frustrating. So let’s go into more detail about a short journey — or attempt at one — in trying to sign up for Obamacare there.
Here’s what happened: We tried twice under two names to sign up. When we first clicked on the main page link to sign up for coverage, we were greeted with a request to wait. The first time, the wait lasted several minutes. Once we got on, we tried to sign on with the username and password we saved in the first of three unsuccessful attempts to log in from Tuesday through Thursday.
The system accepted our username and password and promptly went blank. And there it stayed.
So we tried again with a different name and password. The initial wait to start the process was about 30 seconds. Much better. But this is also where the frustration set in. Once we started to set up the account and answered the security questions, we were told we used an “invalid format for answers of security questions.” Session over.
Later we revisited and tried registering under both names. The first name ended the same way — with the blank page. We tried re-registering under the second name and this time we got past the security question stage. But then we signed on with our new user name and password and got the same blank page.
Clearly, it was time for some answers from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which operates HealthCare.gov. We got a few, but not all. In emails, CMS says 7 million Americans logged on to the Web site, but it’s unclear how many actually have made it all the way through and signed up for coverage. The agency says they probably won’t have figures on Obamacare enrollees until the middle of November.
CMS officials say they are trying to resolve the issues involved with the web site. We asked if they were short-handed due to the government shutdown. They may be, but that’s not clear. In a release, CMS says they will “continue large portions” of Obamacare activities under the shutdown.
Stay tuned to see if we ever get past that blank page.
Follow Russ Britt on Twitter @russbrittmktw
Follow Health Exchange on Twitter @MWHealthBlog
- Senior Republicans in Congress, frustrated over their inability to strike a deal to reopen the government, began shifting from their drive to undercut the 2010 health-care law toward a broader budget deal.
- With all the brinkmanship going on in Washington these days, perhaps it’s time for a little comic relief. Take a look at this video, courtesy of ABC’s late-night talk show “Jimmy Kimmel Live.” It’s a compilation of person-in-the-street interviews in which people are asked if they prefer Obamacare to the Affordable Care Act. (Not to [...]
- Insurers said they are now getting enrollees through the health law's new online marketplaces, though some state websites and the federally run exchange continued to be slow amid heavy traffic.
- One little-noticed item amid the fight over Obamacare and the government shutdown that resulted from it is the fact that Congress members and their staffs now will have to go to the exchanges to get insured.
- A small but increasingly vocal coalition of Republican lawmakers is urging the party's top brass to stop trying to dismantle the entire health-care law, believing the fight is a losing one for their party.
- Our third check -- and last for a while due to time constraints -- of the 16 health exchanges taking applications under President Obama's health-care overhaul shows that you can get through on eight web sites -- or get to the point where they know you're faking it.
- A CBS News poll released Thursday found that 72% of Americans disapprove of shutting down the federal government over differences on the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare. The poll found 25% say they approve.
- Both parties in Congress are now arguing about funding the government for the current fiscal year at much lower levels than either President Obama or Democrats wanted, writes David Wessel.
- A group of House Democrats publicly endorsed repealing the health-care law’s tax on medical devices on Thursday, marking the first time that a coalition of Democrats have publicly supported altering President Barack Obama’s signature legislative achievement as a way out of the budget impasse.
- Singer and actress Jennifer Hudson is a fan of Obamacare and the TV show "Scandal"--so she shot a humorous video for the website "Funny or Die" that's a mash-up of both.
- Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid is the man driving his party's hard bargain against Republican leaders in the legislative back-and-forth over funding the government.
- Obama and congressional leaders met for the first time since the federal government shut down, emerging with no evidence of progress toward resolving their impasse over spending and health care.
- The healthcare exchanges that have been crashing this week are here to stay, and will provide big new opportunities, the investor says.
- One of the more noteworthy items out in the Twittersphere this afternoon was a series of Tweets from Republican Rep. Darrell Issa of California, who’s suggesting that instead of President Obama’s health-care overhaul, Americans should be offered a chance at the same benefits that Congress gets. Issa is calling for the expansion of the Federal [...]
- Health-care stocks have a mixed-to-down day, but Tenet Healthcare climbs more than 6% after Fitch gives its blessing to the hospital operator's completed purchase of Vanguard Health Systems.
- After another check of the health exchanges, it appears they're making progress in welcoming online applicants but still few of them are following all the way through.
No comments:
Post a Comment