The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Startups lead rush into Obamacare markets

- By Zachary Tracer

Republican­s remain eager to end the Affordable Care Act, but some health plans say there’s no time like the present to be in the Obamacare business.

Rising premiums in the marketplac­es created by the health law are enticing insurers, who are looking past the political turbulence. More than a dozen insurers plan to enter new Obamacare markets for 2019, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Among them is the venture capital-backed startup Bright Health. On Wednesday, the company, which already offers ACA plans in two markets, will roll out offerings in five more cities for next year, according to Chief Executive Officer Bob Sheehy.

“Early on, there was the wrong model and the wrong pricing level,” said Sheehy, a former UnitedHeal­th Group executive. “Now the market’s stabilized, so we think it’s a terrific opportunit­y.”

Oscar Insurance, another startup, will enter six new markets. More establishe­d insurers including Centene Corp. and Medica have also announced expansion plans.

“For the insurers that did stick around in the individual market, 2018 is shaping up to be a very profitable year,” said Cynthia Cox, director for the Program for the Study of Health Reform and Private Insurance at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “They’ve managed to raise premiums enough to cover their costs, and then some.”

Over the weekend, the Trump administra­tion said it will suspend an ACA program that moves funds to insurers with sicker customers. Health insurance lobbying groups said halting the The Oscar Center in Brooklyn is part of Oscar Insurance, a startup that is going ahead with expansion plans despite the suspension of an ACA program that moves funds to insurers with sicker customers. so-called risk-adjustment program could cause some companies to stop selling plans in some markets or boost premiums even more.

Bright and Oscar both said that despite the move, they’re going ahead with their expansion plans. Medica is entering Oklahoma, adding a second option to that state’s Obamacare market.

“We’re watching the situation closely. We aren’t making any changes to our 2019 plans at this time,” Greg Bury, a spokesman for Medica, said of the risk-adjustment program.

The expansions will give

more options to customers in some states where choices had dwindled. For 2018, about a quarter of people signing up for ACA plans could select only one insurer, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. A similar percentage could pick from two.

Trump has boasted that his actions have helped undermine the 2010 law. The administra­tion has taken several steps meant to offer alternativ­es to Affordable Care Act plans, or to destabiliz­e its markets.

“We’ve essentiall­y gutted it anyway,” Trump told supporters in a June speech. “Obamacare is on its last legs. It’s almost finished.”

On Tuesday, his administra­tion announced it would cut funding for “navigators” who help people find and sign up for Obamacare plans to $10 million, from $36 million last year. The administra­tion called the program ineffectiv­e and said advertisin­g from insurers themselves can help make up for the reduced funding. Supporters of the health law called the move another sign of the administra­tion’s determinat­ion to undermine the ACA.

 ?? BLOOMBERG 2016 ??
BLOOMBERG 2016

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