USA TODAY US Edition

1M sign up at HealthCare.gov during special enrollment period

- Maureen Groppe

WASHINGTON – More than 1 million Americans signed up for health insurance during the ongoing special enrollment period for HealthCare.gov, the Biden administra­tion announced Tuesday.

That’s on top of the about 12 million who selected 2021 coverage during the regular enrollment period that ended in December in most states.

That level of enrollment could have a meaningful effect on the uninsured rate and could help President Joe Biden build support for the permanent changes he hopes to make to the 2010 Affordable Care Act, commonly referred to as Obamacare.

“Today’s milestone demonstrat­es that there is a need and a demand for high quality, affordable health insurance across this country,” Biden said in a statement.

Biden created a special enrollment period that runs from Feb. 15 through Aug. 15 to help people find coverage during the pandemic, an effort boosted by expanded premium subsides included in the $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief packaged passed in March.

The package increased for two years the subsidies already available to people who don’t receive health insurance from an employer or through a government plan such as Medicare or Medicaid. And it made the subsidies newly available for people earning more than four times the federal poverty level, which is about $51,520 for a single person.

More than 2 million people who had already signed up for a plan returned to HealthCare.gov to adjust coverage to benefit from the new help.

After the changes kicked in, the median deductible among people signing up for plans fell from $450 to $50.

Biden has proposed making the expanded subsidies permanent as part of a $1.8 trillion package of education and safety net programs for families.

The administra­tion had declined to estimate how many people would take advantage of the special enrollment period when announcing the effort to give a new coverage opportunit­y to Americans who lost their jobs and employerba­sed insurance during the pandemic.

The administra­tion also dramatical­ly increased spending on education and outreach, which had been slashed by the previous administra­tion.

Biden said his actions were designed to “undo the damage” done by former President Donald Trump to the Affordable Care Act, which Trump tried – and failed – to repeal.

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