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Obama Admin Says Health Website Improving


healThe Obama administration dodged questions Tuesday about whether it will support legislation to fulfill President Barack Obama’s oft-stated promise that anyone who likes their health care plan will be able to keep it under the nation’s new law.

Instead, the administration dispatched the head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Marilyn Tavenner, to the Senate, where she told a panel that the government’s health care website has improved since its widely panned launch a month ago, and is still improving.

“Users can now successfully create an account and continue through the full application and enrollment process,” she said. “We are now able to process nearly 17,000 registrants per hour, or five per second, with almost no errors.”

With millions of Americans receiving cancellation notices in the mail, pointed questions about whether Obama lied to the public dominated an hour-plus-long briefing for reporters at the White House. Obama first made that pledge in 2009 as he was pitching his proposal to the public.

White House spokesman Jay Carney insisted Obama had been speaking broadly about the law’s intentions, but he acknowledged that because of the website failure, customers losing their current insurance were left with inadequate information about their new options to buy insurance under the law.

“That’s on us and I accept that,” Carney said.

To that effect, Obama’s chief of staff, Denis McDonough, met Tuesday with CEOs from some of the largest health insurers, asking for the companies’ help in explaining to Americans whose policies were canceled what options they may have available. The White House said McDonough also solicited input on whether the website fixes were working.

But Carney and other administration officials declined repeatedly to address legislation that lawmakers from both parties were pushing to let individuals retain their existing coverage if they want to. Still, Carney said that in general, allowing insurers to continue selling sub-standard plans would undermine the law’s fundamental purpose.

On Capitol Hill, Republicans on the Senate Health, Education Labor and Pensions Committee emphasized their longstanding criticism of the law, citing examples of cancellations and increased costs while raising questions about cyber-security for healthcare.gov.

During the hearing, Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., had a poster displayed behind his seat saying, ‘Tip of the iceberg’ that showed a pale blue iceberg floating in water. Above the waterline, the iceberg was labeled ‘website failures.’ Below were examples of reported health care law problems including canceled coverage, higher co-pay and deductibles, premium increases and fraud and identify theft.

Committee Democrats were less pointed, although Sen. Barbara Mikulski of Maryland cited consumer confusion.

“I think it’s very confusing about where you go,” she said. “I can tell you, people really don’t know, they really, really don’t know.”

Tavenner, who last week apologized to the public for the poor quality of the website in its earliest days, invited the public to go online for to see how it was now functioning.

“We are seeing improvements each week, and by the end of November, the experience on the site will be smooth for the vast majority of users,” she said.

Tavenner said the site would be “fully functioning” by the end of the month.

She seemed reluctant to concede the widespread cancellations that some senators referred to.

“Some of the 5 percent of Americans who currently get insurance on the individual market have recently received notices from their insurance companies suggesting that their plans will no longer exist,” she said.

“These Americans do have a choice. They can choose a different plan being offered by their insurer or they can shop for coverage in the marketplace or outside the marketplace. As insurers have made clear, they are not dropping consumers; they’re improving their coverage options, often offering better-value plans with additional benefits.”

Despite her general assurances, several senators raised detailed questions about experiences their own constituents have had.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, an Alaska Republican, said as of Monday, only three people in her state had been able to enroll, and she said there were concerns that they had done so on the basis of incorrect information.

Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., cited an example of a man whose personal financial information had been inadvertently disclosed.

Tavenner appeared at a time when Democrats remain uneasy about the implementation of a program they created over unanimous Republican opposition in 2010.

The website went down again in the middle of the day Monday for about 90 minutes. And the administration still refuses to divulge enrollment statistics until mid-November.

Tavenner began her career as a nurse and built a successful record as a hospital executive before entering public service. Seen as a businesslike manager, she has enjoyed support from lawmakers across the political spectrum.

HealthCare.gov was supposed to provide one-stop shopping for people who don’t have a health plan on the job. Its target audience is not only uninsured Americans but those who already purchase coverage individually. Middle-class people can sign up for private coverage made more affordable by tax credits that act like a discount on premiums. Lower-income people will be steered to an expanded version of Medicaid in states that agreed to expand that safety net program.

A new study released Tuesday estimates the potential size of the market nationally at 28.6 million people. The nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation says three out of five, or more than 17 million people, will be eligible for tax credits. That includes both uninsured people and those switching over from current individual plans. Texas, California and Florida have the highest numbers of residents eligible for the credits.

Earlier, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that 7 million uninsured people would gain coverage through the marketplaces, a statistic the Obama administration adopted as its own enrollment target.

(AP)



6 Responses

  1. MORE BULL. Two THINGS; We are being cancelled because of obamacare and many doctor will not work with obamacare. Abusing doctors with slave pay like $5.00 for and EEG is scandelous when the liar in chief flies around on airforce 1 and plays golf every 10 or less days. The doctors won’t be able to afford green fees but obama will

  2. Dose Obama and his family have there health care if he thinks it is so good he must show all the Erica’s people just like he showed the world his birth certificate show us that you and family have butin to the Obama care and if is being exceptited by the doctors Exampel Please Obama family

  3. While there is no excuse for having had done such a lousy job on the internet site, the state-run sites have been doing quite well. I happened to meet two women in a pizza shop yesterday who were ragging on how bad they thought Obamacare was. I asked if they had actually checked out the web site themselves and of course they said they had not. I then showed one of the women how easy it was to get on the NY Obamacare site to see the huge number of choices I had for insurance plans, almost all of which offered comparable coverage to my employer-based plan for the same or lower cost. She was impressed.

    The two first commenters here are examples of the low information victims of the Republican lies. Insurance companies have been restricting access to out of network providers and cutting reimbursements long before anyone ever heard of Barack Obama. Ironically, these are exactly the things that the Republicans have been promoting — letting the insurance carriers cut costs! And of course President Obama has employer-based health insurance just as most employed Americans do; Obamacare was created for those not lucky enough to have such insurance.

  4. #3
    If the Obama health scam plan is so wonderful how come he was just caught in a massive lie about how people would be able to keep their doctors and their plans, when they in fact will not be allowed to do that?

    What about people who have no insurance because they could never afford even the cheapest plan and will
    now become homeless, because being forced under Obama to pay for a plan they cannot afford will mean they must forgo paying their rent or mortgage?

    With private insurance there was always the option of not buying or paying for a plan they did not like but under Obama you must by law buy something even if you don’t like any of the plans.

    And I heard Obama himself tell someone who asked about his grandmother who needed a hip replacement if she’d be covered under his plan for hip replacement surgery.
    He said no and that she should “just take the pain pill.

  5. “how people would be able to keep their doctors and their plans, when they in fact will not be allowed to do that?”

    The ACA forces nobody to drop a doctor or a plan. However, insurers are free to drop doctors and plans, and doctors are free to drop out of insurance panels. Would you prefer that providers be forced to stay in insurance panels regardless of how little the insurers pay them? Would you prefer that insurers be forced to continue plans no matter how unprofitable? Sounds like a pretty intrusive government these Republican Obamahaters want!

    “What about people who have no insurance because they could never afford even the cheapest plan”

    Those folks were supposed to be covered by an expansion of Medicaid, which the Republicans successfully challenged in court, and blocked in about half the states. Don’t blame Obama for what the Republicans prevented from happening.

    “With private insurance there was always the option of not buying”

    And thus being completely irresponsible and forcing others to pay for your medical care when you got sick. Personal responsibility used to be a Republican mantra, but like everything else, it has been thrown under the bus in order to attack Obama.

  6. It should be noted that there was one race last night where Obamacare was a major issue: The Republican candidate for Governor of Virginia made a big deal about it. He lost, and it was the first time in 40 years that the party in the White House won a gubernatorial election in that state.

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