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State Makes Little Effort To Promote Health Exchange

Warren Vieth
/
Oklahoma Watch

In just six weeks, nearly one in 10 Oklahomans will be able to buy subsidized health policies from private insurance companies through a new online marketplace set up by the federal government.

Many more who don’t qualify for the subsidies will still be able to shop on the marketplace and obtain coverage, even if they’ve been turned down in the past for pre-existing conditions.

But it won’t be simple. Several companies will offer policies, with different levels of coverage. Tax credits will be available for people falling within certain income ranges. Many people will need one-on-one assistance to navigate the registration process.

Don’t expect state government to lend much of a hand.

Q&A: Oklahoma’s Health Exchange

Story: Pitching ‘Obamacare’

Because of widespread opposition to the Obama administration’s Affordable Care Act, state officials will play no direct role in helping Oklahomans determine whether they might benefit from the new health insurance marketplace, or exchange.

So far, no state websites provide any information or assistance. No state agencies have assigned anyone to help with outreach efforts. The state’s role will be limited to telling people who ask where they can go for information.

In most cases, that will be the federal government’s marketplace website.

“If an Oklahoman has a question about how and where to sign up for health insurance, the governor wants state agencies to answer that question accurately and in a timely fashion,” said Alex Weintz, Gov. Mary Fallin’s press secretary. “The state is not, however, actively marketing the federal health insurance marketplace.”

The marketplace is one component of the Affordable Care Act, widely known as Obamacare.

Beginning Oct. 1, Oklahomans who can’t get coverage from their employers and who don’t qualify for public programs like Medicaid and Medicare will be able to shop for insurance on the new health marketplace.

The Oklahoma marketplace is being operated by the federal government because Fallin rejected the option of setting up a state-run marketplace. Fallin also rejected a federal proposal to expand Medicaid in Oklahoma. As a result, many of the poorest working-age adults will receive no government assistance under either program.

The insurance marketplace will offer a variety of plans. It will allow users to compare prices and apply for coverage. The policies will be provided by private insurance companies and will take effect beginning Jan. 1. Depending on their income levels, participants will be eligible for tax credits or refunds to help offset the cost of the premiums. Some will also qualify for health care cost-sharing payments.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, nearly 700,000 Oklahomans, or 19 percent of the state’s total population, were uninsured in 2011. An analysis by the group Families USA estimates that 337,000 of them will qualify for Affordable Care Act tax credits and can buy insurance on the marketplace.

But that figure significantly understates the total number of marketplace participants. The marketplace will provide access to insurance for people who make too much money to qualify for tax credits but have been turned down for private insurance because of pre-existing conditions such as diabetes or high blood pressure. Its policies also could attract people who currently have private market insurance, but are considered “underinsured” because of high deductibles or coverage limitations.

Former Senate Democratic Leader Andrew Rice said he thinks state leaders may be underestimating the potential appeal of the marketplace to a broad swath of the state’s population.

“This is going to get people out of the uninsured world into being covered. It saves lots of money for the health care system over time. So it would be in their interest to do it,” said Rice, who oversees a network of 15 Variety Care community health centers.

Weintz said the governor had asked Oklahoma Secretary of Health and Human Services Secretary Terry Cline to develop a plan to define the state’s role in providing referrals to citizens seeking information about the marketplace.

Cline, who also serves as commissioner of the Oklahoma State Department of Health, said in an interview he was still considering possibilities for dispensing information.

“Right now we are exploring options to determine what would be an appropriate role for the Health Department,” Cline said. “We do assist people in terms of Medicaid eligibility, so that’s not a completely alien thought to us.”

The Health Department’s home page does not mention the Affordable Care Act. Its “How Do I…?” page, which provides advice on everything from getting a birth certificate to dealing with mold, has nothing about the marketplace.

The Oklahoma Health Care Authority oversees two big government health programs, Insure Oklahoma and the state’s version of Medicaid, called SoonerCare. Spokeswoman Jo Kilgore said the authority intended to provide a link and phone number to the federal program.

The Oklahoma Insurance Department also provides no basic information about the Affordable Care Act on its website. Instead, it has posted a statement applauding efforts by the state to thwart the federal law.

“The federal government is struggling to push through Obamacare when so many are against the overreaching law and its numerous flaws,” Insurance Commissioner John Doak said in the post. “I stand together with Oklahomans and state leaders as we continue to challenge this law and expose the extraordinarily negative impact it will have.”

Deputy Insurance Commissioner Mike Rhoads said the department planned to provide referrals once the marketplace is up and running.

“If anybody calls us, we’re going to help them,” Rhoads said. “We’re going to talk to them and probably direct them to another resource that can help them if they want to enroll.”

Rhoads said four insurance companies have applied to the federal government to offer policies to Oklahomans through the marketplace: Coventry Health Care Inc., BlueCross Blue Shield of Oklahoma, GlobalHealth Inc. and CommunityCare. Officials said the list of companies, policy provisions and premium amounts would be released in mid-September.

Oklahoma Policy Institute Director David Blatt, whose nonprofit group favors expanded government safety-net programs, said he was aware of no branch of state government that was providing information or referrals about the health insurance marketplace.

“As far as we can tell, the answer is a resounding, heartfelt, ‘Hell, no,’” Blatt said.

The federal government has assumed primary responsibility for disseminating information in 27 states that declined to operate their own marketplaces; it is assisting with the exchanges in seven other states. In July, it handed out $1.7 million in grants to 73 Oklahoma health clinics so they could hire people to provide one-on-one counseling to potential applicants.

On Thursday, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced another round of grants totaling $1.6 million to three Oklahoma networks that have agreed to serve as marketplace “navigators.” They will engage in community outreach activities as well as individual counseling.

The recipients were Oklahoma Community Health Centers Inc., Little Dixie Community Action Agency and the Cardon Health Care Network LLC. The largest grant went to Community Health Centers, which agreed to place navigators in 57 cities around the state with a goal of reaching 80,000 uninsured people.

“All of this has to be done by Oct. 1. That’s when we have to hit the ground running,” said Judy Grant, interim executive director of the Oklahoma Primary Care Association, which submitted the Community Health Centers grant application. “The health centers are already looking at their uninsured rolls and developing outreach activities.”

In the meantime, the job of spreading the word in Oklahoma has been taken up by a loosely knit coalition of churches, community groups and other interested individuals.

Together, they have formed what might be called the ACA Underground.

On Saturday, Aug. 10, about 70 people showed up a health marketplace information session held at the First Unitarian Church in Oklahoma City. The meeting was organized by Voice OKC, an organization consisting of about 30 churches, schools and nonprofit groups.

“The Affordable Care Act is the law,” said the Rev. Jonalu Johnstone, who presided over the meeting. “It may work, or it may fail. But give it a chance.”

Johnstone and other marketplace advocates fielded questions from people who weren’t sure how the how the health insurance marketplace would work and whether it was right for them.

“It’s complicated. It’s confusing. It involves a lot of math,” said policy analyst Steven Goldman. “So let the web do it for you. Go to healthcare.com.”

Hugh Meade, an independent sign contractor, said he and his wife had gone without insurance for years. He said he shopped around for private insurance only to find that health coverage would be more expensive than his house payment.

“With every insurance company that we called, the cost was going to be more than that,” Meade told the group. “We can’t afford two mortgages. We can’t do it.”  

Oklahoma Watch is a non-profit organization that produces in-depth and investigative journalism on important public-policy issues facing the state. Oklahoma Watch is non-partisan and strives to be balanced, fair, accurate and comprehensive. The reporting project collaborates on occasion with other news outlets. Topics of particular interest include poverty, education, health care, the young and the old, and the disadvantaged.
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