This photo taken Jan. 5,
2014 shows Sharon Van Daele posing for the photographer in her home in
Tucson, Ariz. Record-keeping snags could complicate the start of care
this month as millions of people begin using health plans that they
purchased under President Barack Obama’s law. Among the paperwork
orphans was cancer survivor Sharon Van Daele, who went back and forth
between her insurer and the federal government for more than a week
after her coverage was supposed to start but her insurance card failed
to arrive. Unable to get answers, she said it felt as if she had fallen
into a black hole.(AP Photo/John Miller)
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Record-keeping snags could complicate the start of insurance coverage this month as people begin using policies they purchased under President Barack Obama's health care overhaul.
Insurance companies are still trying to sort out cases of so-called health insurance orphans, customers for whom the government has a record that they enrolled, but the insurer does not.
Government officials say the problem is real but under control, with orphan records being among the roughly 13,000 problem cases they are trying to resolve with insurers. But insurance companies are worried the process will grow more cumbersome as they deal with the flood of new customers who signed up in December as enrollment deadlines neared.
More than 1 million people
have signed up through the federal insurance market that serves 36
states. Officials contend the error rate for new signups is close to
zero.
But orphaned files — when the insurer has no record of enrollment — are particularly concerning because the companies have no automated way to identify the presumed policyholder. They say they have to manually compare the lists of enrollees the government sends them with their own records because the government never built an automated system that would do the work much faster.
"It's an ongoing concern," said Robert Zirkelbach, a spokesman for the industry trade group America's Health Insurance Plans. "Health plans can't process enrollments they haven't received from the exchange."
Julie Bataille, communications director for the federal health care rollout, disputes the industry's view.
"We have fixed the issues that we knew were a problem, and we are now seeing nearly zero errors in the work moving forward," she said.
A federal "reconciliation" team, including technicians, deals directly with more than 300 insurers to resolve signup problems, she said, while the government's call center has caseworkers to help consumers directly.
Insurers use the term
"orphan" for the problematic files because they are referring to
customers who have yet to find a home with the carrier they selected.
The files have cropped up since enrollment began last fall through
HealthCare.gov. The site was down an estimated 60 percent of the time in
October.
But insurers worry that the back-end problems will grow more acute as they process the wave of customers who signed up at the end of 2013. More than 2 million people had enrolled by the end of the year, either through HealthCare.gov or state-run websites.
Aetna spokeswoman Susan Millerick said orphaned files were "manageable over the short term." But she added that manually comparing enrollment files will not work over the long term and that the federal website needs a permanent fix to eliminate the possibility of orphaned files.
Bataille said the
administration is working the issue with every tool at its disposal,
from software fixes to picking up the phone and calling insurers.
Among those who got lost in
the paperwork confusion was cancer survivor Sharon Van Daele of Tucson,
Ariz., who went back and forth between her insurer and the federal
government for more than a week after her confirmation failed to arrive.
Unable to get answers, she said it felt as if she had fallen into a
black hole.
"I made all the deadlines, and then I tried to make my payment, but they wouldn't take it," said Van Daele.
Van Daele is in remission following treatment for a type of blood cancer. Her previous coverage lapsed Dec. 31, and she started getting nervous when nothing for her new coverage arrived in the mail.
"My husband told me I shouldn't leave the house," she said.
Insurance industry
consultant Bob Laszewski said he expects to hear more reports about
orphaned files as patients begin to seek health care or start worrying
about insurance cards that have not arrived.
"As we go through the month, you bet this is going to be a problem," he said.
Improving weather also could
turn up more orphaned enrollees. The year started with a blast of
freezing weather that settled over much of the U.S. Those conditions
usually keep people indoors and out of the health care system unless
they absolutely have to use it.
Laszewski and other insurer
representatives say orphaned files exist largely because the government
allowed people to sign up without first guaranteeing the technology
would work.
Insurers say it usually
takes a few days for a customer's file to reach them after they enroll
through the exchange. People who still do not receive their insurance
cards and introductory packet after that should call insurers first for
help.
If the insurer has no record of them, they must contact the government for help.
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