Enrollments for insurance under the Obama health law picked up in November according to new data released by the federal government, as almost 365,000 people had signed up for coverage by November 30, but those numbers are still far short of original estimates by Obama Administration officials.
The numbers show that 110,410 people signed up through healthcare.gov in November - the total enrollments through the federal exchange stood at 137,204 at the end of November.
That was still less than the 15 states that set up their own exchanges, as 148,087 enrolled for health insurance in November, for a total of 227,478.
Some of the numbers look healthy, like over 107,000 people signed up in California. New York is second, with Florida third - the best of any state in the federal exchange at 17,908.
But at the other end, there are 10 states that couldn't break 2,000 signups in two months, and 11 states with less than 1,000 people signed up for private health insurance coverage.
Oregon is the worst at 44 enrollments overall - but that is mainly due to the complete breakdown of that state's website.
North Dakota has signed up only 265 people, South Dakota just 372.
Here is the state-by-state breakdown on health insurance signups - the data shows enrollments in October, November and the running total of the people who have selected a plan - whether they have paid for it or not.
First, for the 15 states running their own exchange:
Now the 35 states that go through the federal exchange:
Now here is a state-by-state list of enrollments in terms of raw numbers, from first to worst:
Enrollments for insurance under the Obama health law picked up in November according to new data released by the federal government, as almost 365,000 people had signed up for coverage by November 30, but those numbers are still far short of original estimates by Obama Administration officials. The numbers show ...
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