“Only 536 Georgians are signed up for Obamacare while 400,000 in the state lost their health insurance.” -- U.S. Rep. Lynn Westmoreland, R-Ga., in a Twitter post Nov. 14
For a specific segment of Georgians, the recent rollout of the Affordable Care Act marketplaces has been fraught with confusion, headaches and more confusion.
We told you so, say some critics of the act, which many call Obamacare.
One of those critics, U.S. Rep. Lynn Westmoreland, R-Ga., offered some specific numbers to outline the problems, courtesy of his Twitter account.
“Only 536 Georgians are signed up for Obamacare while 400,000 in the state lost their health insurance,” said a tweet posted from his account.
The tweet ended with the hashtag: “trainwreck.”
Some of us wondered about the accuracy of the tweet, particularly how many Georgians have lost their health insurance.
Regarding the first part of the tweet, the White House announced on Nov. 13 that about 106,000 Americans had selected a health care plan through the federal government’s marketplace accounts. The number was far below federal projections. In Georgia, 1,390 people had selected a marketplace plan, but only 536 actually completed enrollment, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.
Westmoreland’s tweet was sent the morning after the White House announced the enrollment numbers.
President Barack Obama sold the health care act to Americans, in part, on the pledge that individuals who like their insurance could keep their plans. Many Americans, however, learned their plans did not meet the requirements of the health care law when the marketplaces premiered Oct. 1. Some told harrowing stories that their plans were being canceled.
Obama held a news conference Nov. 14 in which he offered to let insurance companies sell existing plans for at least one more year, even if they do not meet the standards of the health care law.
Problem solved? Not exactly.
Some states said it was too late to make such an allowance and they would not let insurance companies extend their policies. Georgia Insurance Commissioner Ralph Hudgens said the day after the president’s announcement that he lacks the authority to enforce the stop-gap measure.
According to some news accounts, an estimated 11 million Americans buy their own health insurance. In Georgia, 404,669 people have health insurance through individual accounts, according to Hudgens’ office. Most of these Georgians are self-employed, work at companies that don’t provide insurance or are early retirees. Individual plans represent about 6 percent of the total insurance market in Georgia, the AJC has reported.
The Associated Press recently reported that 400,000 Georgians had received health insurance policy cancellation notices. Westmoreland’s office cited that report as the basis for the congressman’s claim. Westmoreland’s spokeswoman, Leslie Shedd, said she wrote the tweet and sent it from the congressman’s Twitter account.
So have all these Georgians lost their health insurance? Not exactly, some say.
Glenn Allen, a spokesman for Hudgens, said because the health insurance policies of those 400,000 or so Georgians does not comply with federal law, their policies could be canceled, thus the notices to those people in the mail.
Some of those customers will still have health care coverage through their insurance company. For example, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia sent letters to individual policyholders stating that their plans can no longer be offered through the health care law. The letters offer help with finding plans compliant with the law. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia has about 150,000 people who receive insurance through the individual plans, more than any other health care provider in the state.
The AJC and other news outlets — including the AP — have reported that although a policy doesn’t comply with the law, that doesn’t mean consumers will get cancellation letters. One AP article said it is unclear how many individual plans are being canceled.
Shedd said she probably should had mentioned “cancellations” in the tweet, instead of writing that 400,000 Georgians have lost their health insurance. She said it was a consequence of packaging a message in 140 characters.
Shedd made the argument that those customers still face the prospect of either changing their policies or losing their insurance.
“I think if you are talking to people who’ve received notices, they look at it as ‘I’ve lost my health insurance,’ ” she said.
To sum up, Westmoreland’s tweet said “only 536 Georgians are signed up for Obamacare while 400,000 in the state lost their health insurance.” The number of Georgians signed up was correct. The number of Georgians who have lost their insurance needs some clarity. About 400,000 Georgians have received notices warning their policies could be canceled because they are not compliant with the federal law. Not all of them will go without insurance, officials said.
Westmoreland’s claim, like many concerning the health care law, is complicated. There’s some context that’s necessary to fully understand the situation some Georgians face as a result of the controversial law. Our rating: Half True.
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