How the smallest state got the smallest uninsured rate


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anya wallackA recent Gallup poll revealed that Rhode Island has the lowest uninsured rate in the country, at 2.7 percent, as well as one of five states that saw its uninsured rate decline by 10 points or more. But, how did that happen? Anya Wallack, director of HealthSourceRI, was able to provide some answers.

“You come to HealthSource, and right there, you can very easily sign up for coverage regardless of your income,” she said. “We’ve developed an infrastructure that’s really designed for this unified approach.”

Wallack explained Rhode Island decided to create its own exchange because it presented “significant advantages, in terms of local control and customer service.” With a state based exchange, rather than a federal one, they could better tailor their services to the needs of Rhode Islanders.

HealthSourceRI uses what she called a “one door policy,” meaning that customers could come in and not only apply for health insurance, but check to see if they were eligible for Medicaid and other benefits. This is where much of the exchange’s success comes from, since this is a policy only a few states have adopted.

Wallack said that making customers jump through hoops only serves to make things more confusing, and they miss out on important information because of it. Right now, Wallack and her team are expanding their open door policy, and making it possible for customers to begin to apply for other assistance programs like TANF or SNAP.

“When we’re done building our system, you’ll be able to sign up for those with one stop shopping,” she said.

Wallack added that there are a number of ways that customers can use this one stop shopping, that all services are provided online, over the phone, or in person. Face-to-face assistance is also provided right in the community health centers, so customers can sign up for insurance right in their hometown. HealthSourceRI also has enrollment events during the open enrollment period, which is from Nov. 1 to the end of January each year. During open enrollment, a customer can renew, reenroll, or sign up for coverage, or just change their plan. There are two other types of enrollments as well- special enrollment and Medicaid coverage. Special enrollment occurs when a customer’s circumstances change throughout the year and they need to change their plan, and Medicaid coverage happens throughout the year to see if a customer is eligible for Medicaid.

“We try to find any avenue where we can come into contact with people who may be looking for coverage,” Wallack said concerning their community accessibility.

This level of accessibility has worked for the exchange, proved not only by the Gallup poll but the hard numbers that HealthSource has collected so far for this year. In 2015, they have enrolled 32,554 individuals as of July 31. Most people who enrolled were age 55 and over, sitting at 29 percent. 53 percent of enrollees were female, while 47 percent were male. More than half of the enrollees – 59 percent – were eligible for financial assistance in the form of an advanced premium tax credit and cost-sharing reductions. These numbers show an upward trend from last year, with over 7,000 more enrollees. Small businesses are signing up through HealthSource as well, with 542 employers enrolled in 2015, compared to the 381 from 2014.

The Gallup poll found that states that set up their own exchange and expanded Medicaid saw the biggest drop in their uninsured rate, something that the Ocean State has been doing since day one. According to Wallack, as long as they continue with this, Rhode Island can serve as a model for other states and their healthcare exchanges, especially as HealthSourceRI moves forward. Within the next month, HealthSource will be releasing its own survey, which will give more accurate results than the Gallup one, because it will only look at Rhode Island. But, the national survey still shows a trend, and that Rhode Island is headed in the right direction.

“What I take from this, is that those policy decisions, as well as our decisions to take a coordinated approach, was successful for us,” Wallack said.

HealthSource’s next step is to find those last remaining uninsured individuals, and understand why they’re uninsured, as well as work with employers to make sure that they are able to retain coverage. Now, their job is to help control healthcare cost growth, provide support for small business, and provide affordable choices for everyone, especially that last 2.7 percent.

Obamacare a boon for women


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HealthSourceRIDue to the provisions of the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare, millions of women will have expanded health care options and reduced health care costs. For the first time in their lives, many women will find themselves able to access decent and reliable health care for themselves and their families.

Starting October 1, millions of Americans will be able to enroll in new affordable health insurance plans through state level marketplaces set up by the health care law. In Rhode Island the website can be accessed at HealthSourceRI and there is a customer service staff available at 401-222-5192. How affordable are these plans? Millions of Americans will be able to find coverage for as little as $100 a month.

Under Obamacare access to affordable health insurance will become available for the nearly 12 million women of reproductive age (including nearly two million African-American women and more than 2.5 million Latinas) who will be newly eligible for insurance coverage. Already more than three million young adults continue to be covered under their parent’s health care plans until the age of 26. Also, more than four million women will be eligible for tax-credits, making their insurance even more affordable.

Over 20 million women have already received care without co-pay that they previously had to pay for, and over 24 million women covered under Medicare can now receive access to basic preventive care at no cost, including birth control, cancer screenings, well-woman exams, and screenings for diabetes and high blood pressure.

Women will no longer be charged higher rates simply for being women, and insurers will no longer be able to deny coverage because of “preexisting conditions” such as breast cancer, high blood pressure, or diabetes. Some insurers have even claimed that being pregnant or a victim of domestic abuse counts as a preexisting condition, but no longer.

Under Obamacare women will have guaranteed access to an OB/GYN provider without having to seek the permission of the insurance company. Women will have their choice of doctors. Additionally, all employers and insurance companies (except for churches and other places of worship who decide to opt-out on religious grounds) are required to cover contraception without any additional co-pays.

Too often women are confronted with impossible economic decisions; having to choose between basic health care and other life necessities. Under Obamacare some of this economic worry will be alleviated. Serious illness will no longer lead inevitably to economic ruin, access to preventive medicines now can avoid more costly interventions in the future, and families will have one less thing to worry about economically.

According to the Economic Progress Institute, an estimated 45,000 single adults with income below $16,000/year will be eligible for free health insurance through Medicaid, and another 44,000 Rhode Islanders who do not have affordable health insurance through their jobs can enroll in commercial insurance through Health Source RI and pick a plan that fits their needs and budget.

The Affordable Care Act changes the landscape of healthcare for women in Rhode Island. Under the new law women and men are equal when it comes to insurance coverage, a great advance towards real equality. The greater economic stability women will have as a byproduct of Obamacare will open up new economic and career opportunities for many.

October marks a great step forward towards accessible and affordable healthcare for women, and we should be celebrating this landmark. Ten years from now we will all look back and wonder that families could function economically at all in an era before the arrival of Obamacare.

Public or private, big launches can overload servers


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GTA-OnlineJustin Katz, who is avowedly anti-government, is seemingly fighting off a case of the giddies as he reports that “HealthSourceRI, Rhode Island’s ObamaCare exchange,” is overloaded or offline.”

Katz made the somewhat bold proclamation that “in private-sector companies, people lose their jobs and life savings when they crash [servers] at the word ‘go.'” Katz makes his point by using the skydive from space (sponsored by Red Bull) in which millions watched online as an example of the private sector pulling things off without a hitch.

Apparently Katz doesn’t play video games, or he would know that Rockstar Games is working on ‘GTA Online’ server issues. In what can only be described as the most successful video game of all time, with sales of over one billion dollars last month, Rockstar is today launching Grand Theft Auto Online, and encountering bugs, overloaded servers, and more. Writer Dave Their, who at the time of his writing had not been able to creat a character yet, runs some of these problems down:

  • Occasional “Rockstar Cloud Servers Unavailable” error message
  • Freezing sometimes while loading into first race in GTAO with “waiting for other players” on the screen
  • Intermittent “Failed to Host a GTA Online Session” error messages
  • Race Corona (start area, marker) occasionally not showing up for first race
  • Errors saying “Timed out when matchmaking for a compatible GTA Online Session to join”
  • Occasional “Failed to start job” errors
  • General issues with the Social Club site and Social Club features (slow loading, failed logins, emails not arriving, etc)

In government or private sector, things can’t always go as planned. In any kind of major systems launch, there are going to be problems. Justin Katz, in not realizing this essential fact, is displaying a lack of business savvy.