The federal agency that runs HealthCare.gov has just given insurance agents and brokers more information about how the tough new special enrollment period verification process will really work.
The agency, the Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight, has posted a slidedeck giving blow-by-blow examples of how the new pre-enrollment verification process is supposed to work. CCIIO officials used the slidedeck to brief agents who attended a semiprivate webinar on the process earlier this month.
The open enrollment period for 2017 ended Jan. 31 in most of the country. Anyone who buys individual coverage now is supposed to have what a state's exchange sees as a good excuse to qualify for a special enrollment period, or SEP.
CCIIO is now rolling out SEP pre-enrollment verification requirements in two phases, with one phase taking effect June 23 and the other in August.
During the recent webinar, CCIIO officials focused mainly on what agents will need to do to help clients with the verification requirements taking effect this month.
Here's a look at three secrets from the webinar, based a copy of the slidedeck obtained by ThinkAdvisor Life Health and other sources.
1. CCIIO may have some trouble getting anyone to help consumers with the eligibility verification process.
CCIIO is an arm of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The agency helps its parent enforce Affordable Care Act rules and run health-law programs.
One of CCIIO's biggest, most visible programs is HealthCare.gov. HealthCare.gov enrolls people in Affordable Care Act public exchange plans in states that are unable or unwilling to do that. HealthCare.gov also manages consumers' exchange accounts in those states.
HealthCare.gov decides whether exchange plan users qualify for government subsidies, and whether they qualify for special enrollment periods, or SEPs.
The SEP process is supposed to push healthy people to pay for coverage even when they feel fine, by reducing their ability to get coverage immediately the day they need a heart transplant. Insurers offer an annual open enrollment period every year. The period for 2018, for example, is set to run from Nov. 1 through Dec. 15. At other times of the year, consumers are supposed to show they have lost their old coverage, moved, married or gone through some other major life or coverage change.
HealthCare.gov started the open enrollment period for 2017 with more than 60,000 registered agents of brokers, but many have stopped making active efforts to sell individual major medical coverage, inside or outside the exchange market. Some agents are giving up on individual major medical because of uncertainty in Washington, insurer decisions to stop paying commissions, and problems with getting insurers to pay the commissions already earned.
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Nonprofit exchange helpers in many areas have faced their own problems with funding and red tape.
In spite of the problems, thousands of insurance agents, brokers and nonprofit exchange helpers are still trying to help clients cope with the individual major medical insurance application process.
Other financial professionals face the new individual major medical application process mainly when they're getting coverage for themselves or their loved ones.
2. CCIIO will introduce the new SEP verification requirements in two phases.