There are bad reviews and then there are bad reviews. But it would be difficult to imagine some worse headlines than the ones Obamacare has received during the past month.
My favorite for over-the-top headline? How about this gem from the National Journal: “Why Obamacare May Be Obama’s Katrina, Iraq.” That’s right. An initiative to insure millions of Americans has been equated with the most frightening American natural and man-made disasters of the 21st century.
In a world in which we have come to expect tight plotlines, heroic successes, and quick and satisfying endings, I imagine that a blockbuster like Obamacare was never going appeal to critics.
The Obamacare story is being reported this month as if it were a classic disaster movie, with millions of people about to be left out in the cold to fend for themselves in a chaotic healthcare system as Obamacare exchanges crash and burn around them.
But that’s not close to reality.
This week’s announcement that the Obamacare website will work 90 percent of the time (which is another way of saying it still could be down over two hours per day) is hardly worth celebrating. But the truth is that Obamacare itself is unfolding pretty much as expected. The changes to the system that have been in place are for the most part popular and glitch-free.
And in another thirty days, people with pre-existing conditions will be guaranteed insurance at the same price as everyone else. In roughly half the country, people with incomes below 138 percent of poverty will start to receive Medicaid benefits. And nearly everyone with incomes up to 400 percent of poverty who purchase insurance through the exchanges will be given tax credits that make it more affordable.
But one big number – seven million – is already setting up Obamacare for a disaster sequel in the spring.
That’s the number of people who are supposed to get insurance through Obamacare exchanges by March. And when the October and November numbers were slower than desired, another Obamacare disaster narrative began to take shape.
But no one ever thought that signing up seven million people would be effortless.
In fact, way back in March, Phil Galewicz wrote an insightful and prescient article for Kaiser Health News in collaboration with the Washington Post. He quoted several people who are familiar with the challenges of enrolling people in health insurance programs. He and they highlighted some of the issues that would confront the Obamacare exchanges. The article’s conclusion? People should be prepared for a “slow ramp up.”
In this context, some of the early numbers don’t look so bad after all.
Californians alone had completed over 360,000 insurance applications as of November 19. Covered California - the state’s exchange – reported that 135,000 would qualify for the state Medicaid program and 80,000 others had already selected a health plan.
And, according to the exchange, sufficient numbers of those people appeared to be young enough that the California program wouldn’t sink into the sea.
In New York, the reality was similar. As of November 24, according to its marketplace, NY State of Health, over 257,000 people had completed applications, and over 57,000 people were enrolled in insurance plans.
And in Kentucky, 60,000 people have already obtained either Medicaid or private insurance through its exchange. And of those signing up for private insurance, 41 percent are in the 18-34 year old group.
CNN also reported in mid-November that the Washington and Connecticut exchanges were generating healthy enrollment numbers. And the federal exchange numbers were not as bad as one might expect. The November numbers included over 100,000 sign-ups despite the balky website, and according to HHS and CNN over 900,000 more people had completed applications.
So how did CNN headine this good news? “Obamacare success story sours.”
What will it mean if 4 or 5 million, not seven million, people enroll by next spring? That will be enough to drop the uninsured percentage nationally from 15.4 percent to around 14 percent.
That might warrant some favorable reviews.
But if the reporting of the Obamacare story next spring is anything like it has been over the past month, the headline you will be reading may well be “Obamacare Crashes Again.”
So stay tuned. And in the meantime, imagine what things would be like if the alternative to Obamacare had passed. And believe it or not, there is one – from 2009. In my next column, I’ll take a look at how it might be faring today. You’ll be surprised.
Paul Gionfriddo via email: gionfriddopaul@gmail.com. Twitter: @pgionfriddo. Facebook: www.facebook.com/paul.gionfriddo. LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/paulgionfriddo/
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