The first insurer to announce withdrawal this week, Optima Health, will cut its footprint in Virginia in half. That means that around 70,000 Virginians will have no insurance options next year unless another insurer steps in to fill the gap, Mathews writes. In other states where all insurers withdrew, insurers specializing in low-income plans have stepped in to offer insurance. All counties in the U.S. had insurance choices as of Aug. 25.
Bloomberg interactive map updated as of Sept. 7, 2017. Click on the image to enlarge it. Click here to access the interactive version. |
Anthem similarly announced on Sept. 6 that it would cut in half the number of counties in Kentucky in which it will offer individual insurance plans in 2018. "Anthem's decision to sell individual plans in just 59 counties in Kentucky comes more than two months after the Blue Cross Blue Shield insurer filed proposed rates for health plans in 2018 for all 120 counties in the state," Dan Mangan reports for CNBC. "So far, Anthem has announced that it will significantly reduce its Obamacare footprint next year in nine out of the 14 states where it currently sells individual health plans both on and outside of government-run marketplaces." The pullback in those states will not affect Anthem's group insurance or Medicaid plans.
Kentucky's Department of Insurance told Mangan that the areas Anthem is vacating will be covered by CareSource. CareSource specializes in managing Medicaid programs for the poor.
from The Rural Blog http://ift.tt/2gKERIK Optima leaves parts of Va. without individual insurance in 2018; Anthem withdraws from half of Ky. - Entrepreneur Generations
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