HealthCare.gov enrollment approaches 2.5 million in first month
Washington Nearly 2.5 million people selected a health plan on the HealthCare.gov website as of midnight on Friday, Dec. 12, the Obama administration announced Tuesday.
After the 2015 open enrollment period began on November 15, consumer activity on the website began to peak as the December 15 deadline neared to purchase health insurance that begins on New Year's Day 2015.
The website reached a high of over 125,000 concurrent users on Monday with no serious problems, said Andy Slavitt, principal deputy administrator of the federal marketplace that serves 36 states.
Nearly 500,000 people were unable to select a plan by the December 15 deadline due to the high user volume. But they will be allowed extra time to purchase coverage that takes effect on January 1, Slavitt said.
In the last three days alone, more than 3 million people visited the federal insurance marketplace and more than 1.6 million phoned the call center seeking assistance.
The relatively smooth operation was a marked departure from last year’s disastrous inaugural rollout of the HealthCare.gov website. The the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services spent the past year upgrading, simplifying and fully testing the troubled system.
The Obama administration expects fewer than 10 million people to enroll in marketplace health coverage next year. That's far below the 13 million people that the Congressional Budget Office has projected.
This year’s enrollment period will run for just three months, through Feb. 15, instead of six months like last year.
To find out more about the open enrollment period for individual coverage, see the Health and Human Services enrollment update at http://1.usa.gov/1DIg5Ri
After the 2015 open enrollment period began on November 15, consumer activity on the website began to peak as the December 15 deadline neared to purchase health insurance that begins on New Year's Day 2015.
The website reached a high of over 125,000 concurrent users on Monday with no serious problems, said Andy Slavitt, principal deputy administrator of the federal marketplace that serves 36 states.
Nearly 500,000 people were unable to select a plan by the December 15 deadline due to the high user volume. But they will be allowed extra time to purchase coverage that takes effect on January 1, Slavitt said.
In the last three days alone, more than 3 million people visited the federal insurance marketplace and more than 1.6 million phoned the call center seeking assistance.
The relatively smooth operation was a marked departure from last year’s disastrous inaugural rollout of the HealthCare.gov website. The the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services spent the past year upgrading, simplifying and fully testing the troubled system.
The Obama administration expects fewer than 10 million people to enroll in marketplace health coverage next year. That's far below the 13 million people that the Congressional Budget Office has projected.
This year’s enrollment period will run for just three months, through Feb. 15, instead of six months like last year.
To find out more about the open enrollment period for individual coverage, see the Health and Human Services enrollment update at http://1.usa.gov/1DIg5Ri
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