Insurance Exchanges

Bookmark and Share

Insurance Exchanges

Access resources specifically focused on the development and implementation of insurance exchanges and related analysis.  

Narrow Results By:

  • 01/28/2016

    At the outset of the third open-enrollment period for the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) health insurance marketplaces, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) reported that the number of insurance companies participating in the federally run marketplaces would remain relatively consistent from 2015 to 2016. This analysis of the 17 state-based marketplaces also found stable participation. Despite the struggles of many Consumer Operated and Oriented Plans (CO-OPs) and persistent market challenges, most state-based marketplaces have an equal or greater number of insurers competing for business this year.

  • 12/03/2015

    Private insurance plans typically require some form of cost sharing (also called out-of-pocket costs) when enrollees receive a health care service covered by their plan. These expenses, which are in addition to the amount an enrollee spends on his or her monthly premium, come in a variety of forms: copayments, coinsurance, and deductibles. This brief shows the cost sharing in plans sold to individuals through Healthcare.gov for 2016, with a focus on the variation in the ways plans may set cost sharing for services, such as physician visits, prescription drugs, and hospital stays.

  • 12/03/2015

    SHADAC is aggregating State-Based Marketplace (SBM) enrollment reports released during the third ACA Open Enrollment Period (November 1, 2015, to January 31, 2015) and posting them to its marketplace enrollment reports library. The library will also incorporate federal enrollment reports for both Federally Facilitated Marketplaces (FFMs) and SBMs, as well as for Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). State and federal reports covering the first and second ACA Open and Special Enrollment Periods are also available.

  • 11/06/2015

    As Marketplace enrollees begin to shop for coverage starting in 2016, the number of insurance choices available to them is changing in some parts of the country. Over the past year, some insurers have announced their exit or been required to withdraw from the Marketplaces, most notably a number of nonprofit Consumer Operated and Oriented Plans and some larger insurers like Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Mexico.  Despite these withdrawals, the Department of Health and Human Services recently announced that the average number of issuers per state is increasing slightly in 2016 and that about 9 out of 10 returning Healthcare.gov customers will have 3 or more insurers from which to choose in 2016. This Data Note highlights areas where insurer participation is changing in 2016, and where this may have an appreciable effect on market competition. It also examines insurer participation in rural areas, which have historically had low rates of insurer competition.

  • 10/12/2015

    This analysis presents changes in premiums for the lowest- and second-lowest cost silver marketplace plans in major cities in 13 states and the District of Columbia, for which complete data on rates for all insurers are publically available. This page will be updated as complete rate information becomes available for more states