Oklahoma again sets ACA enrollment record

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  • Preliminary numbers released by the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services show a record-setting more than 171,000 Oklahomans signed up for health care plans on the Affordable Care Act’s federal exchange for 2021. Graphic by Oklahoma watch
  • A syringe is about to be filled with the COVID-19 vaccine. Whitney Bryen/Oklahoma Watch
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More Oklahomans than ever before will be covered by health insurance purchased off of the Affordable Care Act exchange when new plans took effect January 1.

Preliminary numbers released by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services show more than 171,100 Oklahoma residents enrolled in health plans purchased through the marketplace during the open enrollment period which ended December 15.

The total is an 8-percent increase during the current year and will be the third straight year the state has set a record for enrollees on the exchange.

The spike in enrollments during the past several years come after officials worried work would be needed to stabilize the state’s marketplace amid a time of high premiums and few options shortly after former President Barack Obama’s signature health-care law took full effect in 2014.

However, thanks in part to a record-number of insurers offering plans in Oklahoma for next year, the average monthly benchmark premiums on the federal exchange were down more than 20 percent from a record high in 2019.

Oklahoma wasn’t the only place seeing more consumers buying plans, which are often heavily subsidized.

Federal data shows 8.2 million plans were purchased for the upcoming year in the 36 states, including Oklahoma, which use the federal exchange. Enrollment numbers for many of the 12 state-run exchanges haven’t been counted because they have different enrollment periods.

That is nearly the same as the 8.3 million who purchased plans for the current year even though New Jersey and Pennsylvania — two states which previously used the federal exchange — moved to state-based exchanges.

When removing those states — as well as Nevada, which moved to state-based exchange last year — enrollment on the federal exchange is up 6.6 percent compared to 2020.

In a statement from the Trump administration, health officials attributed the increase to lower premiums and more offerings across the country.

“Annual enrollment data shows the Trump administration’s focus on delivering more choices along with a smooth and streamlined consumer experience continues to drive strong enrollment,” Seema Verma, administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said. “We’ve opened more pathways to enroll by taking advantage of private sector and people are clearly finding the coverage they need at this critical time.”

Others have pointed to the durability and effectiveness of the exchanges in time.

“I think what you are seeing is consumers just really want coverage, especially subsidized coverage, if they can get it,” Daniel McDermott, a research associate with the Kaiser Family Foundation, said in an interview with Oklahoma Watch when the open enrollment period began.

The increase in enrollment also comes as many Republicans continue trying to diminish or dismantle the controversial health-care law that was enacted nearly a decade ago.

The efforts include an ongoing federal lawsuit, supported by President Donald Trump, that seeks to strike down the law and recent federal and state moves to expand the use of cheaper, stripped-down plans available outside of the exchange.