© 2024 WNIJ and WNIU
Northern Public Radio
801 N 1st St.
DeKalb, IL 60115
815-753-9000
Northern Public Radio
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Four Area Counties Will Have Only One Obamacare Insurer

Illinois Department of Insurance

The Illinois Department of Insurance says 75 percent of Illinois counties will have only one or two insurance companies selling coverage on the health care marketplace for 2017.

In seven counties – McHenry, Lake, Kendall and Grundy in northern Illinois; plus Madison, St. Clair and Monroe in southern Illinois – Blue Cross Blue Shield will be the only insurer selling marketplace policies.

In Illinois, four insurers have dropped out of the “Obamacare” marketplace or folded, leaving five companies.

Insurers were counting on payments from the federal government that they didn’t get, said Illinois Department of Insurance Acting Director Anne Melissa Dowling. Sicker patients and higher drug costs also contributed to insurers’ financial losses, she said.

“There’s nothing happening in Illinois that isn’t happening nationally,” Dowling told The Associated Press.

Open enrollment for HealthCare.gov starts Nov. 1 and ends Jan. 31. The marketplace policies are the only way some people who aren’t insured through their jobs can get government tax credits to help bring down the cost.

About 388,000 Illinois residents were covered by marketplace plans as of last March. About 70,000 will need to enroll in new health plans in 2017 because their 2016 carrier withdrew from the market. The Obama administration intends to match them with a health plan, but consumers should make their own decisions, Dowling said.

“They should look really hard at what the [provider] networks are, the copays, the co-insurance, things that are relevant to individual family needs and health situations,” Dowling said.

Illinois this year will employ more than 600 people to help consumers with enrollment questions. Consumers can make an appointment for free confidential help through the Get Covered Illinois website, Dowling said.

Dowling acknowledged that November election results could offer opportunities to improve insurance companies’ ability to predict their costs, if the health care law survives. She said her department would participate in the discussion, but not until after the election.

“Once we know the composition of all the players, we certainly will, but until then, we’re just going to stand down,” Dowling said.

Before she was appointed by Gov. Bruce Rauner, Dowling helped lead the Connecticut Insurance Department and served as a board member of Connecticut’s state-based health insurance exchange.

Related Stories