Maryland: @MarylandConnect extends 2022 Open Enrollment deadline thru 2/28; breaks 181K QHPs so far

Maryland Health Connection

via Maryland Health Connection:

GOVERNOR ANNOUNCES EXTENSION OF OPEN ENROLLMENT THROUGH MARYLAND HEALTH CONNECTION AFTER A RECORD SEASON

  • More than 180,000 have enrolled for 2022, an all-time high and a 9% increase over last year

(JAN 18, 2022) ANNAPOLIS, MD – Gov. Larry Hogan today announced that open enrollment will continue on Maryland Health Connection through February in light of the ongoing public health emergency. A record number of Marylanders - 181,603 - have enrolled in coverage for 2022 through the state’s health insurance marketplace. A surge of new enrollees fueled the 9-percent increase over a year ago.

In fact, this is up 9.4% vs. last year, which itself was the previous all-tiime record for MD, I believe.

“As we battle this COVID-19 surge, this extended enrollment period will help get more Marylanders covered at a critical time,” said Gov. Larry Hogan. “One of the many lessons of the pandemic is how important it is to have access to affordable and reliable health coverage, and we are fortunate to have a health exchange that is a national model.”

Open enrollment, which began Nov. 1 and was originally scheduled to end Jan. 15, will now continue through Feb. 28. Anyone who enrolls by Jan. 31 will have coverage beginning Feb. 1. Those who enroll during February will be covered starting March 1.

New enrollees totaled 39,181, up 48 percent, between Nov. 1 and Jan. 15. More than 141,944 existing enrollees also retained their coverage, up 2 percent, as the health emergency stretched into a third year. Marylanders can also obtain dental insurance through the state marketplace. Those enrollments grew 29 percent, from 51,505 a year ago to 66,634 for 2022.

Populations that historically have proportionately lacked health coverage such as young adults, Black and Hispanic residents enrolled as never before during the enrollment period between Nov. 1 and Jan. 15.

Enrollment of adults ages 18-34 reached 49,576, a 6-percent increase over the 2021 open enrollment. The gain was propelled by added financial help from a $20 million fund that Maryland set aside during last year’s legislative session to encourage more young adults to get coverage, both for their own health and to help bring down the cost of coverage overall. Nearly two-thirds, or 32,122, of the young adult enrollees qualified for the additional subsidy, which reduced their monthly costs about $35 per person. More than 8,000 of those young adults who qualified for the additional help were new enrollees.

Black enrollees for 2022 totaled 30,535, a 10-percent increase over a year ago. Hispanic enrollees totaled 20,241, a 13-percent increase over a year ago. (Self-identification of race and ethnicity is optional on the application.)

“I’m happy that the marketing and outreach efforts we targeted to those groups helped get the message out about the need for health insurance, especially now,” said Michele Eberle, executive director of the Maryland Health Benefit Exchange, which runs the state’s health insurance marketplace. “Getting high-quality, affordable coverage to as many uninsured people as possible and responding to chronic health inequities are essential to our mission. Thanks to our amazing statewide partners for helping us spread the word.”

Other action in recent years by state and federal officials helped fuel enrollments. The Reinsurance program that Gov. Hogan and the Maryland General Assembly created in 2018 with federal approval led Maryland to offer some of the least expensive plans in the nation. Maryland’s individual market, on average, offered the least expensive gold and bronze plans and the third least expensive silver plans in the nation, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation analysis in October.

Also, the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, approved by Congress and signed by President Biden last March, broadened financial help to all income levels for people who buy their own health coverage. That was reflected in the enrollment totals: The number of people who earn more than four times the federal poverty level, which was the cap for financial help before the Rescue Plan, grew by 60 percent over a year ago, to 16,053. The federal poverty level is $12,880 for an individual and $26,500 for a family of 4.

Additional enrollment opportunities will continue this year, including the Easy Enrollment program that allows uninsured people to get coverage if they check a box when filing their state income tax form.

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