Colorado Health Insurance Exchange Guide

By Andrea Davidson


The official name for the new Colorado Health Insurance Exchange is Connect for Health Colorado or CHC. This is a marketplace where small businesses and individuals that have previously been uninsured can find affordable plans. CHC and other such exchanges across the nation will begin enrollments from Oct 2013, and coverage for those enrolled will become active as of January 1, 2014.

CHC is one of many such exchanges established in states all over the nation to comply with the requirements of federal healthcare reform bill (PPACA or Affordable Care Act). Under this law, all citizens and legal residents in the U. S. Must have health coverage from 2014 onwards. The exchanges that will start offering coverage in 2014 are the main mechanism used to implement the law.

About 500,000 previously ineligible people in Colorado will be able to avail of plans using CHC. This eliminates two-thirds of the state's existing contingent of approximately 750,000 uninsured individuals. The exchange can also be used by those who are already insured but want to shop around to find a better plan.

The program currently has two components. One is the exchange for individuals, and another one called SHOP for small businesses with no more than 100 employees. Larger companies with more employees will be able access this marketplace starting from 2017, assuming the state approves that too.

It is hoped that the establishment of CHC will reduce premiums by around 14-20 percent. This will be accomplished through an expansion of the market combined with competition for customers among providers offering plans in the exchange. Practically speaking, that works out to somewhere in between $1,510 to $2,160 per year in healthcare premium savings for families in Colorado.

The exchange also helps do away with some ugly aspects of traditional healthcare under the old system. Preexisting conditions will no longer be a reason for disqualification of otherwise eligible consumers. Providers must enroll those with such conditions at the same premium paid by others, and they cannot refuse to cover the condition in question while enrolling the individual into the plan.

The establishment of CHC and all the administrative and operational costs are being borne by the federal government until 2016. The state will be required to pay five percent of costs starting from 2017, and the state's share of expenses will go up to 20 percent from 2020 onwards. Colorado will get more than $12 billion in additional federal funding to deal with the implementation and operational costs of this marketplace.

Not since the New Deal have small business owners and individuals benefited from such a massive expansion of government support for social needs. There's still an ongoing debate over the alleged socialization of healthcare. Organizations and business groups are still protesting the additional costs of providing health plans for uninsured employees. Not to mention the inevitable implementation hiccups and confusion over what changes will take place. Regardless of the other pros and cons, the one thing that makes the Colorado Health Insurance Exchange worthwhile is that everyone in the state will have access to proper healthcare coverage.




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