Laura Wallach took the morning off from work just to learn more about signing up for Obamacare.
“I’ve heard pretty much only good things about it,” said Wallach, 25, describing positive feedback from her family and friends covered by the new exchanges this year. On Friday, she carved out time from her non-profit temp job to attend a free workshop at Manhattan’s Bellevue Hospital.
But though it was listed on the New York Health Exchange’s website as an open enrollment event, the four-hour workshop mostly focused on Medicare, with just one hour at the end devoted to Obamacare.
Wallach left shortly after the first hour’s PowerPoint on Medicare, which she won’t qualify for another 40 years. But she’s planning to continue her search for Obamacare information back home in Queens, hoping to find someone to help her navigate the marketplace. “It’s all Greek to me,” she says.
Educational and outreach efforts will be critical to ensuring that the nascent health care exchanges continue to gain momentum in Obamacare’s second year. Open enrollment for the exchanges begins on Saturday, and health advocates are focused both on re-enrolling those already covered — and signing up those who didn’t get coverage the first time around.
The next round of Obamacare participants will be generally harder to reach, as many may have declined to get coverage the first time around or simply didn’t know about the options available. Health advocates are targeting specific populations in particular: Latinos, who have not gained insurance as quickly as other racial or ethnic groups; young people, who are generally healthier and whose participation helps reduce insurance costs for everyone; and people who are middle-income earners but still qualify for Obamacare’s subsidies. Wallach is already a beneficiary of the Affordable Care Act: The law has allowed her to stay covered on her father’s insurance plan after she left her full-time job in D.C. Saving on health insurance helped fund her move to New York and reunite with her long-time boyfriend. But Wallach will lose the ability to share her parents’ coverage when she turns 26, prompting her to look for other options. “I’m on medication that I want covered, and in general, it’s a terrifying prospect not to be covered,” she explained.
“Many of those who enrolled in 2014 were people who had chronic conditions and generally had a lot of demand, or who were particularly low income and benefited the most from the subsidies in the exchange,” said Caroline Pearson, vice-president of Avalere Health, a D.C.-based research and consulting firm.
So this year, health officials and advocates will need to convince those who are relatively healthier and net higher incomes to sign up for Obamacare. “People who have a little bit less demand for health insurance, who are a little bit less aware” of the exchanges, explains Pearson.
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About 7.1 million people are currently covered by the exchanges, and the White House expects as many as 10 million to be enrolled by 2015. Insurers are also betting that new consumers will continue flocking to the exchanges, with 25% more people expected to participate this year. But it’s uncertain exactly if and when new enrollees will decide to sign up. “I don’t think everyone really knows how long it takes to get people engaged who didn’t buy the first year,” said Gary Claxton, vice president of the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Basic information about the exchanges has yet to reach most uninsured Americans: About 90% aren’t aware that open enrollment begins in November; 66% know “only a little” or “nothing at all” about the Obamacare exchanges; and 53% aren’t aware that financial help for insurance is available to lower- and moderate-income Americans, according to an October poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Health care advocates are hoping to break through by drawing from lessons they’ve learned this past year. One outside group, Young Invincibles, has found that big events “with something fun” are particularly effective at reaching young people. The group’s ACA enrollment event at the University of Houston this week featured a free Zumba class and line dancing, for instance.









