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A reported 50,000 people have enrolled in Healthcare.gov. Sounds promising, but that's
still way under target. (Via U.S. Department of Health and Human Services)
The Obama administration set a goal of 500,000 enrollees for the month of October — but
The Wall Street Journal reports the real number is less than 1/10 of what the White House
expected. (Via The Wall Street Journal)
It's worth noting, that figure doesn't include those who have enrolled in Medicaid or obtained
private insurance in one of the state-run exchanges.
And while the 50,000 is a heck of a lot better than that infamous six — the number reported
on Day 1 of the website's launch — it's not great. (Via Gawker)
Especially considering the administration's target of 7 million enrolled by March. While
the administration says the website is improving daily and will be running smoothly for most
users by the end of November, the White House has been lowering expectations in recent days.
(Via CBS, ABC)
SEBELIUS: "Enrollment numbers which will be the first month of enrollment are likely to
be quite low, given the struggles that people have had in getting access to the site and
getting information." (Via WWJ-TV)
A Health and Human Services spokesperson expanded that to the National Journal, liking Healthcare.gov
to Massachusetts' problem-plagued health law rollout seven years ago: "We have always anticipated
that initial enrollment numbers would be low and increase over time, just as was the experience
in Massachusetts."
While the apology tour continues —
"I am sorry that they are finding themselves in this situation."
— the frustration is growing among lawmakers, including some Democrats seeking to distance
themselves from the website. (Via NBC)
North Carolina Senator Kay Hagan, a Democrat, is circulating a letter among other lawmakers
demanding an investigation into the website's launch. (Via Politico)
She's joined by a number of Democrats rallying support for a delay in Obamacare's enrollment
period. (Via Fox News)
The White House says nearly 700,000 Americans have completed applications since the website's
launch — what's unclear is how many of them have actually purchased an insurance plan.
Meanwhile, Marilyn Tavenner — she's the health official charged with managing the
rollout — has told a Congressional panel the administration would release enrollment
numbers this week. (Via C-SPAN)
As for who's counted in that tally, The Washington Post reports the administration will include
both those who have successfully enrolled and those who have a plan left sitting in
their online shopping carts.