The Los Angeles Times is reporting:
The nation's largest health insurer, UnitedHealth Group Inc., is
leaving California's individual health insurance market, the second
major company to exit in advance of major changes under the Affordable
Care Act.
UnitedHealth said it had notified state regulators that it
would leave the state's individual market at year-end and force about
8,000 customers to find new coverage. Last month, Aetna Inc., the nation's third-largest health insurer, made a similar move affecting about 50,000 existing policyholders.
Both companies will keep a major presence in California, focusing instead on large and small employers.
The moves illustrate how different companies are responding to a
major overhaul of the health insurance market for millions of consumers.
Starting Jan. 1, the federal healthcare law forces insurers to accept
all individual applicants regardless of their medical history and
provide a comprehensive set of benefits with limits on patients'
out-of-pocket spending.
Healthcare experts said some national insurers aren't interested in
playing by those new rules in states where their presence in the
individual market is relatively small and more profits can be made by
tending to the employer market.
The government is counting on healthy 18 - 35 y/o's to buy very expensive health insurance to subsidize the program. Not gonna happen. They will pay the $95/annual penalty.
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