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The program will be temporary, a bridge to 2014, when denial of coverage for medical reasons will be against the law, and new insurance markets will offer taxpayer subsidized coverage for millions. Number crunchers at Medicare estimate that 375,000 people will sign up this year. Sebelius says she expects the plan will operate alongside state risk pools where such programs exist
-- making premium comparisons inevitable. She's also planning a national program to serve people in states that have no risk pools, or opt not to participate. Georgia insurance commissioner John Oxendine announced this week that his state would not. Oxendine, a Republican running for governor, questioned the constitutionality of the federal overhaul law, and said he thinks joining the new risk pool could end up costing state taxpayers money. On the other side of the debate, consumer groups supporting the health care law are worried that the federal risk pool may still be unaffordable for some. In a letter to Sebelius, 13 consumer, labor, and patient advocacy groups urged additional subsidies to help low-income people. But the $5 billion that Obama and Congress set aside may not be enough to support even a basic program for long. A recent report by Medicare economists warns that the program could go through $4 billion in its first year, and run out of money as early as 2011. "These are some of the sickest people in the country, and therefore their costs would be dramatically higher
-- yet the law requires that they be subsidized to standard rates," said Robert Laszewski, a health care industry consultant. "I think they've given (Sebelius) an impossible task."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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