New National Survey and COBRA Learning Center Website Highlight the Need for More Information About Health Insurance OptionsMOUNTAIN
VIEW, CA, Sep 22, 2008 (MARKET WIRE via COMTEX News Network) --
eHealth, Inc. (NASDAQ: EHTH), parent company of eHealthInsurance,
has launched a new educational initiative designed to help consumers
and HR professionals make informed decisions about COBRA coverage and
COBRA alternatives. The initiative includes a newly-released national
survey which suggests that many consumers aren't even aware of COBRA
(Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act) and health insurance
alternatives to COBRA. eHealthInsurance also launched a new website
called the COBRA Learning Center, which features helpful benefits
information and financial tools. Extending the educational initiative
are partnerships with national benefits advisors like Willis Group
that work closely with HR professionals and COBRA-eligible consumers.
Each aspect of the program is designed to help consumers as they face
decisions about COBRA coverage in the wake of increased nationwide
unemployment and layoffs.
eHealthInsurance commissioned a nationwide survey of over 1,000
respondents to understand consumer awareness of COBRA and other health
insurance alternatives.(1) The survey found that four in 10 adults
surveyed knew little or nothing about COBRA. Sixty percent of adults
surveyed did not know that individually purchased health insurance
can be less expensive than COBRA. Additionally, only 45% of
respondents were aware that individually purchased health insurance
can provide similar benefits to a COBRA plan.
Additional insights from the survey include:
-- Half of those surveyed who were eligible for COBRA coverage at some
point in the past elected to receive it for themselves or a family member,
while 47% say they declined coverage.
-- The most common reasons respondents decided to opt for COBRA health
insurance coverage were that they liked their employer's plan and wanted to
continue with the same network and/or benefits (59%) and they thought it
was their only option for health insurance coverage (52%).
-- Expense was the most common reason people eligible for COBRA coverage
declined it (68%), followed by the fact they were able to be covered on
another family member's plan (44%).
-- Thirty percent of those surveyed who refused COBRA coverage decided to
go without health insurance coverage.
-- Complete survey results are available upon request.
To address this information gap, eHealthInsurance launched the COBRA
Learning Center (www.COBRAlearning.com), which provides information
and tools to help consumers and HR professionals learn about health
insurance options and make the best choices based on individual needs
and budget. The website features eligibility guides, educational
content, and printable brochures and materials. Visitors can use a
new, interactive COBRA calculator to compare COBRA premiums to some
of the more affordable individual and family plans that may be
available to them. Consumers can also compare and apply for
individual plans online and utilize all of the robust shopping,
sorting and customer service features offered on
www.ehealthinsurance.com.
eHealthInsurance also launched a co-branded website with leading
benefits advisor Willis Group to distribute the COBRA Learning Center
to Willis agents and their clients. This provides helpful resources
to HR professionals that are advising employees during difficult
transitions such as job loss.
"With over 600,000 U.S. jobs lost so far this year,(2) a top priority
for our company is to help workers who are facing unemployment find
the right health insurance coverage," said Gary Lauer, president and
CEO of eHealth, Inc. "COBRA is an important option, but our research
and experience working with the uninsured has shown us that many
employees and HR professionals are not aware of the alternatives.
The COBRA Learning Center provides valuable information to this
population who otherwise might not know that they can find affordable
coverage in the individual health insurance market."
COBRA coverage is an important option for many, especially those with
pre-existing health conditions, because individuals cannot be denied
coverage based on their medical history. However, COBRA can be very
expensive because consumers often must pay up to 102% of the premium
that was partially covered by their employer.(3) By comparing rates
and purchasing individual insurance through eHealthInsurance,
consumers can potentially save up to 60% over COBRA premiums.(4)
"When I was laid off, I accepted COBRA coverage at $620 a month
because I didn't know that I could find an individual plan with
comparable benefits at a far lower rate," said 30-year-old
eHealthInsurance member Jason Bobo from Dallas, Texas. "We found a
plan for my family online for only $288 a month. With four small
children under the age of seven and managing through a tough economy,
it was important to have both the right benefits, such as well baby
care, and the cost savings of more than $300 a month on premiums."
About eHealth
eHealth, Inc. (NASDAQ: EHTH) is the parent company of
eHealthInsurance, the nation's leading online source of health
insurance for individuals, families and small businesses. Through the
company's website, www.ehealthinsurance.com, consumers can get quotes
from leading health insurance carriers, compare plans side by side,
and apply for and purchase health insurance. eHealthInsurance offers
thousands of health plans underwritten by more than 180 of the
nation's leading health insurance companies. eHealthInsurance is
licensed to sell health insurance in all 50 states and the District
of Columbia. eHealthInsurance and eHealth are registered trademarks
of eHealthInsurance Services, Inc.
Sources:
(1) Survey conducted on the telephone September 5-8, 2008 among a
random national sample of 1,004 adults 18 years and older. The
results have a margin of error of plus or minus 3.2% among the total
sample of 1004 adults. Certain questions did not apply to all of the
respondents due to their responses to other survey questions. As a
result, the sample size was smaller for those questions, which causes
the margin of error to be greater. Opinion Research Corporation of
Princeton, NJ, conducted the fieldwork.
(2) September 5, 2008, U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor
Statistics, Commissioner's Statement on the Employment Situation,
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/jec.nr0.htm
(3) http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/faqs/faq_consumer_cobra.html, U.S.
Department of Labor, FAQs About COBRA Continuation Health Coverage
(4) Calculated using average total premium cost for
employer-sponsored health insurance coverage from April 2006 to April
2007 reflected in the Henry J. Kaiser Foundation study Employee
Health Benefits: 2007 Annual Survey
(http://www.kff.org/insurance/7672/index.cfm) plus the standard 2%
administration cost charged to most COBRA participants; then compared
to average premiums for privately-purchased individual and family
coverage in August 2006 cited by eHealth, Inc. and Forrester Research
in The Cost and Benefits of Individual Health Insurance Plans: 2007,
April, 2007
(http://www.ehealthinsurance.com/content/expertcenterNew/CostBenefitsReportSeptember2007.pdf).
For more information, please contact:
Sande Drew
Senior Media Consultant
eHealth, Inc.
Email Contact
(916) 207-7674
Theresa Maloney
Cogenta Communications
Email Contact
(925) 287-1509
SOURCE: eHealth, Inc.
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