Posted on 11/20/2013 10:08:43 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Oregon, a state that fully embraced the Affordable Care Act, is enduring one of the rockiest rollouts of President Back Obama's signature health care law, with an inoperative online exchange that has yet to enroll a single subscriber, requiring thousands to apply on paper instead.
Unlike most other states, Oregon set an ambitious course to make its insurance exchange, dubbed Cover Oregon, an "all-in-one" website for every individual seeking health coverage, including those who are eligible for Medicaid.
But instead of serving as a national model, Oregon's experience has emerged as a cautionary tale, inviting comparisons to technical glitches that have plagued other state-run portals and the federal government's website for those states lacking exchanges of their own.
Oregon's online exchange has remained inaccessible to the public, requiring the state to sign up applicants the old-fashioned way, using paper forms. This has made comparison shopping more difficult for consumers and severely slowed the enrollment process.
(Excerpt) Read more at reuters.com ...
Billion$ for government ads & waste, not one cent of which has gone for actual health care.
Gooberment incompetence ping!
Here is what everyone should look for: the very first person who signed up for OCare, who got a plan, made the first monthly payment, and actually found a doctor for a treatment.
And was satisfied with the experience.
I’m shocked....
Or a unicorn!!
I’m actually surprised at this. Is it the feds messing them up? I really thought they had their tech stuff together.
Didn’t Oracle do this one?
I haven’t seen any Obamacare ads in the last couple of weeks, anyone else?
RE: Didnt Oracle do this one?
Yep. They even advertise it on their website:
http://www.oracle.com/us/corporate/profit/features/092412-oregon-1852010.html
Yes.
From Oracle’s website:
http://www.oracle.com/us/corporate/profit/features/092412-oregon-1852010.html
EXCERPT:
When the healthcare reform legislation was signed, IT staff at Oregon DHS was already modernizing several agency delivery programs, such as Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (which supplies cash assistance to indigent American families with dependent children) and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (which provides financial assistance for food to low-income families). Lawson had identified a short list of potential technology suppliers, including Oracle, and asked if they could create the new insurance exchange as well.
In conjunction with the exchange, Oregon DHS leadership wanted to modernize fundamental business processes for determining Medicaid eligibility and receiving paymentswhich were, at the time, being handled by cumbersome legacy systems. They also needed systems to accommodate new types of healthcare providers. For example, the healthcare reform legislation requires providers to change from managed care organizations (MCOs) to coordinated care organizations (CCOs)networks of doctors, dentists, mental health specialists, and other providers who have agreed to work together to support patients who will receive insurance benefits through the health insurance exchange.
In a project of this magnitude, with these kinds of expressed timelines, we knew that if we didnt take an enterprise approach, not only would there be collisions, but wed tie ourselves in knots, Lawson admits. Neither the insurance exchange nor the CCOs had ever existed before. Without the right enterprise approach, we might end up with the same technology silos we were moving away from.
Further complicating the process was the 2011 transition of DHS and other Oregon health and human service programs into two distinct agenciesDHS and OHA. While the modernization efforts remained with DHS, responsibility for the health insurance exchange project fell under the new OHA. However, the agencies determined that the projects should work jointly to develop the automated Medicaid eligibility and enrollment foundation they both require.
To keep both initiatives in sync and arrive at a cohesive future-state architecture, Lawson and her team decided to engage Oracles enterprise architects and apply their enterprise architecture (EA) process.
The Oracle team helped us see the issues philosophically before we approached the practical aspects of the project, she recalls. Then they supplied the structure and personnel we needed to execute the required tasks. Oracle gave us a new perspective on the challenges at hand. Their support has been invaluable.
pssst... It's NOT about actual healthcare.
If I was drinking, my monitor would be splattered right now! That's hilarious!
I kinda thought that is what I was saying. A lot of my family is in the health care business, we see it first hand.
There is an Oregon legislative hearing today at 2:00 pm which will cover all this. It can be watched online.
http://www.oregonlegislature.gov/citizen_engagement/Pages/Legislative-Video.aspx
Room F
I'm pretty sure that Oracle did the California Exchange and I think it is working at least up to a point. Don't know about Oregon.
By the time the project is complete, the State of Oregon will have spent as much as US$200 million on the exchange and related information systems. However, Lawson believes that if Oregon staff had hired a systems integrator to install a packaged exchange application and integrate it with its legacy DHS systems, as many other states are doing, they would have had to spend even more money than that, and engage more people overall. Were taking the money that many states are spending on just the insurance exchange and rebuilding our entire enterprise, she notes.
Public servants, from Oregon Governor John Kitzhaber on down, have been thrilled with the teams progress, as well as with the example that Oregon is setting for other states. Lawson credits the Oracle EA methodologies and frameworks for keeping the project on track.
Without our dedication to enterprise architecture, we wouldnt have been able to pull off a project of this magnitude, Lawson emphasizes. EA provided a structure for moving forward, from designing the business architecture to mapping the various functions to the technologies that we needed. The State of Oregon has not received any more funding, magic pixie dust, or anything that makes us different from any other state, she adds. We walked in with the same needs, the same challenges, the same funding.
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