Members of a federal review team found that the HealthCare.gov plan issuers they examined had many problems with complying program standards in 2014.
The team, from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), that conducted the review aimed to find out how well the organizations that sold coverage through HealthCare.gov understood and followed the federal exchange program’s rules.
The team looked at 18 QHP issuers in 15 states. They also looked at three Consumer Operated and Oriented Plan (CO-OP) carriers and two stand-alone dental plan issuers.
Team members analyzed management policies, operating procedures and testing programs related to many different areas, such as provider networks, Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) enrollment period rules, records retention and marketing.
One of the other areas the team studied was how well the product issuers followed the HealthCare.gov rules governing insurance agents and brokers.
The team found that all of the issuers studied had at least one of the required policies or procedures in operations, but that all lacked a required policy or procedure in at least one area.
“All 23 issuers had findings related to oversight of affiliated agents/brokers,” according to the review team’s report.
For a look at three things the reviewers said about the agent/broker findings, which are somewhat similar to the findings in other areas, read on.

1. Issuers were not great about establishing procedures for verifying whether producers had completed HealthCare.gov registration requirements.
Eighty-three percent did not have policies or procedures to verify that producers had completed the HealthCare.gov registration process before paying them for HealthCare.gov enrollments.