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One of the US's largest health-insurance companies is dumping Obamacare; Trump says law 'continues to fail' (HUM)

Humana is leaving its individual commercial business.

President Barack Obama pauses during his news conference with Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, Monday, Dec. 12, 2011, in the South Court Auditorium on the White House complex in Washington

Humana is pulling out of the Affordable Care Act market.

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The company, one of the five large publicly traded health insurers, said in a press release Tuesday that it would pull all its business from the individual marketplaces starting January 1, 2018.

The announcement comes the same day that Humana and rival Aetna terminated their merger agreement.

Humana said it was hoping that the individual marketplaces set up by the law known as Obamacare would stabilize.

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But the company said that in reviewing data from 2017 enrollment on the exchanges, it saw "further signs of an unbalanced risk pool."

From Humana's statement (emphasis added):

"All of these actions were taken with the expectation that the company’s Individual Commercial business would stabilize to the point where the company could continue to participate in the program. However, based on its initial analysis of data associated with the company’s healthcare exchange membership following the 2017 open enrollment period, Humana is seeing further signs of an unbalanced risk pool. Therefore, the company has decided that it cannot continue to offer this coverage for 2018. Through the remainder of 2017, Humana remains committed to serving its current members across 11 states where it offers Individual Commercial products."

President Donald Trump said Humana's pull-out was evidence of the law continuing to "fail."

"Obamacare continues to fail," Trump tweeted. "Humana to pull out in 2018. Will repeal, replace & save healthcare for ALL Americans."

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In previous years, large insurers have suffered losses on the Obamacare exchanges because of a risk pool that has been sicker and older, and thus more expensive to cover than expected.

Obama officials hoped that a larger number of young people would sign up through the exchanges during the open-enrollment period that ran from November 1, 2016, to January 31, 2017, and would help balance the costs. Instead, enrollment plummeted in the two weeks after Trump took office, and sign-ups came in lower than the year before.

That was critical, since more young people enroll in the last two weeks of the open-enrollment period.

Health-policy experts had theorized that the uncertainty of the GOP plan to replace the law, combined with the Trump administration's decision to not promote enrollment efforts in the critical weeks, could do serious damage to the exchanges, cause insurers to reconsider their involvement in the exchanges as Humana did on Tuesday, and lead to the " rel="noFollow" target="_blank"death spiral" Republicans has been claiming was happening for years.

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