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hCentive’s solution to the Obamacare subsidies debate

The Reston-based company has built health insurance exchanges for five states. It's offering a SaaS platform that could allow states to minimize costs and forgo federal grants.

The hCentive headquarters in Reston, Va. (Photo courtesy of hCentive)

Five years in, President Obama’s healthcare law is still not out of the woods. Allow hCentive to offer a solution that might provide a quick fix to the legal quagmire, while improving its own bottom line.
“States setting up their own health insurance exchanges,” said VJ Bala, the VP of marketing and growth initiatives. “[That] would be a natural solution.” The Supreme Court is expected to decide in June whether federally-run healthcare exchanges can qualify for tax subsidies under the law.
hCentive, which has built state-run exchanges for five states, plus the federal government, launched a new product last month: WebInsure State Exchange Lease.
In lieu of a building a new platform from scratch, “we offer the technology for health insurance exchanges as a lease,” explained Bala.”By taking the technology into our side, we operate on behalf of the state and therefore we are able to do it much faster [and] with a lot less risk.”
hCentive would charge states a one-time set-up fee, plus additional charges depending on the number of people enrolled. Websites would take about six months to build — and the states could save up and forgo federal grants, said Bala.
Since it was founded in 2009 — a year before the Affordable Care Act was signed into law — hCentive has seen a meteoric rise, growing from five to over 750 employees in six years. (About 125 work in the company’s Reston headquarters. The R&D center is in India.)

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