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They Thought They Were Buying Obamacare Plans. What They Got Wasn鈥檛 Insurance.

They Thought They Were Buying Obamacare Plans. What They Got Wasn鈥檛 Insurance.

(Moment/Getty Images)

[UPDATED on June 8]

Tina Passione needed health insurance in a hurry in December. The newly retired 63-year-old was relocating to suburban Atlanta with her husband to be closer to grandchildren. Their house in Pittsburgh flew off the market, and they had six weeks to move out 40 years of memories.

Passione said she went online to search for the federal health insurance marketplace, clicked on a link, and entered her information. She promptly got multiple calls from insurance brokers and bought a plan for $384 a month. Later, though, when she went to a pharmacy and doctor offices in Georgia, she was told she did not have insurance.

In fact, it said it right on her card: 鈥淭HIS IS NOT INSURANCE.鈥

Passione is one of 10 consumers who told KHN that they thought they were buying insurance but learned later that they had been sold a membership to a Houston-based health care sharing ministry called Jericho Share. The ministry formed in 2021 when House of Prayer and Life Inc., a half-century-old Christian congregation, Jericho Share, according to Texas business filings.

Health care sharing ministries are faith-based organizations whose members agree to share medical expenses. The ministries grew in popularity before the Affordable Care Act鈥檚 mandate for having insurance coverage was repealed because they offered a cheaper alternative to insurance. But they are not insurance, largely not regulated as such, and don鈥檛 necessarily cover members鈥 medical bills. Massachusetts is the lone state that requires ministries to regularly report data, and only of claims submitted to ministries there were deemed eligible for payment. This spring, the Colorado legislature requirements that await the governor鈥檚 signature.

The Better Business Bureau gives Jericho Share an , its lowest, and its website shows more than 100 complaints filed in less than a year. Texas Department of Insurance documents show two complaints, from and , about Jericho Share. The department responded to both by saying it regulates insurance, which ministries are not, and forwarding them to the state attorney general鈥檚 office. The attorney general鈥檚 office did not respond to KHN questions about the status of the complaints.

John Oxendine, a lawyer who was elected four times as Georgia’s insurance commissioner, responded to KHN’s inquiries made to Jericho Share. He is currently that he said are unrelated to Jericho Share. He denied any wrongdoing. If Jericho memberships are being sold to consumers in misleading ways, “that’s a good way for a broker to get fired,” he said.

鈥淛ericho Share does not tolerate any type of misrepresentation or unethical conduct on the part of its programs,鈥 according to a statement sent through Oxendine. 鈥淲henever we become aware of inappropriate conduct, we take appropriate action to remedy the situation.鈥

Consumers can always cancel their Jericho Share plans, Oxendine said. Many consumers who spoke to KHN did cancel their plans and receive refunds, but several said the process to do so was frustrating. Some were left to sort out payment for bills they incurred while they thought they were insured. At least seven of the people KHN spoke with said they ended up with Jericho Share after beginning their health insurance searches on Google.

A screenshot of a Google search for "healthcare marketplace" shows three advertisement links before a listing for healthcare.gov, the federal government's health insurance marketplace.
A screenshot taken May 11, 2022, shows advertisements for 鈥渓ead-generating鈥 websites that popped up after Googling 鈥渉ealthcare marketplace.鈥 The most relevant search result is the federal government鈥檚 official health insurance marketplace, healthcare.gov.(KHN screenshot of Google.com)

Encountering such issues while shopping for health insurance is not uncommon, said , co-director of Georgetown University鈥檚 Center on Health Insurance Reforms. She co-authored a that found 鈥渕isleading marketing practices鈥 were directing consumers to alternative health plans, like ministries, that can cost more than marketplace plans and offer fewer protections.

鈥淚t鈥檚 especially unfortunate because people have set out to buy comprehensive coverage,鈥 Volk said.

Susan Fauman looks at the camera while taking a selfie. The background behind her is blurred.
Susan Fauman thought she was buying health insurance but learned later that she had bought a membership to Jericho Share, a Houston-based health care sharing ministry.(Susan Fauman)

Susan Fauman, 47, a metalsmith from Germantown, New York, relied on her spouse鈥檚 insurance coverage but wanted her own insurance policy before submitting her divorce paperwork last fall. Fauman said her Google search landed her on a series of what the advertising industry calls 鈥渓ead-generating鈥 websites: nongovernmental webpages that connect insurance brokers to consumers.

None of the consumers KHN spoke with could say with certainty which site ultimately connected them to the brokers who sold them Jericho Share memberships. and are among the lead-generating websites that show up on Google when someone searches with terms such as 鈥淥bamacare insurance鈥 or 鈥渉ealthcare marketplace.鈥 Those site listings are actually advertisements that resemble ordinary Google search results but are labeled with the word 鈥淎d鈥 and are placed above the most relevant search result: the federal government鈥檚 official health insurance marketplace, .

Google spokesperson Christa Muldoon said companies that advertise on searches related to the Affordable Care Act must prove they are licensed to sell insurance via the or .

Those marketplaces let consumers shop for comprehensive health insurance, tell them whether they qualify for financial assistance, and connect consumers with enrollment assistance, if needed. By contrast, lead-generating websites typically just sell the personal information provided by consumers to insurance brokers and agents who can sell other types of plans.

Fauman said she unwittingly put her information into what turned out to be several lead-generating websites. She was soon inundated with phone calls from insurance brokers, she recalled.

Eager to get insurance, Fauman said, she bought a plan for about $330 a month, plus a $99 sign-up fee. She said the broker 鈥 who, she later realized, never named the plan 鈥 said she鈥檇 have basically no copays and no restrictions on where to get care. But he did not tell her it was a health care sharing ministry, she said, or that it wasn鈥檛 insurance 鈥 something she didn鈥檛 know to ask about. When she received her Jericho Share card with its disclaimer, she thought, 鈥淲hat the hell did I sign up for?鈥

Ministries and aggressive insurance marketing practices have raised before, and the Washington state attorney general issued a consumer alert last year about 鈥渁ds and websites posing as the official health insurance marketplace.鈥 But Georgetown University’s Volk said large-scale crackdowns would likely require cooperation by multiple state regulators because states are the default enforcers of insurance rules. The Federal Trade Commission did against a Florida-based operation in 2018, alleging it collected over $195 million by enrolling consumers in 鈥渨orthless plans.鈥 The case is ongoing.

And it鈥檚 not always clear who can and should be protecting consumers in this complicated space that covers public and private insurance, interstate commerce, websites, and health care sharing ministries.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services manages the healthcare.gov website. 鈥淲hen CMS sees an ad we think is misrepresenting HealthCare.gov, we share it immediately with the search engines,鈥 deputy administrator said in a statement.

Louise Rasho, a spokesperson for MediaAlpha, which operates ObamacarePlans.com, said in an email that the company鈥檚 code of conduct does not allow brokers who buy customer leads to mislead consumers. It periodically monitors calls to ensure compliance. She also noted the site has disclaimers saying that it is not a government website.

Craig Sturgill of Excel Impact LLC, which owns AffordableHealthPlans.org, said that if the company learns a broker has broken the law or used questionable tactics, it terminates contracts and takes 鈥渇urther action鈥 as necessary. 鈥淎s a digital marketing company, we aren’t necessarily in the business of deeply educating consumers from beginning-to-end about all of their available options,鈥 Sturgill said in an email. 鈥淥ur role is to connect consumers to advisors who can and should effectively educate consumers.鈥

The broker callback number that consumer Hemani Hughes said she used to correct the spelling of her name on her Jericho Share plan 鈥 before she realized it was a ministry 鈥 is listed on the websites of the and the as belonging to Florida-based Prosperity Health LLC. In an email, Prosperity Health鈥檚 registered business agent, Ahmed Shokry, said it had 鈥渘ever sold Health Shares.鈥

Hughes, a 49-year-old communications strategist in Kansas, said she was sold a Jericho Share plan in February after specifically telling a broker she did not want a health care sharing ministry plan. Hughes said she realized after her call that the broker never mentioned the plan by name, saying only that she was signing up for a 鈥渘ational PPO鈥 and walking her through the copays.

When Hughes realized it was a health care sharing ministry, she said, she called to cancel her plan. She was met with what she described as 鈥渁 pretty manipulating and very belligerent gantlet of customer service reps and hold times鈥 over multiple calls.

At one point, Hughes said, the people she was speaking with told her it was irresponsible to go without insurance 鈥 even though Jericho Share itself is not insurance.

Tina Passione smiles while taking a selfie outdoors.
When Tina Passione was searching for health insurance online, she entered her information into what she thought was a government website for Affordable Care Act plans. After being inundated with calls, she purchased a plan. But when she went to the pharmacy and doctor offices, she was told she did not have insurance. In fact, it said it right on her card: 鈥淭HIS IS NOT INSURANCE.鈥 (Tina Passione)

Hughes outlined her story in a complaint she filed with the Better Business Bureau. Jericho Share responded to the consumer watchdog that it was contacting Hughes directly to protect her private health information and said, 鈥淲e are working very diligently to investigate this complaint thoroughly.鈥 Hughes ultimately received a refund.

Passione said she filed her complaint with the Better Business Bureau after she couldn鈥檛 get a straight answer about payment for her doctor appointments and prescriptions. In March, Passione canceled her Jericho Share plan and signed up for COBRA coverage through her former employer for $782 a month.

鈥淎 bit expensive, but at least I know what I am getting,鈥 Passione said.

She said she was reimbursed by Jericho Share for one month鈥檚 payment and is waiting to hear whether her credit card company can recoup payments she made in January and February.

Fauman, who also filed a complaint, received a refund, too, but spent two months uninsured and avoided calling her doctor while she sorted out the situation.

鈥淚 was afraid of what it was going to cost me,鈥 Fauman said.

She eventually got marketplace insurance with the someone trained to help consumers enroll in coverage without earning a commission. After subsidies, Fauman鈥檚 premium is around $95 a month, costing her about $2,800 less a year than what she said her Jericho Share plan would have 鈥 and her new plan is actually insurance.

Where to Buy Marketplace Insurance
To find a health insurance plan, visit the federal marketplace, , or call 800-318-2596.

[Update:聽This article was revised at 11:15 a.m. ET on June 8, 2022, to聽report聽lawyer John Oxendine鈥檚 unrelated indictment charges.]