HHS Releases All the Data You'd Need to Build Your Own Health Insurance Finder
BY Nick Judd | Monday, August 29 2011
Last week, the federal Department of Health and Human Services released comprehensive nationwide data on available health insurance plans in every state in the union and the District of Columbia.
This dataset is the one that lies underneath a longstanding tool, finder.healthcare.gov, that shows potentially relevant available health care plans by entity type — for small business owners, individuals, families etc. — by state and by ZIP Code. In a blog post, HHS Chief Technology Officer Todd Park explains that this move is about bringing transparency to the health insurance marketplace:
This data has been collected from issuers of individual and small group insurance in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. The data files we are releasing contain basic information about the issuers (such as their website and contact information) and basic information on the products they have approval to sell within a state (including the type of product and whether that product is currently for sale). The files also contain data on specific health insurance plans (variants of each insurance product that have been made available), including the benefit and cost-sharing structure of each plan sold.
By releasing this data in the form of downloadable files, we’re enabling the public to more fully understand the current health insurance marketplace and opening the door to innovative uses of the data. For example, a researcher could use this information to put together a picture of benefit and cost-sharing options by region or state, in order to better understand what insurance choices are available to consumers by location. We very much look forward to seeing how this open data gets utilized by innovators across the country!