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Monday, September 12, 2016

The ACA Will Continue to Heavily Influence Health Insurance : hhnmag





as declared in hhnmag

The ACA Will Continue to Heavily Influence Health Insurance

The ACA Will Continue to Heavily Influence Health Insurance
The ACA Will Continue to Heavily Influence Health Insurance
The 2017 AHA Environmental Scan: Insurance & Coverage• In fiscal year 2016, the Medicaid enrollment growth rate is expected to slow across all states, and the variation in enrollment growth between expansion and nonexpansion states is expected to narrow.Slower overall growth in Medicaid enrollment in fiscal year 2016 is anticipated because of three main factors.First, enrollment growth among those newly eligible under the Affordable Care Act Medicaid expansion is moderating after the initial surge in 2014 and 2015.


additionally foxnews

Difficulties of Health Insurance Coverage

Difficulties of Health Insurance Coverage
Difficulties of Health Insurance Coverage
There remains a large issue with health insurance coverage.FOX's Alex Hein reports in this "Housecall for Health":This is Housecall for Health.It seems like for every covered check up there's a horror insurance claim story involving a child's cancer treatment or amputee's limb.


besides healthpayerintelligence

AMA Urges NY Regulators to Reject Health Insurance Mergers

AMA Urges NY Regulators to Reject Health Insurance Mergers
AMA Urges NY Regulators to Reject Health Insurance Mergers
The Anthem-Cigna and Aetna-Humana health insurance mergers are facing more and more scrutiny throughout the medical industry and among federal officials.While the US Department of Justice filed a lawsuit against these health insurance mergers, last week, American Medical Association (AMA) representatives along with the Medical Society of the State of New York (MSSNY) asked state insurance regulators to reject the acquisition proposed by Anthem to merge with Cigna.According to a press release from the American Medical Association, state regulators were advised that the health insurance merger would be "bad medicine" for the state of New York.


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