as declared in kutower
Kean drops health insurance plan for students
Kean drops health insurance plan for studentsBy Rebecca Panico | Published Oct. 22, 2016Kean stopped providing health insurance to students this fall and is instead directing them to the Affordable Care Act website, more commonly known as Obamacare.The change comes in the wake of state legislation from 2013, which sought to make higher education more affordable by nixing the requirement that students needed health insurance to attend college."Students have the freedom to choose their own health care plan rather than purchase a university sponsored plan," Kean University spokeswoman Margaret McCorry said in an email, adding that other universities like Stockton, New Jersey City University, Ramapo College and William Paterson University no longer provide an insurance policy through the school too.
in the same way columbiatribune
MU to subsidize graduate student health insurance indefinitely
MU to subsidize graduate student health insurance indefinitelyClose Get email notifications on Alan Burdziak daily!Your notification has been saved.There was a problem saving your notification.
additionally duluthnewstribune
Dayton calls for quick solutions to high health insurance costs
Dayton calls for quick solutions to high health insurance costsA week after bluntly critiquing the Affordable Care Act for making health care unaffordable for many, Dayton called on Republican and Democratic state lawmakers to reach quick agreement on fixes.He wants legislators to have their joint plan ready by Nov. 1 — a week before Election Day."Time is running short, so legislators must begin their work immediately," Dayton said.
as well watchdog
Pennsylvania health insurance premiums soar
Pennsylvania health insurance premiums soarThe 2017 numbers are out, and it doesn't look good for Pennsylvania residents who purchased their insurance through the federal health care exchange.Health insurance plans sold on Pennsylvania's Affordable Care Act online marketplace could see rate increases up to 55 percent, according to a Pennsylvania Insurance Department announcement.Individual plans will increase an average of 32.5 percent.
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