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By Allison Bell |
April 17, 2012
Because of the partisanship and the court battles, we're looking at the wrong toenail of the PPACA elephant.
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By Brian Anderson |
March 26, 2012
Paul Starr has some intriguing ideas to make the PPACA’s controversial “individual mandate” more of a “choice.” But can they really work?
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By Staff Writer |
March 14, 2012
The Congressional Budget Office estimates the new health law will cost $50 billion less and cover 2 million fewer people by 2016.
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By Allison Bell |
March 13, 2012
John Morrison of Montana and others are trying to create a new type of enrollee-owned health plan.
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By Elizabeth Festa |
March 6, 2012
Final rule expected in March, as early as this week, while states brace for amount of work ahead on establishing exchanges. Donelon calls it a tsunami of work ahead on PPACA implementation.
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By Thomas Klett |
March 1, 2012
Automated procurement processes work particularly well for offerings such as disability insurance, and employers are increasingly embracing these platforms to manage employee benefits.
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By Kathryn Mayer |
February 24, 2012
Rules that allow some small employers to avoid regulation under health reform are unlikely to have a major impact on the future cost of health insurance unless those rules are relaxed to allow more businesses to opt out.
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By Elizabeth Festa |
February 15, 2012
Sebelius fields a range of questions from the Senate Finance Committee on concerns ranging from autism to contraception coverage. Meanwhile, Sebelius herself underscores need for exchange infrastructure and expanding coverage in states.
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By Staff Writer |
January 10, 2012
Raising the Medicare eligibility age would save the federal government money while shifting more costs to seniors, the Congressional Budget Office said Tuesday.
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By Allison Bell |
December 12, 2011
That rebate check might burn your clients, Freedom Watch loses a round, and more.