Author: Kalup Alexander
Survey: Healthcare Executives Spotlight the Sweeping Policy Changes They See Coming for the Industry
Despite a split Congress and talk on the Hill moving away from an Affordable Care Act repeal, healthcare industry executives are still expecting a whirlwind couple of years for health policy, according to a new survey.
The CMS should allow states to continue the practice known as "silver-loading" or risk destabilizing the Affordable Care Act's insurance exchanges, according to comments from insurers, state regulators, hospitals and patient groups.
Even without a history-making health care remake to deliver “Medicare-for-all,” government at all levels will be paying nearly half the nation’s health care tab in less than 10 years, according to a federal report released Wednesday.
State Sen. Pat Spearman, D-North Las Vegas, introduced a bill Wednesday that would require all insurers in Nevada to cover hearing aids for children and give vouchers to low-income parents to purchase diapers.
Nevada legislators heard introductions for three bills in the Assembly and Senate health committees Monday, including one that would appropriate $15 million to general public health needs.
Survey: Healthcare Executives Spotlight the Sweeping Policy Changes They See Coming for the Industry
Despite a split Congress and talk on the Hill moving away from an Affordable Care Act repeal, healthcare industry executives are still expecting a whirlwind couple of years for health policy, according to a new survey.
The CMS should allow states to continue the practice known as "silver-loading" or risk destabilizing the Affordable Care Act's insurance exchanges, according to comments from insurers, state regulators, hospitals and patient groups.
Even without a history-making health care remake to deliver “Medicare-for-all,” government at all levels will be paying nearly half the nation’s health care tab in less than 10 years, according to a federal report released Wednesday.
Earlier this week, Democrats introduced a bill that would allow people ages 50 and over to buy in to Medicare coverage, and the plan is already getting pushback from payers and providers.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom says he’s done waiting for the federal government to curtail the rising cost of prescription drugs. Newsom has his own plan to ease that financial burden — one he hopes other states can join or replicate.