Jay Hancock

Jay Hancock was a senior correspondent for 麻豆女优 Health News until he retired in Feburary 2022.

jayhancock@protonmail.com

鈥楳assive Confusion鈥 Abounds For Insurers As GOP Wavers On Obamacare Redo

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Republicans鈥 delay in finding common ground to repeal and replace the health law raises risks that coverage could shrink and rates rise even more, the industry says.

Employers Fret Job-Based Coverage Vulnerable To Fallout From GOP Health Overhaul

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Employer medical insurance still covers more people than any other kind. A Republican replacement for Obamacare could spread instability beyond the health law鈥檚 shaky marketplace plans.

Trump’s HHS Nominee Got A Sweetheart Deal From A Foreign Biotech Firm

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Price and another influential GOP congressman got a discounted deal as an Australian firm seeking federal approval sought 鈥渟ophisticated U.S. investors.鈥

Insurers鈥 Flawed Directories Leave Patients Scrambling For In-Network Doctors

麻豆女优 Health News Original

Many consumers find that doctors listed in their plan鈥檚 directories aren鈥檛 accepting new patients, charge large concierge fees or may not even be in the network. Regulators don鈥檛 check.

Health Law Expanded Coverage For Ex-Inmates, But Gaps Remain

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The health law鈥檚 Medicaid expansion and its requirement that employer medical plans cover dependents up to age 26 had a significant impact on coverage for this population. The portion of young adult ex-inmates without insurance fell from 40 percent to 32 percent.

Baltimore Draws 10-Year Blueprint To Cut Racial Health Disparities

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Officials aim to bring elevated rates of lead poisoning, heart disease, obesity, smoking and overdoses among Baltimore鈥檚 African-Americans closer to those of whites.

Thousands Leave Maryland Prisons With Risky Health Problems But No Coverage

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Maryland鈥檚 prisons and jails release thousands of inmates each year without helping them enroll in Medicaid, jeopardizing their health and putting communities at greater risk.

In Freddie Gray鈥檚 Neighborhood, The Best Medical Care Is Close But Elusive

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Last year鈥檚 Baltimore unrest highlighted deep distrust between police and poor African-Americans. Dozens of interviews and little-seen data show a similar gap between that community and the city’s renowned health system.