Jay Hancock

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

jayhancock@protonmail.com

Health-Law Test To Cut Readmissions Lacks Early Results

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Results so far show community agencies haven鈥檛 made a big difference in keeping seniors from making return hospital trips. But administration officials say the program has plenty of potential.

Big Investments For ACA Innovation Lab, But Most Results Still Pending

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Some 2.5 million patients are involved in federally funded tests to control costs and reduce injuries, but data on most programs still aren鈥檛 available.

Small Businesses Drop Coverage As Health Law Offers Alternatives

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Small employers are canceling medical plans and leaving workers to buy insurance through the law鈥檚 online marketplaces 鈥 sometimes to everyone鈥檚 benefit.

HHS鈥檚 Contracting Bonanza in 8 Charts

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The Affordable Care Act and related programs have helped make the Department of Health and Human Services the No. 3 federal agency for outsourcing work to private business, after the Pentagon and the Energy Department.

How Employers Are Getting Ready For Open Enrollment

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Some large employers will face penalties if they don鈥檛 offer workers health insurance in 2015. In addition, workers can expect to see increased cost-sharing and employers pushing them to 鈥減rivate exchanges鈥 to save money.

Obama Administration Closing Health Law Loophole For Plans Without Hospitalization

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Moving to close what many see as a major loophole in Affordable Care Act rules, the Obama administration will ban large-employer medical plans from qualifying under the law if they don鈥檛 offer hospitalization coverage.

Administration Signals Doubts About Calculator Permitting Plans Without Hospital Benefits

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he Obama administration may reverse course on an online spreadsheet that lets large employers comply with the health law by offering what consumer advocates call substandard insurance.

Debate Grows Over Employer Plans With No Hospital Benefits

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Some insurance pros say the administration intended such coverage to meet Obamacare’s “minimum value” standard. Others disagree, and the government stays silent.

Flaw In Federal Software Lets Employers Offer Plans Without Hospital Benefits, Consultants Say

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Problems with a government calculator that companies use to prove that their insurance meets health law standards could allow substandard policies, consumer advocates say.

Early Results: Average 2015 Exchange Premiums Decline Slightly

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This KHN story can be republished for free. (details) In preliminary but encouraging news for consumers and taxpayers, insurance聽filings show that average premiums will decline slightly next year in 16 major cities for a benchmark Obamacare plan. Prices for a benchmark “silver” or mid-priced plan sold through the health law’s online marketplaces aren’t all moving […]

16% Of Large Employers Plan To Offer Low-Benefit ‘Skinny’ Plans Despite ACA: Survey

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The National Business Group on Health also found, based on 136 large employers’ responses, a continued move toward high-deductible, “consumer-directed” plans.

Biggest Insurer Drops Caution, Embraces Obamacare

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This KHN story can be republished for free. (details) UnitedHealthcare, the insurance giant that largely sat out the health law’s online marketplaces’ first year, said Thursday it may sell聽policies through the exchanges in nearly half the states next year. “We plan to grow next year as we expand our offering to as many as two […]