When Your Parent Is The State, It’s Tough For Young Adults To Stay Insured
Many former foster kids are entitled to Medicaid coverage until they turn 26 but eligibility workers ? and they themselves
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Many former foster kids are entitled to Medicaid coverage until they turn 26 but eligibility workers ? and they themselves
Skid Row clinics in Los Angeles and other locations around the country are educating and enrolling homeless people in new health coverage, but mental illness and drug addiction pose challenges.
While it may be a logical place to enroll the uninsured, consumer confusion -- and illness -- are hurdles for outreach workers.
Enrollment of key group is hampered by language, cultural and technological barriers.
Dismal enrollment numbers in October spark cry for action.
After initial outrage over insurance cancellation notices, some people are finding better coverage and good deals on the marketplace.
More important than age, however, will be how healthy or unhealthy the enrollees are. Those who are sick are more motivated to sign up early, researchers said.
New insurance marketplaces around the country are weighing whether to offer voter registration to people signing up for health insurance. The issue could cause political and legal fights across the nation.
The state mistakenly told consumers in the "bridge to reform" program that they may have to switch doctors as they transition to Medicaid.
Threatened with a legal action from the state, company says 80,000 customers can keep their plans through March 31.
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