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Mal Allison

As health costs rise, some companies blame Obamacare  - NBC News.com - 0 views

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    A recent Kaiser Family Foundation/Health Research & Educational Trust survey found that while healthcare costs are still climbing, the rate of increase has slowed to 4 percent, bringing the average premium of employer-provided insurance to $16,351 for family coverage.
Mal Allison

Some Massachusetts small businesses could see health insurance premiums rise under Obam... - 0 views

  • Next year, Massachusetts will be allowed to take into account two-thirds of its soon-to-be-disallowed rating factors. It can use one-third of the disallowed factors in 2015.
  • that requires the state to formally request a waiver from the federal government from the ratings factor provision. Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick signed the bill on Friday, and the state is working to comply with the waiver request provision.
Mal Allison

For Obamacare, Some Hurdles Still Ahead - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • We were told that insurers would develop narrow networks excluding high-cost providers, and squeeze providers to give lower rates,” Mr. Holahan told me. “But smaller insurers will probably not get a good network at good prices.”
Mal Allison

Business Boondoggle: Shedding the Cost of Health Care | The Fiscal Times - 0 views

  • he actions of these other employers don’t detract from the unique nature of Walgreens’ decision. Two months earlier, the retailer announced its partnership with the Department of Health and Human Services to extol the benefits of Obamacare to its employees and its customers. Their website still features the effort, and brochures continue to be distributed even while the corporation itself realizes that compliance must force it to abandon employer-provided health insurance for the people in the stores distributing the brochures to customers.
  • With the CBO predicting that rising health-care costs would increase at twice the rate of other federal spending, the same increase in costs will now be borne almost entirely by employees.  Finally, it appears that the private-exchange option will satisfy the employer mandate, which means that the employees cannot bail out of these private exchanges in order to qualify for federal subsidies, which prevents the employers from having to pay increasing fines for non-compliance.
  • limit the liability of the third-party payer.
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  • s opposed to the Independent Payment Advisory Board and its “death panel”-like power. 
  • nce, and now employees will get more than just one or two options at open enrollment, with twenty-five plans available in the Aon exchange.
  • This arrangement makes the consumer the customer of the exchanges from the very beginning.  A termination would only impact the subsidy, which the consumer/employee could negotiate as part of his compensation package with his next employer. 
  • is to restore price signals on health care back to the consumer through the elimination of third-party payers and middlemen. 
Mal Allison

Health Care Policy and Marketplace Review: The Affordable Health Care Act's Launch On O... - 0 views

  • We often hear that the administration's first-year objective is to sign-up 7 million people––of which 2.4 million need to be aged 18-34, in order to get a sustainable mix.
  • But, buyer beware. Consumers need to be very thorough here. A Silver plan is not a Silver plan is not a Silver plan.
  • he 2015 exchange rates and health plans will have to be developed by the participating insurance companies in mid-2014 so they can go through the approval process and be put on the exchange in time for the next year's October 1 open enrollment
Mal Allison

Average Obamacare Premiums Will Be Lower Than Projected - Kaiser Health News - 0 views

  • Premium prices are influenced by many factors, including what insurers guess their costs will be, a region’s labor costs and how much hospitals and other facilities charge. Competition between insurers is also a significant factor.
  • While some of the lowest cost plans are in the “bronze” tier of coverage, such plans generally have higher annual deductibles and co-payments than a silver plan.  Also, the silver plans reduce some costs for subsidy-eligible consumers, which could reduce their exposure to big bills if they fell seriously ill.
  • “Although premiums are generally the first and last thing discussed when comparing plans, out-of-pocket costs may be an equally or even more important consideration, particularly for those with significant health care needs.”
Mal Allison

Texas is curtailing health costs with own program | www.statesman.com - 0 views

  • Doctors complain, though, that the savings comes from cutting reimbursement rates, which discourages health care providers from accepting Medicaid patients. The Texas Medical Association also expressed disappointment that Gov. Rick Perry rejected proposals to expand the number of people on Medicaid to include the working poor.
  • But since the poor and uninsured often rely on expensive emergency room care, Lunsford said hospitals will continue to pass on those costs to the public when those patients don’t pay their bills.
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