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Family Life Insurance Policy Pricing Now Obtained Using National Price Finder at Insurance Website

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Family life insurance can now be priced using the national system at the Quotes Pros website at http://quotespros.com/life-insurance.html.

Midland, TX (PRWEB) October 17, 2014

Reviewing different insurance agencies for the various forms of life insurance can be one time consuming task for the average family. The Quotes Pros company is now providing some of the best family life insurance policy pricing from national companies inside of its web portal at http://quotespros.com/life-insurance.html.

The tool now explores the entire U.S. to find policies that are right for families who seek simple or complex policies for coverage. The finder works on a zip code level to first sort companies that are available to quote plans on the Internet. Coverage seekers will be asked to enter a zip to start the sorting process.

"Coverage for family plans can now be reviewed or purchased with help from our location system to simplify the entire process of insurance shopping," said a Quotes Pros rep.

The defined database that is offered to the public this year includes popular formats like term and whole coverage from agencies. A person who requests price data for guaranteed or cash value plans can also find available price information through the insurers that appear in the finder tool.

"There are many types of coverage plans when it comes to life policies and our system helps to simplify all of the research necessary to connect with a known provider," said the rep.

The Quotes Pros company has arranged to input new providers of policies into its national system to expand policy research for the public online. Life, auto, motorcycle and health plans can all be explored or purchased with use of the optional database at http://quotespros.com/health-insurance.html.

About QuotesPros.com

The QuotesPros.com company supports the public through its portal for reviewing insurers on the Internet. The company adds and removes companies from its database in order to keep a fresh supply of policy information accessible to consumers. The QuotesPros.com company has taken new steps to improve its search procedures for users of its system over the past couple of years and now relies on zip data to supply insurer listings. Reported by PRWeb 3 hours ago.

Leaders Dedicated to Paving a Way Forward for Health Care Policy

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One year ago, millions of families around the country faced a tough new reality. Notices began arriving in the mail with the grim news: Due to the implementation of Obamacare, their health care plan had been cancelled. Millions were left without healthcare or were forced into higher-priced plans with services they didn't want or need. Others saw their premiums shoot up -- by an average of $3,000 for a family of four. Still others learned that their new "improved" plans no longer let them see their trusted family doctor, continue to use the hospital where their children were born, or visit the specialist who knew the challenges posed by their life-threatening condition.

Many public officials denied there was a problem. Others stood by and hoped it would get better. Some, however, used their position in the public spotlight to begin a fight to repeal Obamacare and fix America's broken health care system. We need more public representatives who are willing to speak boldly about the problems with the current health care law and who are willing to do the critical work of building support for an alternative. That's why the Independent Women's Voice created the Healthcare Leadership Awards to recognize those leaders who are willing to fight for greater choice, lower costs, a stronger bond between a patient and her doctor, and greater access to high-quality, affordable care.

As part of Healthcare Solutions Week, the Independent Women's Voice presented 15 public officials with the 2014 Healthcare Leadership Award: Rep. Dan Benishek, Rep. Bill Cassidy, Sen. Tom Coburn, VA Del. Barbara Comstock, Rep. Tom Cotton, Rep. Renee Ellmers, State Rep. Marilinda Garcia, Rep. Cory Gardner, Terri Lynn Land, Sen. Mitch McConnell, State Sen. Jim Oberweis, Rep. Lee Terry, Sen. David Vitter, State Rep. Bruce Westerman, and State Sen. Lee Zeldin.

Our health care system is in crisis, and believe it or not, the worst is yet to come. The same policies that devastated the individual insurance market last year will begin to hit the employer-provided market in January as large companies are forced into Obamacare. A study by the American Enterprise Institute estimates that by the time Obamacare is fully implemented as many as 129 million Americans will have their health insurance plans cancelled.

Health care policy affects our economy as well. Obamacare has left the American economy stagnant as companies try to comply with the changing law while still keeping the doors open. Workers have lost jobs or seen their hours cut. Businesses have stopped hiring and expanding. Obamacare has raised taxes and will add trillions to the national debt.

The brutal irony is that the Congressional Budget Office estimates that even when Obamacare is fully implemented, 30 million Americans will still be living without health insurance coverage. Surely we can do better.

These health care leaders understands that the first step to solving our health care crisis is to repeal Obamacare. It is bad policy, and it is not working. It has already led to higher costs, less access, fewer choices, lost jobs and a stagnant economy, and it has failed to fix the very problems it was purported to solve. All awardees have made a clear an unequivocal pledge to the citizens they represent that they will work for a full repeal of Obamacare.

But that is just the beginning. Some of the concerns that led to the ill-fated passage of Obamacare in the first place remain. Our health care system needs reform. True reform empowers families. It lower costs, expands choice and enables better access to doctors. From allowing Americans to purchase insurance across state lines, to Health Savings Accounts and tax credits, to malpractice reform and strengthening state-based high-risk pools, the recipients of the 2014 Healthcare Leadership Awards have offered innovative solutions to our ongoing health care crisis. Visit www.healthcaresolutionsweek.org to review the long list of alternative plans for fixing our healthcare system. You can see that there is a growing consensus about how we can build a better, patient-centered system.

These have been a tough few years. In discussions around kitchen tables throughout America, families have had to cope with higher healthcare costs, cancelled coverage, and fewer options for care. They've had to deal with lost jobs, fewer hours and less take-home pay. To turn this around, the Independent Women's Voice seeks to recognize leaders who understand the complex challenges of healthcare reform, and encourage them to continue their work for the American people.

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Hadley Heath Manning is health policy director at Independent Women's Voice. Reported by Huffington Post 1 day ago.

National Insurance Leader Reduces Costs While Empowering Business Analysts with Access to Real-time Information Across Platforms

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The move to UltraQuest has also had a significant impact on the insurance provider's bottom line. "In the first 18 months we saved $250,000 in maintenance fees and we expect to continue saving $100,000 a year with UltraQuest."

Dallas, TX (PRWEB) October 18, 2014

Serving the needs of millions of Americans each year, this leading insurance provider offers a wide array of insurance products and services, including life insurance, annuities, health insurance, property and casualty insurance, credit insurance, and pension plan services. The organization relies on the UltraQuest Reporter from Select Business Solutions for robust business intelligence, empowering its business users with the real-time data they need to make fast, accurate and strategic business decisions.

The industry leader turned to UltraQuest when its 30-year old FOCUS business intelligence (BI) solution, developed by Information Builders, became too costly to maintain. In addition, the legacy solution lacked the technology advances the company needed to report on data across numerous data sources, mainframe databases and web-based applications. “It was very difficult to communicate information that was not stored on the mainframe,” explains the company’s Special Projects Coordinator. “A lot of our systems are moving to a distributed platform on servers, and it was extremely challenging, if not impossible, to access and mine that data.”

The organization evaluated a number of business intelligence solutions, but chose UltraQuest Reporter because it offered a cost-effective, state-of-the art solution that could support its reporting needs across different platforms and provide users with the critical real-time data required for fast decision making.

To minimize time and expense and maximize the value of UltraQuest, the industry leader relied on Select’s consultants to help with the implementation. “The Select consultants did a terrific job collaborating with our internal team and implementing best practices to ensure the conversion was as successful as possible.”

Together, the teams conducted an initial discovery, and realized - through a process of elimination - that there were a number of reports they no longer needed. They then identified those reports that were still strategic to the business and converted those from the legacy system to UltraQuest.

“Our consultants from Select were instrumental in helping us identify what we needed to convert, which streamlined the entire process. That team was 100% responsible for converting all of those mainframe jobs for us that we ran in a batch process every day. Additionally, they provided an in-house educational program for our business analysts to train them on UltraQuest and help them convert their own ad-hoc jobs over to the new system. All of that support and expertise was critical to ensuring a successful conversion and enabling users to be up and running on day one.”

During the implementation process, Select’s consultants were able to identify areas where data within the 30-year old system was inaccurate. By fixing those instances within UltraQuest, business analysts are now reporting more relevant and accurate data. “When you are dealing with financial information, you want the most accurate data possible, particularly when those projections are used to make important product-related decisions. With UltraQuest, we are now confident that our analysts have access to the best data available to make the most informed business decisions.”

UltraQuest was designed with the business user in mind. “The user interface is so intuitive that a new business analyst, with very little programming experience, can quickly design the report and run it with very little assistance from IT once the schema is created.”

Prior to UltraQuest, there were several business units that requested more robust reporting. However, because the company’s legacy solution lacked the ability to integrate with new technologies, the group would have to unload data from one system in order to marry it to the data of another system. For example, some marketing groups are responsible for both annuity variable and life insurance portfolio products. But the organization could never report effectively on those two areas together since the data resided in two different systems.

“Today, with UltraQuest, that is no longer an issue. We can now mine data from all of those different systems and generate one consistent report in real time. That is having a direct impact on our business analysts’ agility to quickly react to market change and opportunity. ”

The move to UltraQuest has also had a significant impact on the insurance provider’s bottom line. “In the first 18 months we saved $250,000 in maintenance fees and we expect to continue saving $100,000 a year with UltraQuest.”

In addition to having a quality product, the insurance leader also appreciates the people at Select Business Solutions. “Everyone I have come into contact with at Select has been very knowledgeable and experienced, able to connect with and advise both our technology and business users. They have been very responsive in providing support – going above and beyond. That was exactly what we were looking for in a technology partner.”

About Select Business Solutions:
Select Business Solutions is a leading international software company with customers drawn from the Global 1000. Select provides comprehensive solutions consisting of tools and services for business intelligence and information access, as well as business critical IT software development, deployment and management. Headquartered in Shelton, Connecticut, Select operates sales offices throughout North America and Europe, in addition to a network of international distributors. http://www.selectbs.com/ Reported by PRWeb 22 hours ago.

ObamaCare customers afraid to use their benefits due to sky-high deductibles

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It must have pained the New York Times to publish its article about how many ObamaCare customers fear to make use of their taxpayer-subsidized, hyper-regulated benefits because the deductibles are so high.  It's a devastating indictment of the Affordable Care Act, cutting deep into the very small number of Americans who actually find the ACA somewhat useful.  

Not only does ObamaCare have low approval ratings from the American public at large, it doesn't even score well among the group it was nominally intended to benefit most directly, the uninsured.  We hear a lot from ObamaCare defenders about how all of the expense, confusion, and abject failure of the program are worthwhile, because some number of people who formerly lacked insurance now have it.  That argument drifts into the stratosphere of lunacy once a rational observer backs out the number of "newly insured" who are actually enrolled in the ancient, insolvent, and inadequate welfare program known as Medicaid, and computes the cost per person who picked up real health insurance due to the ACA - it would have been far cheaper to simply hand each of those people a card that says "get all the medicine you want from any doctor you want, free, for life." 

And now we see vindication of a point made long ago by ObamaCare critics: not only are insurance premiums rising at least as much as they would have without the trillion-plus dollars sunk into ObamaCare - and absolutely skyrocketing because of the ACA in many parts of the country - but even among those who receive enough subsidy money from the rest of us to offset the high premiums, killer deductibles make their coverage much more expensive in practice, to the point of rendering them virtually useless:



Patricia Wanderlich got insurance through the Affordable Care Act this year, and with good reason: She suffered a brain hemorrhage in 2011, spending weeks in a hospital intensive care unit, and has a second, smaller aneurysm that needs monitoring.

But her new plan has a $6,000 annual deductible, meaning that Ms. Wanderlich, who works part time at a landscaping company outside Chicago, has to pay for most of her medical services up to that amount. She is skipping this year’s brain scan and hoping for the best.

“To spend thousands of dollars just making sure it hasn’t grown?” said Ms. Wanderlich, 61. “I don’t have that money.”

About 7.3 million Americans are enrolled in private coverage through the Affordable Care Act marketplaces, and more than 80 percent qualified for federal subsidies to help with the cost of their monthly premiums. But many are still on the hook for deductibles that can top $5,000 for individuals and $10,000 for families — the trade-off, insurers say, for keeping premiums for the marketplace plans relatively low. The result is that some people — no firm data exists on how many — say they hesitate to use their new insurance because of the high out-of-pocket costs.

Insurers must cover certain preventive services, like immunizations, cholesterol checks and screening for breast and colon cancer, at no cost to the consumer if the provider is in their network. But for other services and items, like prescription drugs, marketplace customers often have to meet their deductible before insurance starts to help.

While high-deductible plans cover most of the costs of severe illnesses and lengthy hospital stays, protecting against catastrophic debt, those plans may compel people to forgo routine care that could prevent bigger, longer-term health issues, according to experts and research.



Among other things, this means people are still using "cost-shifting" tactics to get "free" care at emergency rooms, which was one of the major problems ObamaCare was supposed to address.  In fact, there have been studies showing the abuse of emergency rooms has gotten worse since the ACA was passed.

We could have passed any number of sensible reforms to provide more affordable access to preventive services, and help people arrange for catastrophic coverage, without the rest of ObamaCare's monstrous, expensive, and Constitutionally dubious machinery.  The situation described by the Times article is not much different from the conditions that already existed before ObamaCare - it's risible for them to talk about "high-deductible plans covering most of the costs of severe illnesses and lengthy hospital stays" as if that were a feature of Obama's boondoggle, since that kind of coverage was already available, at more reasonable cost, before the ACA came along.  That's pretty much what insurance was, before Obama got hold of it.  This is all about turning "health insurance" into a welfare scheme, getting the middle class hooked on Big Government subsidies (without which they can't afford Obama's super-expensive insurance at all), creating vast new government agencies, and infecting the insurance industry with a fiscal virus that will kill it off in a few years, paving the way for single-payer socialized medicine.

Now, how's the already bleak picture of 7 million Americans with highly subsidized insurance they can't afford to use going to look after the subsidies provided through the federal HealthCareDotGov exchange are ruled unconstitutional, and the true enrollment numbers are revealed, showing there aren't actually 7 million enrollees anyway?  Quite a few of them have dropped out, or been found invalid, over the past year.  What's the cost per "newly insured" American, with insurance she can't afford to use because of the deductibles, going to look like then?   Reported by Breitbart 15 hours ago.

American Academy of Pediatrics Urges IUDs, Contraception for Teen Girls

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American Academy of Pediatrics Urges IUDs, Contraception for Teen Girls In an updated policy, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) is recommending long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs), such as hormonal implants, intrauterine devices (IUDs), Depo-Provera injections, and combined oral contraceptives for teenage girls.

“Contraception is a pillar in reducing adolescent pregnancy rates,” states the AAP policy, which cites the Institute of Medicine as recommending “contraception as an essential component of adolescent preventive care,” and the fact that Obamacare has allowed women to purchase contraception for free.

As Breitbart News reported in August of 2011, the Obama administration approved the recommendation from the Institute of Medicine (IOM) that Obamacare would guarantee full health insurance coverage for birth control, including the “morning after” pill, which it did, beginning August 1, 2012.

“I want to thank the Institute of Medicine for providing this important report recommending additional preventive services for women’s health and well-being,” said former HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius upon receipt of the IOM’s report. “This report is historic.” 

Additionally, whenever possible, the AAP also wants to ensure that teen girls can receive contraception and “sexual health care” confidentially, which means without the knowledge of their parents.

“For states without specific laws, best practice guidelines, federal statutes, and federal case law may support minor confidentiality and consent,” AAP states.

The policy update also indicates that “although HIPAA allows parents access to a minor’s records as personal representatives, that access is denied when the minor is provided with confidentiality under state or other laws.”

AAP states its recommendation:

As an additional protection for minors’ confidentiality, HIPAA states that if there is no applicable state law about the rights of parents to access the protected health information of their children, pediatricians (or other licensed health professionals) may exercise their professional judgment to provide or deny parental access to the records.

The pediatricians’ organization suggests that teen girls be encouraged to involve their parents “or trusted adults as they are able.”

“I'm so happy about this,” said physician Ana Radovic, according to a report in National Catholic Register. Radovic, who runs a family-planning clinic for women and girls of ages 12 to 21 in Pittsburgh, told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, “This will give primary-care physicians and pediatricians the much needed information” that inserting an IUD “is a safe procedure, even for young girls who have never had intercourse.”

However, Dr. Donna Harrison, executive director of the American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists (AAPLOG) disagrees.

“First, pediatricians are not trained in inserting IUDs,” Harrison said. “The uterus in a child is much smaller than the uterus in a grown woman. So you have a fairly significant risk of perforating that uterus. And who is going to take care of that perforation? It will be the ob-gyns.”

“What about other, more significant complications, like infections or tubal-ovarian abscesses?” Harrison asked. “Or what if the IUD string gets lost? How is the pediatrician going to remove that IUD? So you have the AAP encouraging pediatricians to do a procedure for which they’re untrained to handle the kinds of complications that can and occasionally do happen.”

AAPLOG past President Dr. Mary Davenport expressed concerns that a young girl’s future fertility could be affected by premature sexual activity with an IUD as her only protection.

“If you get gonorrhea or chlamydia, it can turn a local infection in your cervix into an infection that permanently damages your fallopian tubes,” Davenport said, recalling the Dalkon Shield IUD debacle in the 1970s.

“Many young women lost their fertility, some had to have hysterectomies, and a few died,” she noted. “It was an extremely serious thing that happened. But we have a short memory.”

AAP, nevertheless, states LARCs have become a standard in medical care.

“To be fair, most teens who use IUDs will not have a perforation, expel the IUD or become pregnant,” said Dr. Karen Poehailos, a family physician in Charlottesville, Virginia. “However, the [AAP] is advocating procedures with risks and not with parental consent. What happens to the girls who have a problem and are afraid to tell their parents who don’t know they have IUDs in?”

Referring to the AAP policy as “irresponsible,” Harrison said the organization “went out of its way to emphasize that pediatricians should isolate this girl, this child, from the input of her parents in these really important health decisions.”

Ironically, Harrison observed that studies show parental involvement decreases premature sexual activity in teens.

Dr. Dem Trumbell, president of the American College of Pediatricians, a group that split off from the AAP in 2002 after the latter endorsed abortion and adoption of children by same-sex couples, said, “Given the life-altering consequences of early sexual activity, it is a travesty to ban a parent from such a discussion.”

Similarly, Father Shenan Bouquet, president of Human Life International, called AAP’s new policy “reckless.”

Bouquet said the policy is “only about money – specifically, it is [about] a formerly reputable medical academy shilling for the profiteers of the contraceptive industry – for Planned Parenthood and for the pharmaceutical companies who profit when girls give themselves over for sex before they’re ready.”

“Parents must in the clearest terms demand that this propaganda not drive public policy at the local or national level, lest your girls be treated like animals who cannot be trusted to make good decisions about their sexuality and their health,” he said.

In an interview with Breitbart News, Dr. Paddy Jim Baggot, a Los Angeles area OB/GYN, and member of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS), said that the AAP policy ignores the fact that “the primary mechanism of action of IUDs is that they cause abortions.”

“IUDs are primarily abortifacients,” Baggot said. “They’re telling women they will prevent pregnancy but these women could really be having an abortion each month.”

Beyond that, Baggot is concerned about the underlying message the AAP policy is conveying to young girls.

“All women and men are searching for love,” he said. “Having these devices implanted will increase the amount of promiscuous sex and venereal disease, not committed love.”

“The whole concept is designed to reduce love to mere sex – that’s what’s being promoted,” Baggot added. “Both AAP and the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) seem to act as if they’re tools of Planned Parenthood.”

“Look around our society today,” he continued. “Prior to 1960, there was no widespread availability of contraception. Since then, there was an explosion of teen pregnancy at the same time that there was an explosion of contraception as increasingly more people were able to prescribe them.”

“They’re trying to drown a fire with gasoline,” Baggot said, noting that, prior to 1960, blacks had high marriage stability, with teen pregnancy between only one and three percent.

“Sex has become more trivialized in our society,” Baggot stated. “People are not achieving true, lasting love relationships by vastly increasing the number of sex partners they have.” Reported by Breitbart 13 hours ago.

Markets & Ebola: Confusion, Containment, & Complexity

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Via Scotiabank's Guy Haselmann,

*Ebola Must Be Contained Now*

*President Obama and western governments are beginning to appreciate the scale of the Ebola crisis.*  Unfortunately, the highly deadly virus remains rampant in western Africa and is spreading there at an alarmingly exponential rate.  Playing defense by trying to defend our borders will be insufficient since infected travels will not be identified give the long incubation period.  However, health officials are doing an admirable and prudent job immediately quarantining all victims and tracing all of their contacts.

*Yet, the West must play offensive and snuff the virus out at its source. Stopping Ebola in western Africa is the only way that the virus will be beaten.*  At the moment, entire societies are tragically being ravaged. These countries need desperate help, because, unlike in the West, they have poorly-equipped health care systems.  Spending more today will save much more money later. The world is too interconnected to allow the virus to move from remote areas to large urban areas.  

*Nigeria did a masterful job preventing an outbreak when an infected person arrived in Lagos, a city of 11 million people.  However, not all large metropolitan areas are equipped to do so well.*  There are 850 urban areas in the world with populations of 500,000 or more.  There are 26 cities that qualify as a ‘megacity’ or a city whose population is greater than 10 million people or more.   To put it in perspective, New York City is ranked 7th in population with 20 million people, but surprisingly it has the lowest population density of any ‘megacity’.

*Other megacities:* Tokyo 37M, Jakarta 26M, Seoul 22M, Delhi 22M, Manila 22M, Shanghai 20M, Sao Paulo 20M, Mexico City 19M, Cairo 17M, Beijing 17M, Osaka area 17M, Mumbai 17M, Guangzhou area 16M, Dhaka 15M, L.A. 15M, Kolkota 15M, Karachi 14M, Buenos Aires 13m, Istanbul 13M, Rio de Janeiro, 12M, Lagos 11M.

*Clearly, many of these countries do not have adequate public health facilities to deal with Ebola.*

(For sake of argument, ‘Urban area’ is defined as a continuous urban development within a metropolitan area whose physical form constitutes the essence of a city.)

There are *two less obvious or less discussed economic reasons why the Obama administration may be urgently focusing more on the Ebola crises*.  Flu season is about to start and the symptoms of Ebola resemble those of the Flu.   Some people with flu symptoms are likely to irrationally panic.  *There are likely to become numerous and frequent headlines about people being tested for Ebola-like symptoms and they might begin to impact financial markets.*  Hospitals could be overwhelmed particularly due to the vast requirements in terms of the facilities and personnel necessary in order to treat such a patient.

*According to the US Census Bureau, there are over 40 million Americans who do not have health insurance. *  These people are more likely to not seek medical attention at all, thus significantly increasing the risk that the virus will be spread.  The West needs to do ‘whatever it takes’ to stop Ebola immediately before one traveler brings it to a large city and we are looking at 1918 comparisons. Moreover, the desperate people in Western Africa deserve and require a global response. * For markets, the outcome is binary.*

*Counter-Productive Micromanagement*

*The Fed’s message is too complex with too many contingencies and churned with too many mixed signals.*  Bullard’s comments yesterday are a case in point. One moment he says he has become ‘uncomfortable’ with official rates at zero (as have others); the next minute he says the FOMC needs to consider continuing QE3 or discussing QE4.  Enough.  Markets understand that the Fed is looking at everything and will act accordingly.   (Note:  I outlined the reasons in my note on Wednesday why continued or more QE is highly unlikely.) 

*The Fed must know that there is likely to be a strong negative market reaction during the Fed’s pivot toward normalizing policy. * The recent (hollow) hints recently of more QE have foolishly juiced equity markets just as they were beginning the prudent process of preparing for a less accommodative Fed.  I say “foolishly’, because those comments will increase market volatility as the market will ultimately have to do the recalibration trade all over again.   (My note on Wednesday addressed the reasons why I believe the chances of QE4 are practically zero.)

*The level of micro-management by the Fed appears to have reached a new shockingly high plateau.* It was already surprising that markets were being told that policy tweaks would be impacted by ‘data dependency’.  Can a $17 trillion complex global economy really be tweaked? What ever happened to the Fed rhetoric that whatever is done now only   funnels into the broader economy 18 months from now?

· As far as data is concerned, Unemployment Claims reached a 14 year low, which was also the lowest level as a percentage of the workforce in history
· Once upon a time, the Fed said they were going to hike when the Unemployment Rate hit 6.5%.  Today, the rate is 5.9% and the Fed is not even finished with QE.    

*Bullard also cited concern about the fall in the 5-year/5-year expected inflation rate.  Since Fed policies and regulations have monumentally distorted the price of financial securities, how can the FOMC gain any useful information from any market valuations?*   Recently prices have been driven more by liquidity, fear, greed, and Fed policy, than by valuation.  It is time that the Fed stops being a source of interference and confusion.

*I expect long end Treasury rates to continue to maintain a strong bid at least for the remainder of 2014.*  Elevated volatility, credit widening and general risk-off themes will resume again next week.  I expect the 30-year Treasury to march toward lower yields, eventually taking out the lows of the year within the next few weeks.

“Take him by the hand / Make him understand / The world on you depends” – The Doors Reported by Zero Hedge 6 hours ago.

Health Industry Cashes In One Year After Rocky Obamacare Rollout

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Even after the disastrous rollout of the healthcare.gov web site a year ago, health insurance companies and providers of medical care are reporting more promising profits as third quarter earnings emerge. Although the next enrollment period for uninsured Americans seeking coverage from government-run exchanges under the Affordable Care Act doesn’t begin [...] Reported by Forbes.com 15 hours ago.

One Of Two Scenarios Will Play Out If Republicans Win The Senate

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One Of Two Scenarios Will Play Out If Republicans Win The Senate MOST polls suggest that Republicans will capture a narrow majority in the Senate in November's mid-term elections, while holding on to the House of Representatives. So America faces two more years of divided government, but with a shift in the balance of power.

Until now, Barack Obama has always had a Democratic Senate to block proposals passed by the House. If that buffer disappears, he will have to sign or veto every bill that a Republican Congress sends him. The result may be political paralysis, accelerating the greying of the president's hair and alarming allies worldwide. Or it may be that the two sides find common ground and pass some sensible measures.

Pessimists sigh that the parties are too polarised to agree on anything. Plenty of Republicans think Mr Obama is a menace whom patriots must thwart and resist. Many Democrats believe there is no point in trying to cut deals with Republicans.

Instead, they want Mr Obama to spend his last two years in office ignoring Congress and using executive orders and federal regulations to pursue progressive goals, such as curbing greenhouse-gas emissions, shielding illegal migrants from deportation (and even closing the Guantánamo Bay prison for terrorist suspects, if press reports are true: see "Lexington: The politics of Guantánamo"). Under this scenario, no significant laws will be passed until after the presidential election in 2016.

Optimists retort that once Republicans control both arms of Congress, they cannot just snarl from the sidelines. Unless they show they have a positive agenda, they risk a drubbing in 2016. And if Mr Obama wants a legacy, he will have to work with them. Some of the bigwigs interviewed for this article believe that several constructive, growth-friendly policies already enjoy enough bipartisan support to pass in the Senate.

The current roadblock to such ideas, Republicans say, is Harry Reid, the Democratic leader of the Senate. In their telling, he stops many Republican amendments from coming to the floor for a vote precisely because he fears they would pass. Pragmatic, pro-business Republicans make a similar point about the House of Representatives, noting that moderate Republican ideas need Democratic votes to pass, since the GOP's "Hell No" wing reflexively opposes almost anything Mr Obama might sign.

Senator Bob Corker, a Republican from Tennessee, makes a striking claim. In private meetings with the president, he has told Mr Obama that he will find it easier to address America's long-term fiscal woes if Democrats lose in November. "I have told the president that he is better off if the Republicans are in the majority," Mr Corker reports, explaining that both sides would then be under pressure to act responsibly.

If Republicans win the Senate, Mr Corker hopes to see progress on long-stalled areas of policy such as free trade, corporate-tax reform, deficit reduction, federal highway funding, and revising the legal basis for the war in Iraq and Syria.

Other moderate Republicans agree. The most durable reforms are those that enjoy bipartisan backing, from the Civil Rights Act to the Clinton-era welfare reforms. Laws rammed through by one party enjoy less legitimacy (Republicans cite Obamacare; Democrats cite the George W. Bush tax cuts). The shortest-lived reforms rest on executive orders, of the sort being urged on Mr Obama by the Left.

Republicans have what ought to be compelling reasons to seek compromise. Next year Congress must fund the government by extending existing spending plans and, ideally, by drawing up a formal budget. It must also raise the debt ceiling (a limit on federal borrowing) or force a catastrophic national default. Pragmatic Republicans believe that the last time their party played chicken with the budget, it disgraced itself in the eyes not just of economists but also of voters. (In October 2013 House Republicans forced a government shutdown by insisting that any new spending bill must include provisions to delay or defund bits of Obamacare.)

Some prominent Republicans, such as Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, chairman of the House Budget Committee and Mitt Romney's running-mate in 2012, suggest a two-pronged strategy that combines governing with point-scoring. A Republican Congress could pass a few modest, incremental bills which Mr Obama might actually sign, but also send him several popular ones which he might veto.

For example, they would surely ask him to approve the long-delayed Keystone XL pipeline to carry oil from Canada's tar sands to American refineries. Environmentalists hate the idea, but if Mr Obama vetoes it, Republicans will accuse him of killing jobs.

Not all conservatives share the optimists' vision. Hardliners have essentially given up on working with Mr Obama--unless he surrenders completely and lets them dismantle Obamacare. Some urge their party to ignore its own pragmatic wing and channel the voters' rage instead.

Michael Needham, the chief executive of Heritage Action, a conservative campaign outfit, denies that the 2013 shutdown hurt Republicans, insisting that it sparked a valuable debate about Obamacare. Heritage Action would like to see Republicans provide a "bold contrast" to Mr Obama, and show they care about ordinary Americans and their stagnating incomes, rather than "the lobbying class in Washington, and the Chamber of Commerce".

The "no compromise" camp will grow louder as the next presidential race nears. Putative White House contenders such as Senator Ted Cruz of Texas will vie to come up with fresh attacks on Mr Obama. Some will assume that the best chance of a Republican victory in 2016 lies in proving that divided government does not work and in seeing Mr Obama hooted from office.

Many Democrats think compromise is unlikely, too. If Republican pragmatists in the Senate think a new era of bipartisanship is nigh, they "really need to talk to some of their House colleagues, because I see no evidence that they have changed," says Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, a senior House Democrat.

He does not accept that the Republicans will win the Senate, but if they do, he predicts that they will over-reach and create a "huge public backlash". The Ryan budget plan "absolutely devastates" spending on education, scientific research and infrastructure, while cutting the top rate of personal income tax, Mr Van Hollen charges. If Republicans want to pass Mr Ryan's plan, "Go for it," he urges.

Whatever happens in November, Mr Obama will remain in overall control of foreign policy and defence, and enjoy considerable discretion over how government agencies implement regulations. But a Republican Congress would hold the purse strings, and new federal appointees such as judges and central bankers would have to be approved by a Republican Senate.

If Republicans hold a narrow majority in the Senate, their ambitions will be limited by the need to reach a super-majority of 60 senators (to avoid a "filibuster", where a minority of 41 or more can block a bill). However, some policies attached to budget bills can be passed by a simple majority of 51, using a parliamentary wheeze known as reconciliation. This may sound arcane (and is), but could have hefty real-world consequences after November.

-Strife via reconciliation-

Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader in the Senate, has set out how a new majority might be used. In a speech to donors that was leaked, he said: "We own the budget." Republicans would use riders on spending bills to restrict the federal bureaucracy, he explained. "No money can be spent to do this or that. We're going to go after them on health care, on financial services, on the Environmental Protection Agency, across the board," he said.

Yet making such constraints bite will be complicated. It would take 60 votes to attach riders to run-of-the-mill spending bills, meaning that Democratic support would be needed. The game is to attach so many popular spending plans to a bill that some Democrats will back it, explains Judd Gregg, a former Republican senator.

However, reconciliation must follow strict rules (to simplify, it must be agreed that a policy's main impact is on the federal budget, and it must not increase the long-term deficit). "Reconciliation is a very difficult vehicle to work with," says Mr Gregg. It could perhaps be used to rein in environmental regulations. But it is a poor way to pursue tax reform, since tax cuts are usually assumed to increase the deficit.

Obamacare itself was partly passed via reconciliation, and in 2012 the team planning a Romney presidency researched how much of the health law could be unpicked in the same way, recalls Lanhee Chen of Stanford University, Mr Romney's chief policy adviser. Quite a lot, was the answer, but reconciliation is a lengthy process, and would probably end in a veto by Mr Obama, Mr Chen says.

Democrats in the Senate recently tweaked their rules to make it easier to confirm presidential appointments with just 51 votes, and Republicans will have to decide whether to preserve that rule change, which they denounced at the time. Either way, if Republicans win in November, Mr Obama will have to nominate judges, ambassadors and senior officials with bipartisan appeal if he wants them confirmed.

In most other areas, the goal for Republicans will be to find policies that might attract moderate Democrats, and thus 60 votes. That could include measures to boost energy production, promote trade and tweak the tax system.

On energy, Congress could press federal regulators to grant export licences for natural gas, and make it easier to drill for oil on federal lands or offshore. On trade, Congress could grant the president "fast-track" authority to negotiate with foreign governments, so that lawmakers cannot unpick deals after they have been agreed on. Mr Corker thinks this is possible; Mr Van Hollen suspects that some in Congress may insist on seeing details of proposed trade pacts before agreeing to fast-track.

On taxes, Republican leaders think a bipartisan deal could address the problem of American firms hoarding profits overseas. Recent headlines about firms quitting the country for tax reasons mean that both sides understand the harm caused by Uncle Sam's insistence on taxing American firms' profits even if they are earned abroad, says Mr Corker. Some on the right could live with a "repatriation holiday" for profits. Congressional Democrats retort that an earlier amnesty, in 2004, just led to more hoarding of profits abroad.

-Deal or no deal?-

A broader tax reform may be possible, but House Republicans have always resisted considering corporate taxes in isolation, says Mr Van Hollen. Democrats close to the White House sound a bit more optimistic. In a recent article, Gene Sperling, a former economic adviser to Mr Obama, insisted that the two parties' leaders are not far apart on corporate-tax reform, suggesting both sides could agree to cut headline rates while imposing a minimum tax on foreign earnings.

Alas, the prospects for a grand bargain on taxes and spending do not look good. Democrats suggest that Republican senators underestimate how allergic House Republicans are to anything that sounds like a tax increase.

Many Republicans will demand a show vote to repeal Obamacare, which Mr Obama would obviously veto. Smaller tweaks to the health law may pass, however. Some Democrats support Republican calls to repeal a tax on medical devices; others may agree to loosen the rules for when a firm is deemed large enough to be obliged to offer its staff health insurance.

Optimists hope that the near-insolvency of the Highway Trust Fund, which depends on federal fuel taxes, will force Congress and the White House to do a deal when the next stopgap funding plan expires in 2015. But flintier conservatives instead want the states to decide how to tax fuel and pay for roads, cutting out the federal government entirely.

Some Republicans think tweaks to immigration policy are possible, as long as the question of what to do with the estimated 11m illegal migrants now in America is shelved. Senator John Cornyn of Texas warns Democrats not to start by demanding an amnesty. He grumbled to a Texas newspaper that Democrats "want to eat dessert before they eat their vegetables on immigration".

Yet what Republicans want is for Democrats to swallow conservative red meat--such as yet more border security, new systems to catch visa-overstayers and unlawful job applicants and employer-friendly visa schemes. Only later might Republicans contemplate legalisation.

As it happens, a broad debate on immigration looms after November's elections, because Mr Obama is expected to announce an executive order to shield more migrants from deportation, building on an order of 2012 to stop deporting many youngsters brought to America as children (a group known as Dreamers). Hispanic activists want millions more to be covered. Mr Obama may compromise, perhaps with a rule protecting Dreamers' parents.

Mr Chen, the former Romney adviser, hopes that Republicans in Congress will put together a "reasonable" alternative to that presidential order and send it to Mr Obama, forcing him to choose between a modest immigration reform now, or progressive perfection some day. Mr Chen fears, however, that after the announcement of an Obama amnesty some on the right will simply "go nuts", drowning out serious debate with histrionics.

Many in Congress would like to draft a new authorisation for the use of force against Islamic State. The current authorisation dates back to 2001, is narrowly tied to the September 11th attacks and gives the president sweeping powers. Mr Obama used to say that that authorisation needed replacing; now he cites it as his authority for bombing Iraq and Syria. A Republican Congress would also demand that America maintain pressure on Iran's nuclear programme, predicts Mr Corker. However, Mr Obama would probably veto any bill that tightened sanctions against his wishes.

The battle between pragmatists and partisans in both parties is far from resolved. If Republicans control both halves of Congress, "They have to show they can govern or they will suffer huge losses in 2016," says Mr Gregg. But other Republicans would rather deny Mr Obama any successes in his final two years.

For one thing, they sincerely distrust him. For another, they want to hammer home the idea that Democrats are incompetent and big government always fails. For their part, lefty ideologues want to stir Republicans into such a fury that they repel voters in 2016. That is why some hope for the largest possible immigration amnesty (precisely to provoke the Right), and for a flurry of executive power-grabs.

Washington is rather empty now, since many politicians are back home campaigning. When they return, many will be carrying barbed wire and shovels for digging trenches.

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Join the conversation about this story » Reported by Business Insider 14 hours ago.

Dayton and Johnson meet in fourth gubernatorial debate

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With the election little more than two weeks away, Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton and Republican challenger Jeff Johnson sparred in their fourth gubernatorial debate in as many weeks, trading familiar jabs over Minnesota's economic competitiveness, the MNsure health insurance exchange and growing state spending. Reported by TwinCities.com 12 hours ago.

Why Democrats Aren't Boasting About Their Biggest Accomplishment

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Why Democrats Aren't Boasting About Their Biggest Accomplishment"MY INSURANCE was cancelled because of Obamacare. Now the out-of-pocket costs are so high, it's unaffordable," said Julie Boonstra, a cancer patient, in an ad attacking Gary Peters, a Democrat running for the Senate in Michigan.

It turned out, however, that Mrs Boonstra will save over $1,000 this year because of the health law; she just didn't know it. Mrs Boonstra's confusion is not unusual. Many Americans are eligible for federal subsidies to help pay for insurance, but don't know it.

According to Kantar Media, a firm that tracks political advertising, health care is the main subject of campaign ads, especially Republican ones (see chart).

Obamacare is unpopular--over half of Americans disapprove of it. Republicans talk about it constantly on the campaign trail, though not as intemperately as they did during their own party's primaries. Democrats scarcely mention it.

The Republican National Committee's first paid ads of 2014 reminded voters of Barack Obama's promise that "if you like the plan you have, you can keep it." The Urban Institute, a think-tank, estimates that 2.6m Americans had their plans cancelled at the end of 2013 because they did not meet Obamacare's standards. Politifact, a watchdog, called Mr Obama's promise the "lie of the year".

Republicans quote it all the time. At an event put on by Americans for Prosperity (AFP), a conservative group, in Raleigh, North Carolina, Donald Bryson, the state director, notes that the president repeated it 22 times. Munching on barbecued pork to the sound of bluegrass music, audience members assail the law as an attack on their liberty.

Since Republicans came within one vote of blocking Obamacare in the Senate, any Democratic senator can be accused of having cast the decisive vote for it. Kay Hagan of North Carolina, for example, has been hit by a flood of ads slamming her support for Obamacare.

At the warehouse of a small lighting company in Greensboro her Republican opponent, Thom Tillis, warns that Obamacare is destroying businesses. The company's owner, Gordon Hunt, says he has passed up chances to expand in order to avoid the law's requirement that firms with 50 or more employees must provide health insurance for their workers. In an ad earlier this year, Mr Tillis cited an estimate from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) that Obamacare would cost America the equivalent of 2m jobs.

The CBO said that Obamacare, by raising labour costs and making it easier for individuals to buy insurance without relying on an employer, would reduce the incentives for people to work, by the equivalent of 2.5m full-time workers by 2024. An analysis by the Centre for Economic and Policy Research, a think-tank, suggests that more people are choosing to work part-time. A previous study found that this uptick was probably the result of the slow recovery, not Obamacare.

Democrats have several counter-arguments they could use. The growth rate of health-care spending has slowed from an average of 7.2% from 1990-2008 to 3.6% last year. The number of uninsured people under the age of 65 fell from 44.3m in 2013 to 40.7m in the first three months of this year, and premiums have not spiked in most places (though they still could, and some people will find out just before they vote).

Mark Pryor of Arkansas is one of the few Democratic senators who mentions Obamacare, albeit only obliquely. In an ad he mentions his vote "for a law" that requires insurers to provide affordable coverage to people with pre-existing conditions, like himself (he has suffered from cancer). Mr Pryor is behind in the polls.

Republicans often use Obamacare as shorthand for Democratic incompetence (eg, the Obamacare computers crashing on day one) and for broader criticism of big government. It is also, of course, a word that reminds voters of an unpopular president, says Elizabeth Wilner of Kantar. Opinions of the law itself have hardly budged since its enactment, dividing along partisan lines.

Yet for all the Republican bluster about repealing Obamacare, there is no chance that this will happen while Mr Obama is president, and little chance thereafter. Less than a third of voters want the law scrapped, according to a poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation, a research outfit, while nearly half would like to see it improved. Even Republicans like parts of it, such as the ban on insurance companies charging people more if they are sick.

If the law were less confusing, it might be an easier sell.

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Join the conversation about this story » Reported by Business Insider 10 hours ago.

Landlord Insurance Prices Now Searchable Nationwide Using Independent Insurer Portal

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Landlord insurance prices can now be found using the national finder tool at the Quotes Pros website at http://quotespros.com.

Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB) October 19, 2014

New forms of liability coverage for owners of real estate do exist in some states in the U.S. and the Quotes Pros website is now helping to link property owners to insurers. Prices for landlord insurance can now be explored and quoted using the portal at http://www.quotespros.com.

The nationwide system that is now in place is making it possible for owners of properties to find coverage that extends to rental homes, apartments and town homes in the U.S. A landlord without personal liability protection or forms of home insurance can now use the price finder available to compare price data from different companies.

"The searchable system we're providing this year offers an accurate way to find insurers and various plans of coverage for owners of private and commercial real estate," said a Quotes Pros rep.

The groups of insurers that have been included in the database of companies for research this year are licensed to provide coverage in most areas of the country. A zip finder is part of the national search options in order to connect searchers of policies to agencies in a geographic area. Due to the limitations of some agencies, some forms of coverage cannot be researched online.

"The tools that we've included for use on our consumer accessible homepage offer alternatives to calling companies by phone or requesting price details through the mail," said the rep.

The Quotes Pros company is supplying state and national insurers that specialize in home protection policies for landlords this year. In addition to these options, policies and prices for automotive or health coverage are available to explore using the zip system at http://quotespros.com/health-insurance.html.

About QuotesPros.com

The QuotesPros.com company offers ways to review property insurance costs and other real estate based coverage through its website portal. Consumers across the country now gain entry to the database of agencies that are viewable using the homepage daily. The QuotesPros.com company supplies full access to the insurers inside of the system based on zip information that consumers input during an initial search for available providers. Reported by PRWeb 8 hours ago.

Study Shows Children Who Have Had Enterovirus Infection Are More Likely To Have Type 1 Diabetes

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*Provided by Dr. Tsai Chung-Li, Diabetologia*

A new study published in Diabetologia (the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes) shows that children who have been infected with enterovirus are 48% more likely to have developed type 1 diabetes. The study is by Dr. Tsai Chung-Li, China Medical University, Taiwan, and colleagues.

"Type 1 diabetes is considered to be caused by complex interaction between genetic susceptibility, the immune system, and environmental factors," say the authors. "Though the cue for genetic predisposition has been elucidated, evidence also points to involvement of enterovirus (EV) infection, including viruses such as poliovirus, Coxsackievirus A, Coxsackievirus B, and echovirus."

To investigate the link between EV infection and subsequent type 1 diabetes, the researchers used nationwide population-based data from Taiwan's national health insurance system. They looked at type 1 diabetes incidence in children aged up to 18 years with or without diagnosis of EV infection during 2000–2008.

Overall incidence of type 1 diabetes was higher in the EV-infected children than in the non-EV infected group (5.73 vs. 3.89 per 100,000 people per year, showing a 48% increased incidence rate in EV-infected versus non-EV-infected children). Hazard ratios of type 1 diabetes increased with age at diagnosis of EV infection, with a more than doubling of the risk of type 1 diabetes (2.18 times increased risk) for children aged over 10 years at entry. No relationship of allergic rhinitis or bronchial asthma to type 1 diabetes was found.

The authors point out that despite countries such as Finland and Sweden having the highest incidence of type 1 diabetes worldwide, they are thought to have low background rates of enterovirus infection, suggesting that genetic factors are a large component of the high type 1 diabetes rates in those countries. But they add: "Regions such as Africa, Asia, South America have a low but increasing incidence of type 1 diabetes and high prevalence of enterovirus infection; environmental factors like enterovirus infection may play a vital role in increasing incidence in these regions."

They add: "Taiwan has relatively low type 1 diabetes incidence; we believe that the marked escalation of the said incidence in recent decades can be largely attributed to the highly endemic spread of enterovirus infection in Taiwanese children, given that there has been little gene flow and genetic drift in such a short period."

They conclude: "This nationwide retrospective cohort study found a positive correlation of type 1 diabetes with EV infection. Our results suggest that preventive strategies, such as an effective vaccine against EV infection, may lessen the incidence of type 1 diabetes in Taiwan."

----- Reported by redOrbit 9 hours ago.

HCMS Group Becomes First Commercial Tenant of New Green House Data Center in Cheyenne

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HCMS Group moves to energy-efficient Green House Data and gains capacity, reliability, and security while exceeding HIPAA requirements.

Cheyenne, Wyoming (PRWEB) October 20, 2014

HCMS Group recently became the first commercial tenant of Green House Data’s new Cheyenne data center, gaining expansion capacity, greater reliability, and improved security, the two companies jointly announced.

HCMS moved its servers, database storage systems, switches, and routers out of its data center in Cheyenne’s Bank of the West building, where they’ve been since the company began building secure healthcare databases more than a decade ago. The Cheyenne-based company’s Research Reference Database includes information on 4 million people covered by more than 300 employers.

As HCMS rapidly adds clients, the firm needed room to expand, said Mick Simon, the company’s chief technology officer. Green House Data offered several advantages to operating an owned-data center, including improved power system redundancy, access to multiple internet service providers, and heightened physical security compared with what HCMS could provide in a shared office building, he said. Green House Data’s data security also exceeds the requirements of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA.

Simon cited Green House Data’s willingness to go beyond HIPAA standards and “accommodate what we needed to do on top of standard security measures.”

Green House Data has other attractions, Simon said. The $35 million, 35,000-square-foot installation is designed to dramatically cut energy consumption, using passive and evaporative cooling systems. Green House can obtain as much as 100 percent of its power from renewable sources such as wind. Cheyenne sits astride the main transcontinental fiber optic cable lines in an area with low risks of earthquakes, tornadoes, and hurricanes.

“HCMS is an innovator in healthcare IT, and as a local company we’re thrilled we were able to help them keep their data center business in Wyoming,” said Shawn Mills, president, CEO and founder of Green House Data. “Working with them to understand their needs and those of their clients has helped us to meet and exceed the stringent information privacy and security requirements of the healthcare industry.”

Green House Data is a cloud hosting and co-location services provider with highly energy efficient, green data centers located across the country. The company is a certified VMware service provider, SSAE 16 Type II and HIPAA compliant, as well as a Certified B-Corp and EPA Green Power Partner. Visit http://www.greenhousedata.com to learn more, view demos, or request a free cloud trial.

HCMS Group is a healthcare data technology, research, and clinical prevention services company that provides integrated data warehousing and analytics to employers and healthcare organizations. The company’s 5|50 Solution™ uses the predictive Human Capital Risk Index® (HUI, patent pending) to identify individuals in the 5 percent of patients who account for 50 percent of medical costs. HCMS then helps those people manage complex health situations through the KnovaSolutions clinical prevention service. Visit http://www.hcmsgroup.com to learn more about population and individual health management. Reported by PRWeb 23 hours ago.

How to pick a Medigap plan

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*How to pick a Medigap plan*

Medigap health plans are basically bookkeeping operations. Unlike Medicare Advantage plans, Medigap plans don't make any decisions about what to cover. They don't have networks of doctors or hospitals. All they do is pick up a specified share of your medical bills that Medicare doesn't pay, such as Part A or Part B deductibles or co-pays. If Medicare paid for it and you still owe a part of the bill, Medigap will pay it, no questions asked.

-*Medigap plans come in standardized varieties*-

In all but three states (Massachusetts, Minnesota, and Wisconsin), Medigap plans are available in 10 standardized benefits packages, which vary according to how much of your expenses they will pick up. The more expenses the plan will pick up, the higher its premium will be.  

The most popular plan is F, which pays for pretty much everything Medicare doesn't, including the 15 percent excess charge that you can be billed by doctors who don't accept Medicare as payment in full. Here's a chart of the various kinds of Medigap plans.

You can find a complete list of Medigap carriers in your area on Medicare.gov.

When you put your ZIP code into the search box, you will see a list of which plans are available in your area and which companies sell them. You will see a range of prices for each type of plan, and the names, websites, and other contact information for companies that sell them. But it's up to you to contact the carriers directly to get their specific pricing information.

-*There are no ratings for Medigap plans*-

Consumers are often surprised to find this out because there is plenty of rating information available for Medicare Advantage plans. Basically, there is very little to base Medigap plan ratings on. The benefits of Plan F are the same no matter which company you buy it from.

In almost every case, the companies get information on your Medicare bills straight from Medicare and pay their share automatically. They don't have networks of doctors or hospitals.

And the rules for Medigap are not the same everywhere, the way they are for Medicare Advantage. The federal government sets some minimum rules to protect consumers but many states have decided to add additional consumer protections on top of those.-*The type of premium pricing method you choose will affect your future costs*-

A policy that looks inexpensive when you first buy it at age 65 could end up being the most expensive when you hit 80.

Insurance companies use three different ways of setting premium prices. In some states you may have a choice of only one or two.

*Community-rated* (also called no-age rated). The same premium is charged to everyone, regardless of age. Medigap experts say these plans are the least expensive over time, though not necessarily when you first purchase them.

*Issue-age-rated.* The premium is based on your age when you buy the policy. It won't go up as you age, but will increase due to cost inflation.

*Attained-age rated*. The premium starts low but goes up as you get older. Over time, this type of policy is the most expensive.

Learn more about policy pricing.

-*Medigap plans can turn you down or charge you more for pre-existing conditions at certain times*-

In every state, you have a guaranteed right to buy a Medigap policy for six months starting the first day of the month you are at least 65 and enrolled in Part B. During this grace period, the insurance company is not allowed to turn you down or charge you more because you have a pre-existing condition. This is called "guaranteed issue."After that, you're only entitled to guaranteed issue Medigap in specific situations, such as these.

· Your Medicare Advantage plan shuts down or you move out of its service area.
· Your retiree plan shuts down.
· You joined Medicare Advantage at 65 but decide to switch back to original Medicare within a year.
· Your Medigap plan shuts down.

The minimum rules for when Medigap must sell you a plan are explained in this publication from Medicare. But some states have chosen to go beyond these minimums, for example, by requiring insurers to sell Medigap plans to applicants at any time. Your State Health Insurance Assistance program or state insurance department can give you information on your state's rules.

-*The rules are different if you are under 65*-

If you are under 65 but have Medicare because of a disability or other qualifying condition, you do not have the same blanket right to buy a Medigap plan guaranteed issue. Some states have gone above and beyond the minimum rules about this and do require at least some Medigap plans to be made available. You can learn more from Medicare's free publication on choosing a Medigap policy.

If you are in this category and cannot buy a Medigap plan, you have the option of getting a Medicare Advantage plan instead. These must be sold to anyone on Medicare, regardless of age. Then when you turn 65 you can switch to a Medigap plan if you want.-*How to buy a Medigap plan*-

You can't buy a Medigap plan directly through Healthcare.gov the way you can a Medicare Advantage plan. You can buy the plan directly from an insurance company. Or you can work with a reputable local insurance broker to close the deal.-Consumer tip: Download this excellent Medicare pamphlet on Medigap-

Medicare's free publication "Choosing a Medigap Policy: A Guide to Health Insurance for People with Medicare" has much more detailed information on Medigap than we have room for here. Highly recommended.*Consumer Reports has no relationship with any advertisers or sponsors on this website. Copyright © 2006-2014 Consumers Union of U.S.*

*Subscribe now!*
Subscribe to *ConsumerReports.org* for expert Ratings, buying advice and reliability on hundreds of products.
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Update your feed preferences Reported by Consumer Reports 19 hours ago.

Biggest Insurance Confusions Involve Houses and Red Cars, Says Insure.com Survey

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A new survey examines insurance myths and who believes them most.

Foster City, Calif. (PRWEB) October 20, 2014

Misinformation about insurance for houses and red cars ranks highest among the insurance myths that people believe are true.

Insure.com recently surveyed 2,000 adults and asked whether 10 insurance-related statements were true or false. (All the statements were false.)

Over half of people surveyed (52 percent) have a misunderstanding of how to insure a house. Most believe a house should be insured for its real estate market value. In fact, one should insure a house based on the cost to reconstruct it. Depending on the area of the country, this means homeowners could be significantly under-insuring or over-insuring their homes – either of which would be an unfortunate personal finance mistake.

Insure.com also looked at who was more likely to believe a myth – men or women. In all cases except one, men were more likely to be duped by an insurance myth.

In the only exception, women were more likely than men to erroneously believe that red cars cost more to insure than other cars, due to the perception that they get ticketed more. But car color is not a factor used by insurance companies in setting rates.

“I hope no one passed up the red Miata they really wanted because they thought the insurance would be more expensive,” said Amy Danise, editorial director of Insure.com.

The biggest disparity between men and women involved the myth that out-of-state speeding tickets can’t follow you home. They can follow you, and can lead to a rate increase depending on your insurance company. Men were far more likely to think that speeding tickets can’t follow one home (66 percent) than women (34 percent).

Below are the myths, the realities and gender breakdown of those who believe the myths are true.

Myth 1: I should buy insurance coverage for my house based on its real estate market value.·     52% think it’s true (45% women, 55% men).
·     Reality: Buy coverage based on a home’s cost to reconstruct (materials and labor).

Myth 2: Red cars cost more to insure because they get pulled over for speeding more.·     46% think it’s true (52% women, 48% men).
·     Reality: Car color doesn’t affect insurance rates.

Myth 3: If I cause a crash with extensive damages to others, my auto insurance company can cancel me immediately.·     44% think it’s true (50% women, 50% men).
·     Reality: If an insurer wants to drop a customer due to claims, it generally has to wait until the policy period is up.

Myth 4: Small cars are the cheapest to insure.·     40% think it’s true (42% women, 58% men).
·     Reality: Small and mid-size SUVs and minivans are generally the cheapest to insure. Small cars are not, often because they’re chosen by more inexperienced drivers who tend to make claims, and because passengers incur more expensive injury claims.

Myth 5: The Affordable Care Act (also called Obamacare) allows health insurance companies to base rates on medical conditions such as high blood pressure, heart disease and cancer.·     36% think it’s true (42% women, 58% men).
·     Reality: It’s just the opposite – the Affordable Care Act prohibits health insurers from basing rates on pre-existing conditions.

Myth 6: Comprehensive auto insurance covers everything and anything.·     32% think it’s true (41% women, 59% men).
·     Reality: Comprehensive coverage is tragically misnamed. It covers only narrow portions of possible problems, including car theft, storm damage, animal collisions and vandalism.

Myth 7: Thieves prefer to steal new cars.·     29% think it’s true (42% women, 58% men).
·     Reality: It’s more lucrative to steal old cars and sell them for parts.

Myth 8: If my friend borrows my car and crashes it, their insurance will pay for damage.·     25% think it’s true (48% women, 52% men).
·     Reality: You and your insurance are on the hook when someone else drives your car.

Myth 9: The Affordable Care Act (also called Obamacare) requires me to take the health insurance plan offered by my employer.·     19% think it’s true (41% women, 59% men).
·     Reality: The Affordable Care Act requires almost all Americans to buy health insurance but doesn’t say where they must get it.

Myth 10: Out-of-state speeding tickets can't follow you home.·     13% think it’s true (34% women, 66% men).
·     Reality: Oh yes they can.

“These misunderstandings can lead to financial loss,” said Danise. “We hope the survey results open people’s eyes to their true risks and insurance gaps.”

An infographic and chart of survey results are available at http://www.insure.com/car-insurance/insurance-myths.html.

Methodology

Insure.com commissioned an online-panel survey of 2,000 licensed drivers, half women and half men, with respondents representing all regions of the country according to Census population data. The survey was fielded in September 2014.

About Insure.com

Insure.com provides a comprehensive array of information on auto insurance, home insurance, health insurance, and life insurance. The site offers an extensive library of originally authored insurance articles and decision-making tools that are not available from any other single source, including its extensive car insurance discounts tool. Insure.com is owned and operated by QuinStreet, Inc. (NASDAQ: QNST), one of the largest Internet marketing and media companies in the world. QuinStreet is committed to providing consumers and businesses with the information they need to research, find and select the products, services and brands that best meet their needs. The company is a leader in visitor-friendly marketing practices. For more information, please visit QuinStreet.com.

Twitter: @InsureCom

###

Press contact:
Amy Danise
860-386-6446
adanise(at)insure(dot)com Reported by PRWeb 18 hours ago.

7 Things You Must Do To Successfully Prepare For Retirement

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With 10,000 boomers turning 65 each day, many eyes are watching the sand in their job hourglasses drain. But before they accept their gold watch -- does anyone even get gold watches anymore? -- here are seven important things everyone should do in the months before they retire.

*Actually pay attention to Social Security.*
When you start to collect Social Security impacts how much you get for the rest of your life. The longer you delay the start of benefits, the more you will get monthly. For people born between 1943 and 1954, the full retirement age is 66. If those folks start collecting at 62 -- the youngest they are allowed to -- their monthly benefits will be 75 percent of what they would have been had they waited until 66. Same thing if they start up their benefits at 65 -- they get 93.3 percent of what they would have gotten had they waited that extra year. Social Security also gives you a "bonus" if you delay the start of benefits; for people born after 1943, the amount you get is an extra 8 percent for every year you delay collecting Social Security up until age 70. That could increase your monthly check by a decent chunk of change.

Here's the problem with Social Security: Just thinking about it makes our eyes glaze over. But instead of viewing a visit to the Social Security Administration's website as a cure for insomnia, pay attention. In 2012, Social Security represented on average 35 percent of the aggregate total income of people aged 65 or older.

*Square away your housing.*
If you think you want to downsize and redirect some of your equity, it makes sense for a few reasons to do it before you stop working. For one, if you need a mortgage -- no matter how small -- it's harder to get without a pay check, no matter how much you put down or what your loan-to-value ratio is. Lenders want to see that you have income. It's also helpful to know just how much your home is worth in the current market, especially if part of your retirement plan is to live off some of the equity.

But there is a larger question you need to figure out too: If you are taking money out of your home, where should it go? The short answer is -- into something that earns money for you. Some people may want to use their home equity to start a business. Others may want to invest it in something that pays dividends.

Some others may consider buying rental property with the equity in their homes. The logic goes that while your mortgage expenses are fixed (based on the term of the loan), the rents you collect will likely increase each year. Rents have increased 12.1 percent nationally since Zillow started tracking them in November 2010. AARP offers this primer-calculator on whether income property is a good investment for you. Yes, being a landlord is not without headaches. But for many retirees, having a monthly income is a positive thing. You can use your IRA to buy investment property, but the rules are complicated and generally only for the big ticket players -- and if you fail to comply with any of the rules, it may kill your IRA and get you penalized tax-wise. Talk to your accountant about all the implications of owning rental property.

Reassess your risk level for the stock market.
You still need the growth that equities provide, but who wants to be left holding an empty bag after market dips? Your 60s aren't the decade for taking a lot of financial risks because you don't have a lot of working years left in which to recover from losses. You need to know that your principal is safe and that your money will last for as long as you do.

Dial back on stocks now and move that money into a savings or money market account -- some place safe.

*Figure out where your health coverage will come from.*
At 65, you are eligible for Medicare. Part A, which is hospital care, won't cost you anything, so even if you aren't retired from work, sign up for it. Part B covers medical care and does cost a monthly premium. If you delay enrolling in Part B, enrollment later on will cost more. It still might make some sense to delay though if you are still eligible for coverage through a spouse's plan. And then there is Plan D, which covers prescription drugs. Medicare A and B won't pay for your medications.

Another factor to consider: your kids. Although they may have been covered up until age 26 under your employer-provided health insurance plan, they will not be covered under Medicare. Investigate what alternatives are available to them. Colleges generally require students be insured and don't always offer inexpensive plans. And there is also the ACA to check out.

*Go see the doctor before your final day of employment.*
Before you leave behind your employer-sponsored health coverage, make sure you are up-to-date on all annual screenings and health exams. Get refilled all your prescriptions that will no longer be covered. Get a dental exam and have whatever dental work is necessary. Have your hearing checked and get fitted for hearing aids if you need them. Get a vision exam and new glasses, up to the limits of your plan. Medicare does not pay for dental, hearing aids or vision glasses.

Begin the emotional shift before you leave.
Nobody likes to hear this, but a good part of our social lives are work-related. And once you are no longer part of the official office "family," connections tend to drift away. You become less interested in office news and you all pretty much realize that the friendship existed primarily because your desks were near. When you retire, you will still need people in your life but it may not be the people you once worked with. Start building up your stable of non-work friends, preferably people who have their days available -- because that's the time you will need to fill. Check out Book clubs, jogging and bicycling groups, whatever your interests are. But you will need to replace not just the money but the socialization that came from going to a job everyday.

*Envision what your retirement day will look like.*
Many people focus all their energy on figuring out how to afford retirement and don't give a minute's thought to what they will actually do once they retire. Retirement can be an emotional thing. It can also be boring, especially for those people whose identity is strongly tied to their work. If you plan on volunteering, figure out where. If you think you want to teach some courses at the local college, make those connections now. If you are thinking it'd be fun to spend a few months in Costa Rica, learn where you will go and how much it will cost.

Retirement can be an exciting time of new adventures. But it also can be lonely and boring. The difference is in the planning. Reported by Huffington Post 17 hours ago.

Steve Scalise Grows In Popularity As House Majority Whip

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Let's count the ways Louisiana Rep. Steve Scalise has grown in popularity since he became the third most powerful man in the Republican-led House.

More than a dozen political action committees, including the American Hotel and Lodging Association, Comcast, Capital One and the International Dairy Foods Association, quickly donated to the newly installed whip's campaign while previous contributors — Facebook, Microsoft and Halliburton — wrote another check. By the end of September, Scalise's committee contributions had jumped $568,087 for a total of $1.7 million, according to Federal Election Commission reports.

The giving is a testament to the congressman's newfound clout.

In a rapid-fire chain of events in June, Republicans elected the 49-year-old Scalise, the onetime chairman of the conservative Republican Study Committee, to serve as the whip, the chief vote counter who occasionally has to twist some arms. The stunning primary defeat of Majority Leader Eric Cantor and his subsequent resignation forced a shake-up in the House leadership.

The previous whip, Kevin McCarthy, succeeded Cantor, and Scalise beat two rivals to become the No. 3. John Boehner remained speaker.

The quick rise to the leadership post made Scalise the first member of the Louisiana congressional delegation to hold such a powerful job since 1972 when Democrat Hale Boggs was majority leader. It's an achievement not lost on Scalise, whose great-grandfather came from Sicily to work on a sugar plantation in the state.

The new whip sees himself as the "more conservative voice at the leadership table," capable of bridging the divide within GOP ranks. Scalise proudly describes his effort in August to bring the caucus together on two immigration-related bills when a politically disastrous defeat was imminent.

The House passed one measure to deal with the crisis on the U.S.-Mexico border by sending migrant youths back home without hearings. A separate bill would shut off an Obama administration program to grant temporary work permits to immigrants brought here illegally as children, potentially making them subject to deportation.

"We can pass conservative policy that unites us," Scalise says in an interview in his Metairie office. The Democratic-led Senate hasn't acted on either bill.

Campaign contributions also helped Scalise engender goodwill as he gave a fair share of his money to some two dozen Republican incumbents and challengers. And it didn't hurt that on his first day in his new Capitol offices — in a room Illinois congressman Abraham Lincoln used — Scalise served his colleagues gumbo, jambalaya and boudin sausage prepared by Cajun chefs.

While donors and the GOP have embraced Scalise, constituents in his district worry about the congressman, who still has the build from his high school wrestling days. They are wary of Washington ways changing him, particularly some of the parishioners at St. Agnes Catholic Church, where Scalise and his family attend Mass.

"Money and influence are so more important to them now," 66-year-old Jane Duggan says of modern day politicians. Of Scalise, she says, "We need to up our prayers for him."

Not surprisingly, the House Whip was warmly received this week at a regional meeting of the National Federation of Independent Business at a French Quarter hotel.

While Senate Republicans are circumspect about what would happen if the GOP wins the Senate, Scalise speaks bullishly about the first 100 days. He wants a budget done quickly and he wants to force President Barack Obama's hand on legislation, including a bill enshrining the president's vow that if you like your health insurance, you can keep it.

"He's going to actually have to engage in the legislative process," Scalise tells some 50 people. "Bill Clinton did with Newt Gingrich. Barack Obama, he just sits out. He sits back, he criticizes everybody. He's got his professorial attitude, real condescending as if he's got all the answers."

The red-meat rhetoric plays well as Scalise refers to fierce opponents of the Keystone pipeline as "crazy, radical environmentalist nut jobs" and complains about "extreme, leftist policies that are failing."

But he offers hints that he's more than a pure partisan.

He speaks animatedly about being on the board of Teach for America, the push for charter schools in New Orleans and the turnaround from a corrupt and failing school system.

This election, Scalise isn't taking anything for granted even though he cruised with 67 percent of the vote in 2012 and his three opponents haven't raised a single dollar.

Everyone got religion after Cantor's loss.

The congressman holds town halls in his expansive district that includes parts of New Orleans, its suburbs, the Bayou and cities and parishes integral to coal production, gas drilling and the fishing industry in the Gulf of Mexico. He spotlights his family — wife Jennifer, seven-year-old daughter Madison and five-year-old son Harrison — in a campaign ad in which he says his favorite title is "dad."

When he's home, Scalise takes his children to school in the morning, booster seats in the Suburban and security detail in tow.

"We both made a commitment to save that family time," Scalise says of the decision he made with his wife. "I've got young kids, I love seeing them every day." Reported by Huffington Post 17 hours ago.

Thanks, but No Thanks: When to Reject the Health Plan at Work

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When to buy your own health insurance, even if your employer offers it. Reported by Motley Fool 17 hours ago.

After Taking Away Some Employees’ Insurance, Walmart Care Clinics To Offer $40 Doctor Visits

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Less than two weeks after the nation’s larger retailer and private employer decided it would discontinue health insurance for many part-time employees, the company announced its new health care centers would provide doctor visits for around $40, or as low as $4 for Walmart employees and their families.

The new plan, unveiled after the newest Walmart Care Clinic in … [More] Reported by The Consumerist 15 hours ago.

PointCare Adds Food Stamps to Health Insurance Screening Software

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PointCare Adds Food Stamps to Health Insurance Screening Software SAN MATEO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--PointCare adds government food stamp program to its mobile health insurance eligibility software in preparation for upcoming Obamacare enrollment period. Initial program is with 10 clinics in Calif. Reported by Business Wire 16 hours ago.
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