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GOP To Sports Leagues: Don't Play With Obamacare

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WASHINGTON -- The Senate's Republican leader is telling major league sports: Don't play with "Obamacare."

Following news that the administration has approached the NFL and other sports leagues to help promote new insurance coverage under President Barack Obama's health care law, Sen. Mitch McConnell fired off a letter Friday crying foul.

The Kentucky Republican wrote that leagues risk damaging their inclusive and apolitical brand and could be seen as taking sides in a highly polarized debate,.

The letter went to the NFL, MLB, the NBA, the NHL, the PGA and NASCAR.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said this week the administration is talking with the NFL and other groups to help promote the benefits of health insurance.

Uninsured people can start signing up Oct. 1 under the health care law. Reported by Huffington Post 2 days ago.

HHS Accommodation Is No Accommodation At All

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In response to Federal Appeals Court Rules in Favor of Hobby Lobby:

Yesterday, HHS released the final text of its adjustments to the ObamaCare regulation that requires health-care plans to provide cost-free coverage for sterilizations, contraceptives and abortion-inducing drugs, which many businesses object to on religious grounds. I mistakingly viewed their release as a capitulation in the wake of the 10th Circuit Court of Appeal's ruling that favored Hobby Lobby on Thursday.

But the final rule only includes an accommodation for non-profit  institutions that oppose the use of contraception. “Under the accommodation these organizations will not have to contract, arrange, pay for or refer contraceptive coverage to which they object on religious grounds, but such coverage is separately provided to women enrolled in their health plans at no cost,” HHS said.

A more careful reading on my part would have seen that the final regulation issued yesterday provides no accommodations at all for individual Christians or private for-profit employers who morally object to the mandate. 

***CNS* reported:







Catholic and other Christian individuals in the United States will now be forced by the Obama administration to buy insurance coverage that pays for sterilizations, contraceptives and abortion-inducing drugs--whether they want that coverage or not and even though it forces them to act against their faith.

What these final adjustments to the regulation do is provide what the administration calls "accommodations" to religious non-profit organizations only--or what the regulation calls "eligible organizations."









To be an "eligible organization" a group must be "a nonprofit entity" that "holds itself out as a religious organization." Organizations that certify that this is the case, however, will not be wholly liberated from providing health-insurance plans that provide access to free sterilizations, contraceptives and abortion-inducing drugs. What they will have is a convoluted relationship with their insurance company or, if they self insure, with their third-party administrator.





So the Regime's War on Religion continues, but as the court's decision on Thursday indicated, this is a battle they are almost certain to lose.







 
 
 
  Reported by Breitbart 1 day ago.

Zane Benefits Publishes New Information on HRAs for Nonprofits

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Four Case Studies on Nonprofits Using HRAs for Employee Health Benefits

Park City, Utah (PRWEB) June 30, 2013

Today, Zane Benefits, the online alternative to group health insurance, published new case studies on how nonprofits are using HRAs.

According to Zane Benefits’ website, the cost of health insurance for nonprofits can be prohibitive. And yet, it is vital for nonprofits to offer health insurance for recruitment and retention of key employees. Health Reimbursement Arrangements (HRAs) offer nonprofits a tool to offer quality health benefits at a lower cost.

According to Zane Benefits’ website, nonprofits can utilize a standalone HRA as an alternative to group health insurance, or can use an integrated HRA to significantly save on the cost of their group health insurance plan. Here are four real-life case studies of how nonprofits are using HRAs to offer cost effective health insurance. Zane Benefits highlights the following case studies:


· Washington Nonprofit Offers Health Benefits For The First Time
· Colorado Nonprofit Sees Employee Health Benefits Savings
· Massachusetts Housing Nonprofit Avoids High Group Health Insurance Costs
· Washington DC Historical Non-Profit Sees Significant Savings on Health Insurance

Click here to read full article.

About Zane Benefits
Zane Benefits was founded in 2006 to provide a revolutionized SaaS (Software-as-a-Service) administration platform ("ZaneHRA") for Health Reimbursement Arrangements (HRAs) and defined contribution health care. The flagship software provides a 100% paperless administration experience to small businesses and insurance professionals that want to offer better health benefits without a traditional group health insurance plan at lower costs. For more information about ZaneHRA, visit http://www.zanebenefits.com. Reported by PRWeb 15 hours ago.

New Report by HealthInsuranceQuotes.me Shows How Medical Insurance Fraud Costs US Citizens $54 Billion a Year

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Medical insurance fraud in the US causes yearly damages of $54 billion. A new report by HealthInsuranceQuotes.me explains the most common types of fraud and how consumers are affected.

New York (PRWEB) June 30, 2013

In their latest report, health insurance quote provider HealthInsuranceQuotes.me takes a close look on the subject of insurance fraud in the medical field.

"The sheer number is outrageous: $54 billion in yearly damages is overwhelming" explains Steven, project manager at HealthInsuranceQuotes.me. He continues: "It's not just the big guys. Of course, there is organized crime, but a lot of individual instances of fraud are just adding up".

The report explains the four major types and sources of insurance fraud, naming also several recent examples of schemes which affect both consumers and insurers.

"It is surprising that some Americans actually tolerate certain types of insurance fraud. Our team hopes that this report will shed more light on the subject and can contribute to a higher awareness" closes Steven.

The report is available at: http://www.healthinsurancequotes.me/medical-insurance-fraud-in-the-usa/

About HealthInsuranceQuotes.me:
Website HealthInsuranceQuotes.me was founded in early 2013 and provides comprehensive insurance guides, FAQs, and expert answers and relevant consumer news to the American public. Fast and free health insurance quotes are made available for easy comparison. The blog already received several positive feedback from both industry professionals and consumers for it's in depth coverage of important topics such as the Affordable Care Act. Reported by PRWeb 14 hours ago.

The Likeliest Reason Obamacare Will Fail

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By Sharon Begley
NEW YORK, June 30 (Reuters) - About 550,000 people in Oregon do not have health insurance, and Aaron Karjala is confident the state's new online insurance exchange will be able to accommodate them when enrollment under President Barack Obama's healthcare reform begins on Oct. 1.
What Karjala, the chief information officer at "Cover Oregon," does worry about, however, is what will happen if the entire population of Oregon - 3.9 million - logs on that day "just to check it out," he said. Or if millions of curious souls elsewhere, wondering if Oregon's insurance offerings are better than their states', log on, causing Cover Oregon to crash in a blur of spinning hourglasses and color wheels and an epidemic of frozen screens.
Multiply that by another 49 states and the District of Columbia, all of which will open health insurance exchanges under "Obamacare" that same day, and you get some idea of what could go publicly and disastrously wrong.
Obamacare, formally known as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), could fail for many reasons, including participation by too few of the uninsured and a shortage of doctors to treat those who do sign up. But because its core is government-run marketplaces selling health insurance online, the likeliest reason for failure at the opening bell is information technology snafus, say experts who are helping with the rollout.
Although IT is the single most expensive ingredient of the exchanges, with eight-figure contracts to build them, experts expect bugs, errors and crashes. In April, Obama himself predicted "glitches and bumps" when the exchanges open for business.
"This is a 1.0 implementation," said Dan Maynard, chief executive of Connecture, a software developer that is providing the shopping and enrollment functions for several states' insurance exchanges. "From an IT perspective, 1.0's come out with a lot of defects. Everyone is waiting for something to go wrong."
Two states that intended to build their own exchanges, Idaho and New Mexico, announced this spring that because of the tight timeline and daunting challenges they would have the federal government operate their IT systems.
"Nothing like this in IT has ever been done to this complexity or scale, and with a timeline that put it behind schedule almost before the ink was dry," said Rick Howard, research director at the technology advisory firm Gartner .

WHAT COLOR WAS YOUR VOLVO?
The potential for problems will begin as soon as would-be buyers log onto their state exchange. They'll enter their name, birth date, address and other identifying information. Then comes the first IT handoff: Is this person who she says she is?
To check that, credit bureau Experian will check the answers against its voluminous external databases, which include information from utility companies and banks on people's spending and other history, and generate questions. The customer will be asked which of several addresses he previously lived at, for example, whether his car has one of several proffered license plate numbers, and what color his old Volvo was.
It's similar to the system that verifies identity for accessing personal Social Security information. If someone gets a question wrong, he will be referred to Experian's help desk, and if that fails may be asked to submit documentation to prove he is who he claims to be.
The next step is determining if the customer is eligible for federal subsidies to pay for insurance. She is if she is a citizen and her income, which she will enter, is less than four times the federal poverty level. To verify this, the exchange pings the "federal data services hub," which is being built by Quality Software Services Inc under a $58 million contract with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
The query arrives at the hub, which does not actually store information, and is routed to online servers at the Internal Revenue Service for income verification and at the Department of Homeland Security for a citizenship check.
The answers must be returned in real time, before the would-be buyer loses patience and logs off. If the reported income doesn't match the IRS's records, the applicant may have to submit pay stubs.
These federal computer systems have never been connected before, so it's anyone's guess how well they'll communicate.
"The challenge for states," said Jinnifer Wattum, director of Eligibility and Exchange Solutions at Xerox's government healthcare unit, is that they have to build "the interfaces needed with the federal data services hub without knowing what this system will look like." That makes the task akin to making a key for a lock that doesn't exist yet.
CMS's contractors are working to finish the hub, but "much remains to be accomplished within a relatively short amount of time," concluded a report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO), the investigative arm of Congress, in June. CMS spokesman Brian Cook said the hub would be ready by September, and that the beta version had been tested for its ability to interact with the exchanges Oregon and Maryland are building.
The federal hub has to verify even more arcane data, such as whether the insurance offered to a buyer through his job is unaffordable, in which case he may qualify for federal subsidies, and whether the buyer is in prison, in which case she is exempt from the mandate to purchase insurance.
If someone's income qualifies him for Medicaid, or his children for the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), software has to divert him from the ACA exchange and into those systems. Many of the computers handling Medicaid and CHIP enrollment are, as IT people diplomatically put it, "legacy systems," meaning old, even decades old.
Many are mainframes, lacking the connectivity of cloud computing. They typically process eligibility requests in days, not seconds.
The legacy systems "rely on daily or weekly batch files to pass information back and forth," and often require follow-up phone calls, said Wattum of Xerox, which is working to configure Nevada's exchange so it can interface with the federal hub.

'NO WRONG DOOR'
A "we'll call you" message is unacceptable under Obamacare, which has a "no wrong door" goal: A buyer must never come to a dead end. If she is diverted to Medicaid, for instance, she must not be required to resubmit information, let alone wait a week for an answer about whether she's now enrolled.
State IT systems must therefore "be interoperable and integrated with an exchange, Medicaid, and CHIP to allow consumers to easily switch from private insurance to Medicaid and CHIP," said an April report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO), the investigative arm of Congress.
To make all those systems communicate, the state exchanges must either develop entirely new systems or use application programming interfaces (APIs) that work with the legacy systems to exchange data in real time. APIs are programming instructions for accessing Web-based software applications.
GAO's Stan Czerwinski compares the necessary connectivity to adapters that let American electronics work with European outlets.
State officials told the GAO that verifying eligibility, enrolling buyers and interfacing with legacy systems are the most "onerous" aspects of developing their exchanges, "given the age and limited functionality of current state systems."
A key goal for exchange officials is keeping would-be buyers in the portal so they don't give up and use a state's ACA call center, which could quickly be swamped.
To avoid this, Oregon brought in potential users to test design prototypes, recorded what people did and where they had trouble, and tweaked the consumer interface to make it as user-friendly as possible, said Karjala.
"Even with that, if you have a family of four and you're eligible for a tax credit to offset your premium," he said, "you could be sitting at the computer for a long time."
What everyone hopes to avoid is a repeat of the early days of the Medicare prescription-drug program in 2006. Some seniors who tried to sign up for a plan were mistakenly enrolled in several, while others had the wrong premium amounts deducted from their Social Security checks.
Another challenge is capacity. Websites regularly crash when too many people try to access them.
"I had no choice but to be extremely conservative" in estimates of how many simultaneous users Cover Oregon has to be prepared for, Karjala said. "Building capacity is the only way to avoid the spinning hourglass or the site freezing, so in our performance testing we're seeing what happens if the whole U.S. population came to Cover Oregon to check it out."
This summer, state exchanges will test their ability to communicate with the federal data hub, whose security frameworks and connectivity protocols are still works in progress. But whether Obamacare 1.0 flies won't be known until the new health plans take effect on Jan. 1. Robert Laszewski, president of Health Policy and Strategy Associates Inc, a consulting firm, said he wouldn't be surprised if some patients showing up at doctors' offices next year with Obamacare policies are told their insurers never heard of them. Reported by Huffington Post 14 hours ago.

PeopleSurance Becomes PPACA Certified Advisor

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PeopleSurance has been certified as a Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Advisor by the National Association of Health Underwriters.


PeopleSurance® is pleased to announce that it has been certified by The National Association of Health Underwriters (NAHU) as an advisor on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA). This certification is recognized in all 50 states and provides PeopleSurance® agents with the ability to advise employers on the many facets of the PPACA including:

- Implementing Health Care Reform Policies
- Grandfathered Plans and Tax Credits
- Medicare Part-D
- Patient Protection Rights
- Changes to Consumer-Directed Health Plans
- Medical Loss Ratio Requirements and Tax Implications
- W-2 Reporting, Summary of Benefits, Waiting Periods, and Essential Benefits
- Individual Mandates and Pre-Existing Conditions
- Health Insurance Exchanges for Individuals and Small Business
- Employer Pay or Play
- Self-Insured Health Plans

PeopleSurance® president, Brandon Beavers states, “We are pleased to have earned this certification from the Association because it demonstrates a continued commitment to a high degree of service we offer to our group clients as they navigate the complex changes of PPACA in the coming months.”

As part of our group benefits outreach program, PeopleSurance® will begin offering seminars on PPACA during the summer of 2013 as well as providing additional on line tools to help employers make informed decisions regarding their health insurance responsibilities and options. Seminars will be offered for both small and large employers as well as private consultation services for companies implementing health insurance changes. For additional information on PeopleSurance® group benefits advising services or health insurance changes resulting from the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, visit our web site at www.peoplesurance.com.

Company Contact Information
PeopleSurance
Brandon Beavers
P O Box 1472
Virginia Beach, VA
23451
757-422-8880

News and Press Release Distribution From I-Newswire.com Reported by i-Newswire.com 13 hours ago.

How The DOMA Strike-down Affects Business Owners

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Many business owners may need to adjust their employee benefits packages and tax liabilities now that legally married gay couples will be eligible for federal benefits.

The U.S. Supreme Court's landmark decision to overturn the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act this week has been celebrated by many as a social-justice victory. DOMA defines marriage as only existing between a man and a woman. By striking it down in a 5-4 decision, the Court cleared the way for same-sex couples, in the 12 states and Washington, D.C., where those marriages are recognized, to receive federal marriage benefits.

The ruling will require that many business owners make changes to their office administration. "Anytime the Supreme Court or Congress makes major changes to a law, there is a lot of work that happens behind the scenes to ensure the changes are understood and implemented correctly," says Martin Mucci, president and chief executive of payroll and human-resource outsourcing company Paychex, in a statement.

While necessary changes will depend on the state your business is in, here are a few areas that may require updates, according to Rochester, N.Y.-based Paychex.

1. *Health insurance plans:* The cost of an employee's health-insurance coverage can be deducted from their income before taxes. With the DOMA ruling, employees will now be able to deduct the cost of their same-sex spouse's health-insurance costs, just like opposite-sex spouses can.


2. *Flexible spending: *Flexible spending accounts allow employees to set money aside for certain costs, such as commuting, qualifying prescriptions and childcare expenses. Same-sex spouses will now be eligible to set aside pre-tax money into these accounts, which helps reduce the employee's tax bills, says Mike Trabold, the director of compliance for Paychex.


3. *Tax liability:* As a business owner, many of your tax liabilities are calculated based on the taxable income of your employees. If the total taxable income of your employees decreases because they are able to deduct the cost of their same-sex partner's health insurance and flexible spending plans, the business's tax bill will also decrease.


4. *Employee time off:* The Family Medical Leave Act protects an employee's job for up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave to take care of immediate family, such as a spouse. The DOMA ruling could increase the amount of time off taken by employees.

The specifics of how the Internal Revenue Service plans to handle same-sex tax benefits remain uncertain, says Trabold. For example, how will same-sex couples who live in a state that does not recognize same-sex marriage be treated come tax time? Will same-sex couples and businesses that employ them be able to go back and file amended tax returns? What about someone who works in a state that recognizes same-sex marriage but lives in a state that does not?

"We are expecting a tremendous amount of clarifying regulation and other types of guidance coming out from both the federal agencies, like the IRS, and the states," says Trabold. "There is likely going to be a lot of questions, probably a lot of lawsuits."

Join the conversation about this story »

 
 
 
  Reported by Business Insider 12 hours ago.

BART talks continue; strike deadline looms

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BART talks continue; strike deadline looms
San Francisco Chronicle
Copyright 2013 San Francisco Chronicle. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Updated 7:22 pm, Sunday, June 30, 2013

BART employees, union and non-union, make no contribution to their state pension plans and pay $92 a month for health insurance. SubhedBART spokesman Rick Rice said the district's latest proposal offers a 2 percent annual raise and reduces pension contributions and health insurance payments by an undisclosed amount. The extra 1 percent pay per year that BART offered is contingent, they said, on factors ranging from ambitious ridership increases and sales tax revenues and reductions in the number of employees seeking Family Medical Leave Act absences. BART says it wants to reach a fair deal with its employees but that it needs relief from skyrocketing pension and health benefits that are more generous that most private and public employers offer. To accommodate that growth, it needs to raise billions to pay for its share of 1,000 new rail cars, a new train maintenance facility and a new train control system. According to BART, they also make an average of $11,000 to $16,000 annually in overtime. Reported by SFGate 1 hour ago.

Online USA Doctors Offers Patients Medical Advice for Some of the Most Common Health Issues Through Innovative Telemedicine Consults

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Online USA Doctors has launched a number of affordable healthcare plans that are geared towards helping patients find answers to some of the most common health problems. From medical advice to recommending lab tests and suggesting prescription-grade supplements, these telemedicine packages address all the healthcare needs of patients.

New York, NY (PRWEB) July 01, 2013

The spiraling costs of health insurance have made it increasingly difficult for patients to afford quality healthcare. To address this problem, Online USA Doctors have launched virtual healthcare services allowing people to seek medical advice for some of the most common problems from USA licensed doctors through an online consultation either video conference, telephone and/or email.

Remarkably affordable healthcare plans at OnlineUSADoctors are also available to individuals and families at prices as low as $29 per month for unlimited doctor access.

It may take days and or up to a week or two to schedule a doctor appointment where people have to go into an office and then wait using the traditional approach of healthcare. Visiting an emergency room for conditions that are not life threatening or serious can be costly and extremely time consuming.

Online USA Doctors has designed a number of telemedicine packages through which common medical conditions can be easily and quickly handled via video, telephone or even email in some situations.

People can also take advantage of asking an initial question for free and then for only $0.99! A video doctor consult costs as little as $39.99. Online USA Doctors also has a proprietary health quiz to help the doctor understand underlying health problems. Apart from answering questions about health issues that don’t require an urgent trip to the doctor, OnlineUSADoctors also offers comprehensive treatment packages.

A literature review on ‘Twenty years of telemedicine in chronic disease management--an evidence synthesis’ was conducted by the Norwegian Centre for Integrated Care and Telemedicine, Tromso, Norway to obtain a high-level view of the value of telemedicine in the management of five common chronic diseases, namely asthma, COPD, diabetes, heart failure, and hypertension. Summarizing the value of telehealth, studies reported that telemedicine interventions of various kinds had a positive effect in the treatment of chronic diseases.

People can find professional medical advice for a number of health problems such as yeast infection, poly cystic ovarian disease, endometriosis male infertility, and obesity at OnlineUSADoctors. They can email Online USA Doctor with important health related questions and also communicate with their doctor using a convenient and secure email messaging system. Each patient’s health charts, lab tests, and the entire medical history along with recommended pharmaceutical grade supplements are housed in one convenient area.

These telemedicine packages from Online USA Doctor offer patients access to cost-effective and quality healthcare. Reimbursable with employers HRA (Health Reimbursement Act) and other employer sponsored health plans and with their tax deductible component, these healthcare packages are also an attractive and affordable alternative to employee health insurance.

Additionally, the team of doctors also offers Health Improvement Quizzes that help patients identify underlying conditions that might not be diagnosed until the onset of a debilitating disease or illness. Patients can schedule appointments online during times convenient for them instead of waiting for hours to receive the medical attention they seek. Online USA Doctor also sends reminders of important periodic doctor consults for patients and their family.

Online USA Doctors Contact Information:
San Diego, CA
(855) 872-0012
info (at) onlineusadoctors (dot) com
http://www.onlineusadoctors.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/OnlineUSADoctor
Facebook: OnlineUSADoctors Reported by PRWeb 18 hours ago.

Medwise Insurance Advocacy Wins Cases Previously Denied Multiple Times, Recoups Half a Million Dollars in Unwarranted Medical Expenses

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Founder Adria Gross helps beleaguered patients fight Insurance companies and medical providers on contested charges, confusing bills

Monroe, NY (PRWEB) July 01, 2013

At a time when the health insurance industry is under government scrutiny, healthcare costs are skyrocketing, and consumers are becoming more aware of their patient rights, patients need to be vigilant about their medical bills. For those with medical insurance but who are facing inadequate coverage or insurance company loopholes, a medical insurance advocate provides valuable assistance recouping unwarranted expenses.

Adria Gross, founder of MedWise Insurance Advocacy based in Monroe, New York, has achieved life-changing results for her clients by working out highly beneficial arrangements for those who have exhausted all other avenues. Since founding her practice in January 2012, she has recovered approximately $500,000 in medical expenses that insurers have tried to block or that healthcare providers erroneously charged. This includes a recent case in which Gross - according to court documents - won a judgment over $43,000 for a New York man whose appeals had been denied ten times by his insurer since the summer of 2010. (Reference: Number CSB - 2012-824622)

Gross— a New York State-licensed insurance broker and consultant, and certified medical billing and medical claims expert—contacts all the appropriate state financial and legal agencies, Medicare/Medicaid, healthcare providers, and insurance companies to ensure patient rights are adhered to and that her clients get the rightful coverage for which they are paying. She stressed that diligence is often required and cases often go to the state insurance authorities for resolution.

“When people are sick or in recovery from an illness or surgery, the last thing they want to do is fight the insurance company or physician about their medical expenses; nor are they equipped to manage the intricacies of the health insurance industry,” said Gross. “As a medical insurance advocate, I am the liaison between patient or attorney, insurance company, and medical provider to work out a solution that resolves billing disputes.” In addition to working with individuals she handles cases for elder law and personal injury attorneys.

MedWise Turns Ten Denials into $43,000

After numerous attempts to get the proper reimbursement from his health insurance for services rendered two years ago, a New York resident turned to MedWise Insurance Advocacy for help. The patient hired MedWise after six denials of his medical claim by his medical insurance carrier. After several attempts to get the client the reimbursement he deserved, Gross filed his case (Number CSB - 2012-824622) with the New York State Department of Financial Services. The agency overturned the denials and instructed the insurance company to pay the money to the insured, Gross’ client.


· Gross worked with Medicare and the patient’s secondary private health insurance carrier to ascertain actual medical costs and establish the denials.
· She worked through three subsequent denials and then wrote to and appealed the case with New York State’s Department of Insurance, Department of Financial Services, Department of Consumer Affairs, and the state’s Attorney General.
· She sent a copy of the letter to the health insurance carrier, who denied the claim a tenth time.
· Through Gross’ repeated efforts, the NYS Department of Financial Services reversed the denial and the insurance company reimbursed her client $43,000—his original $35,000 out-of-pocket costs plus interest.

Gross’ case load is varied and she has helped clients work through medical claims and collect proper reimbursement from public and private insurance carriers, hospitals, healthcare providers, and nursing homes. She also provides key legislative contacts when requested.

Gross frequently speaks publicly to business and consumer groups about the current and upcoming health care laws, important insurance issues, and reminds insured individuals that they are entitled to the insurance coverage they are paying for—and they have recourse when insurers don’t want to pay for what is in the policy.

“Many people have claimed bankruptcy because the health insurance carriers do not want to pay claims,” said Gross. “My advice is to not give up and fight for the health insurance coverage you are legally covered for.”

For more information about MedWise Insurance Advocacy, contact Adria Gross at (845) 238-2532 or adria (at) medwisebilling (dot) com

###

About MedWise Insurance Advocacy

As a nationwide medical insurance advocate, MedWise Insurance Advocacy in Monroe, New York supports individuals and their families, and elder law and personal injury attorneys on medical claim matters, from resolving medical bills and denied health insurance claims to handling medical lien claims and medical letters of appeal.

Founded by Adria Gross, a New York State-licensed insurance broker and consultant , and certified medical billing, coding and claims consultant, MedWise Insurance Advocacy is a division of MedWise Billing, Inc., a medical billing and credentialing practice. Gross uses her expertise in medical billing and coding, her knowledge of the prevailing rate structures of health care, and her expertise in Medicare and other health plans, to uncover discrepancies in diagnostic or procedure coding, or discover the loopholes through which insurance companies are attempting to deny a claim.

Her clients are primarily in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania, but she can take cases anywhere in the United States. Reported by PRWeb 16 hours ago.

BART strike has commuters scrambling

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BART strike has commuters scrambling
At his post at Caltrans' traffic management center in Oakland, Officer Ron Simmons of the California Highway Patrol said traffic on the Bay Bridge heading into San Francisco was already backed up to the MacArthur Maze at 6 a.m. The key issues in the BART dispute are economic: wages, contributions to pensions and health insurance payments. Currently, BART employees, union and nonunion, make no contribution to their state pension plans and pay $92 a month for health insurance. BART said its latest proposal reduced the amount that the agency would require employees to begin contributing to pensions and to pay toward health insurance premiums. Part of the raise BART offered in the latest proposal is contingent, they said, on factors ranging from ambitious ridership increases and sales tax revenues to reductions in the number of employees seeking Family Medical Leave Act absences. BART says it wants to reach a fair deal with its employees but that it needs relief from skyrocketing pension and health benefits. To accommodate that growth, it needs to raise billions to pay for its share of 1,000 new railcars, a new train maintenance facility and a new train control system. Ridership has risenThe unions say their employees are responsible for keeping the aging system running well enough to transport more passengers than planners envisioned even four years ago. According to BART, they also make an average of $11,000 to $16,000 annually in overtime. Reported by SFGate 15 hours ago.

Protect Your Bubble Educated Consumers About Gadget Insurance on Insurance Awareness Day

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Niche insurance brand shared insights into insurance options, like smartphone insurance.

Atlanta, GA (PRWEB) July 01, 2013

Believe it or not, Friday was Insurance Awareness Day. Protect Your Bubble reminds consumers that it’s the perfect time to take stock of their stuff and decide what needs coverage. Many people hear the word “insurance” and immediately think of home owner’s insurance, auto insurance, health insurance; but the truth is that there are items that many consumers have that are very precious to them, but don’t always think to insure. Take smartphones, for example.

Not only are smartphones important to consumers, but they are a hot target for thieves. According to studies, 113 cell phones are lost or stolen every minute in the US. In fact, Protect Your Bubble's data shows that more than 75 percent of policy holder's claims that are reported are related to loss or theft. This is all the more reason for consumers to take extra precaution with their device.

Protect Your Bubble offers affordable and comprehensive smartphone insurance that provides coverage for unexpected events like theft, accidental damage, loss and breakdowns outside of the manufacturer's warranty period, with quick replacement of the device. For more information, visit us.protectyourbubble.com for a quick quote.

About Protect Your Bubble
Protect Your Bubble is a specialty insurance brand, offering insurance for gadgets, pets and travel―all for today’s modern consumer.


·     Gadget - Smartphone and tablet insurance covers loss, theft and water damage and consumers will receive a replacement device quickly. Home gadget warranties provide coverage for mechanical breakdown and accidental damage for laptops, game consoles and cameras as well as mechanical breakdown for appliances, televisions, desktop computers, home theater systems and more.
·     Travel - Plans provide a variety of coverage for travelers including cancellation, interruption, medical/dental, baggage, rental car damage and much more. Plan services include 24/7 emergency assistance, Consult a Doctor™, roadside assistance, restaurant reservations and tee-time scheduling.
·     Rental Car - For those hitting the open road in a rental car, it’s important to remember that rental car damage protection is a great way to cover your rental car while on your road trip.
·     Pet - Plans provide up to 90 percent reimbursement for covered vet charges for eligible accidents, illnesses, hereditary conditions and behavioral treatments and alternative therapies. They allow owners to visit any licensed vet in the country. Additionally, annual deductible options start at $100 which only need to be met once per plan year.
·     Renters – Plans protects customers against theft, fire, lightning, wind, hail, smoke, vandalism, water damage liability (where applicable), earthquakes and power surges in most states. Content limits start at $10,000, with personal liability limits under $100,000.
·     ID Theft Protection – The program offers a full array of prevention services, including 24/7 access to customer service and education about identity theft protection. Detection services include credit and identity monitoring, both important early warning tools that notify customers about potential fraud involving their credit or identity. To resolve any identity theft incidents, certified resolution specialists are available 24/7 to work directly with customers to manage the entire resolution process from start to finish.

Headquartered in Atlanta, Protect Your Bubble is available online, via mobile app or phone, allowing consumers to understand, buy and, most importantly, protect what enriches their lives. Find Protect Your Bubble USA on Facebook or Twitter (@PYBUSA) or visit us.protectyourbubble.com for more information or to get a two-minute quote today.

Media Contact
Protect Your Bubble USA
press(at)protectyourbubble(dot)com Reported by PRWeb 13 hours ago.

ValuePenguin Publishes New Guide and Information on Ohio State Health Insurance Exchange

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The Ohio State Health Insurance Exchange is scheduled to open in October 2013. ValuePenguin has released a comprehensive guide and map to the health insurance exchange to provide information on the upcoming changes.

New York, New York (PRWEB) July 01, 2013

In October 2013, Ohio will begin implementing the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA, ACA, or “Obamacare”), by opening the Ohio Health Insurance Exchange to individuals and small businesses to purchase health insurance plans for coverage effective in January 2014.

To provide information on the upcoming changes, ValuePenguin, a consumer data and research website, has released a comprehensive guide to the Ohio Health Insurance Exchange. The profile identifies the insurers who have submitted health insurance plans for the exchange and outlines the proposed plans under consideration based on the website’s research. Among the fourteen insurers identified by ValuePenguin are Aetna Life Insurance Company, Buckeye Community Health Plan, and the Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Ohio.

ValuePenguin has also created a map that visually organizes the state of Ohio’s counties into seventeen rating areas. These rating areas are used by health insurance companies as a variable to adjust premiums they charge to policyholders residing in those areas.

About ValuePenguin
ValuePenguin is a consumer data and research website that delivers insights and tools on consumer spending. Its analysts review and synthesize facts, figures, and fine print into salient and actionable intelligence for consumers and journalists. For more research on health care reform and consumer spending, visit http://www.valuepenguin.com.

Media Contact: Andrea Martone, Andrea(at)valuepenguin(dot)com, 917.929.0527 Reported by PRWeb 11 hours ago.

WSJ: Health Insurance Rates Could 'Double Or Even Triple' For Healthy Consumers In Obamacare's Exchanges

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Three months from today—October 1, 2013—is O-Day, the day that Obamacare’s subsidized health insurance exchanges are supposed to become fully operational. And today brings more news of “rate shock,” the phemonenon by which Obamacare dramatically increases the underlying cost of health insurance for people who buy it on their own. Louise Radnofsky of the Wall Street Journal looked at insurance rates in eight states, and found that while some sicker people will get a better deal, “healthy consumers could see insurance rates double or even triple when they look for individual coverage.” Reported by Forbes.com 11 hours ago.

Checking Out Obamacare: Librarians Enlisted To Help People Learn About Health Insurance

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Public libraries will be part of the federal government's sweeping consumer-education campaign on health care reform, President Barack Obama's administration announced Monday.

Starting Oct. 1, individuals and small employers will shop for coverage and learn about financial assistance in health insurance exchange marketplaces. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which is implementing these marketplaces under the law, will provide information to libraries in order to educate the public, the agency said.

The Obama administration is beginning a broad education and outreach campaign to reach the millions of people who will be using the health insurance exchanges to obtain health care coverage, which will be required for most people next year. Libraries not only are public resources in most communities, but also provide computer and internet services to people who don't have access in their homes, including the low-income individuals most likely to benefit from Obamacare's expansion of Medicaid and subsidies for private health insurance.

"People will likely turn to libraries to learn about the marketplace, and we want to make sure that library staff has access to the tools and the information to respond to people who want to sign up and enroll for coverage on Oct. 1,” Marilyn Tavenner, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said in a press release.

Surveys have shown that public understanding of the health care reform law is low, especially among low-income and uninsured people who stand to gain the most from Obamacare.

As many as 17,000 libraries could participate in Obamacare educational activities via the Institute of Museum and Library Services, a federal entity that provides funding to libraries, the Associated Press reported Friday.

Libraries equipped with public computers and Internet access already serve as a bridge across the digital divide, so it made sense to get them involved, said Julie Bataille, spokeswoman for the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

"Libraries are a tremendous resource for people in their communities," Bataille said. "They're already a destination many individuals go to when they're seeking out information and understanding on a variety of issues."

Libraries also have public spaces where meetings can be held. And they already provide health information to 28 million people a year via public access computers, according to the Institute of Museum and Library Services, a federal grant-making agency, which will coordinate the new effort with CMS. The two federal agencies also worked together during the rollout of the Medicare prescription drug benefit, experience that should help with this effort, Bataille said.



Last week, the administration unveiled a new consumer-information hotline anda new version of the website that will become the health insurance exchange marketplace in October, HealthCare.gov.

So far, the government has launched nationwide advertising and promotional campaigns by the president and other administration officials to publicize the open enrollment period for people who buy their own health insurance, which runs from Oct. 1 through March 31, 2014. The administration and its allies are also planning myriad community-based activities.

The federal government, states like California and Kentucky, nonprofit advocacy organizations such as Enroll America and local groups will share information about the health care law's requirements and benefits in a variety of settings, including churches, schools and state fairs.

The Obama administration also is seeking partnerships with professional sports leagues like the National Football League and the National Basketball Association, which reach wide audiences and young men in particular. Those plans suffered a setback Friday, however, when the NFL announced it currently had no plans to participate. The NFL's statement came after sports leagues said they had received letters from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) and other Republicans warning them not to cooperate with the administration's efforts. Reported by Huffington Post 10 hours ago.

Obamacare Could Leave Many Uninsured

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WASHINGTON -- Nearly 2 in 3 uninsured low-income people who would qualify for subsidized coverage under President Barack Obama's health care law may be out of luck next year because their states have not expanded Medicaid.

An Associated Press analysis of figures from the Urban Institute finds a big coverage gap developing, with 9.7 million out of 15 million potentially eligible adults living in states that are refusing the expansion or are still undecided with time running short.

That a majority of the neediest people who could be helped by the law may instead remain uninsured is a predicament seemingly unforeseen by Obama and congressional Democrats who designed a sweeping extension of the social safety net. The law's historic promise of health insurance for nearly all U.S. residents would not be fulfilled as envisioned.

It's the direct consequence of last summer's Supreme Court decision that gave states the right to opt out of the Medicaid expansion, combined with unyielding resistance to the law from many Republican state lawmakers.

Expanding Medicaid is essential to Obama's two-part strategy for covering the uninsured.

Starting next year, middle-class people without job-based coverage will be able to get tax credits to help them buy private insurance. But the law calls for low-income people to enroll in Medicaid, expanded to accommodate a largely excluded group: adults with no children at home. Expanded Medicaid would cover about half the 25 million to 30 million people who could be helped by the law.

Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have decided to accept the expansion, which is fully financed by Washington for the first three years and phases down gradually to a 90 percent federal share.

Among those are six states led by Republican governors. But the majority of low-income Americans newly eligible for Medicaid under the law live in states such as Texas, Florida and Georgia, where political opposition remains formidable.

"Because of the Supreme Court's decision making Medicaid expansion optional with the states, we're going to see some pretty significant differences in this country from one place to another in terms of access to health care and access to health insurance," said Gary Cohen, the Health and Human Services official overseeing the rollout of the law.

Speaking this past week at the Brookings Institution, Cohen added: "We are going to have an opportunity ... to take a look at that in a year and see what difference it made, the choices that were made at the political level to do one thing rather than another.

"And that's going to be a pretty profound difference and a pretty profound choice that we get to make every couple of years about what kind of country we want to be," Cohen continued.

Elections for state offices and Congress will be held next year.

Republican state lawmakers continue to oppose the expansion for several reasons. Many believe Medicaid has too many problems already. Others worry that Washington will renege on financing, and some believe health care is an individual responsibility, not a government obligation.

"It's an ideological principle piece to us on the conservative side," David Gowan, Arizona's Republican House majority leader said recently. "We don't believe in the expansion of Medicaid itself. ... We don't believe it's the government's duty to do that." Gov. Jan Brewer, also a Republican, succeeded in getting the Arizona Medicaid expansion through the Legislature but now faces the possibility of a referendum to block the law.

GOP health policy expert Gail Wilensky says she did not expect so many states to turn down the Medicaid expansion. While critical of some main features of the Affordable Care Act, Wilensky believes it's important for the country to get uninsured people covered.

"For me, it is really is quite surprising – particularly in the years with 100 percent federal funding – that so many states are saying `no,'" Wilensky said. "This is depriving the poorest of their citizens of an important benefit." Wilensky ran Medicare and Medicaid during the George H.W. Bush administration.

The AP's continuing check of the states finds 18 not expanding and nine where the outcome is still undecided. The biggest states where the expansion is stymied are Texas, with 1.7 million potentially eligible residents; Florida, with 1.3 million, and Georgia, with more than 680,000.

Still trying to find a path forward are Michigan and Ohio, whose Republican governors support the expansion but face legislative opposition. Each has more than one-half million potentially eligible residents, according to the Urban Institute, a public policy research center.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius says she hopes that holdouts will have a change of heart.

"The door is open," said Sebelius. "If a legislature decides to reconvene at the beginning of January, and change their law, then we would welcome them in."

There is no deadline for states to decide. Next year states will have an opportunity in each calendar quarter, and if they later want to drop out they can do that.

Low-income residents of states refusing the expansion will be exempted from tax penalties for being uninsured. Those penalties also take effect next year, when virtually everyone in the country will be required to have health insurance.

Medicaid already covers more than 60 million people, including many elderly nursing home residents, severely disabled people of any age and many low-income children and their mothers.

An earlier Urban Institute analysis of the expansion found that less than $100 billion in state spending could trigger nearly $1 trillion in federal dollars over a decade.

As originally designed, the expansion was supposed to cover households making up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, about $15,860 for an individual or $32,500 for a family of four.

Under the law, Medicaid is the only coverage option for people below the poverty line, $11,490 for an individual, or $23,550 for a family of four. The poor cannot get subsidized private coverage in the new health insurance markets coming on line next year.

"This decision will have very real human costs for the adults who are going to remain uninsured and their families," said Genevieve Kenney, co-director of the Urban Institute's health policy center. "It seriously undermines the ability of the Affordable Care Act to substantially reduce the number of uninsured in this country, at least at the beginning." Reported by Huffington Post 10 hours ago.

Here's What Happens If You Don't Sign Up For Obamacare

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Here's What Happens If You Don't Sign Up For Obamacare We're months away from cutting the ribbon on the new online marketplace for health insurance, but the vast majority of uninsured Americans — the very people the Affordable Care Act is meant to help — still have no idea whether they'll be in the shopping mood or not. 

According to a recent survey, nearly two-thirds of uninsured Americans say they haven't decided whether or not they'll buy health insurance by the Jan. 1, 2014 deadline (even though they'll have to pay a penalty if they don't).

Another 10% say they flat out won't buy in at all.

We understand the hesitation. Change is hard enough when it's simple to understand, let alone when it has to do with things like insurance, health care policy, and your own financial and personal well-being. 

"People just don't understand how this is going to affect their wallet, what prices are going to be and what this could really cost them," said Laura Adams, InsuranceQuotes.com senior insurance analyst. 

*Here's what you need to know:*

-*What is this new health care exchange all about? *-

The health care exchange (aka The Marketplace) is the centerpiece of the Affordable Care Act, an online marketplace where consumers can shop around for health care plans, just like auto insurance. All 50 states will have their own marketplaces, some of which will be run by the federal government and some of which will be run by individual states.

Delays notwithstanding, the marketplace opens on Oct. 1, 2013 and people will have until Jan 1, 2014 to pick up a policy if they want to escape penalties.  There, you'll be able to choose from four different varieties of plans, platinum (highest benefits), gold, silver, and bronze (lowest benefits).

*Does everyone need to sign up for a health plan? *

The health care exchange is open for every U.S. resident, but only the uninsured will face penalties for skipping out. If you are enrolled in your employer's health plan or pay for your own plan already, you can keep on keepin' on, although we'd at least recommend shopping around to see if there are more affordable plans out there. 

-*What if you don't think you can afford it?*-

Obviously, if everyone could afford to enroll in health care, chances are we wouldn't have an Obamacare plan to deal with at all. As it stands, 61% of the uninsured respondents surveyed by InsuranceQuotes cited money issues as the main reason they haven’t purchased health insurance. 

To help, the government has put in place tax credits that are specifically designed to help low-income households cover the cost of a health care plan. 

To qualify, individuals or families can earn household incomes up to 400% of the federal poverty level ($94,200 for a family of four in 2013). You can claim the tax credit in advance, rather than paying upfront for your health care plan and then waiting for a refund after tax season, Adams notes. 

Generally, the government will apply those credits directly to your health insurer, which will reduce your premium cost.

To find out how big a tax credit you can expect, use Kaiser Permanente's calculator.

-*What if you just don't want to enroll?*-

To make the reform easier to swallow, lawmakers have thrown consumers a couple of bones: For starters, the Jan. 1, 2014 deadline for enrollment is a soft one. You can start signing up when the exchange opens on Oct. 1 and you have until March 31 to enroll.  

That gives people a three-month cushion to get their ducks a row. And on April 1, when the penalties begin, they start small and rise on a tiered scale up until 2016: 

*2014:*

Families — $285 or 1% of total household income, whichever is greater.
Individual adults — $95 or 1% of total household income. 

*2015:*

Families — $975 or 2% of income, whichever is greater. 
Individual adults — $325 or 1% of income.

*2016:*

Families — $2,085 or 2.5% of income, whichever is greater. 
Individual adults — $695 or 2.5% of income. 

"It's designed to be this kind of gentle nudge that becomes not so gentle in a couple years," Adams says.

Some analysts predict young people will look at the first year penalties and shrug. If you're under 26, you can always sign up for your parents' health care plan. And paying a $95 fee may not seem all that tough a burden  when you compare it to the potential higher cost of a year-round health care plan. 

It's not the end of the world if that happens, but it could mean some trouble for Obamacare. A lot of the new plan's success rides on whether it can attract consumers who are both young and healthy along with the older, unhealthy sect in order to keep costs affordable for everyone. If young, healthy, uninsured people decide they'd rather pay a fee than shell out hundreds of dollars per year for a health policy they doubt they'll use, leaving mostly unhealthy, older people enrolled, it could throw things out of balance and make policies more expensive. 

But given the results of this Kaiser Permanente poll, in which nearly 77% of 18- to 25-year-olds said health care is very important, those worries may be overblown.

*The bottom line: *It's up to you whether or not you can afford to skip out on health care. For now, kick back and wait until the exchange opens in October until you start to worry. You can do some searching and see what rates are really out there before making your decision. Any speculation on costs before then is basically white noise as far as we're concerned. 

-*What about Medicaid? *-

Families and individuals who earn less than 138% of the federal poverty level will still have access to Medicaid.

At best, Medicare coverage in states will be expanded under Obamacare. At worst, states will exercise their right to skip an expansion in favor of the status quo. So far, about 13 states have opted out of an expansion. This map shows where each states stands as of June 14.

-*How much can I expect my health care costs to rise? *-

We wish there were an easy way to answer this question. Because each state is in the process of submitting estimates from insurer, we can only guess at premium costs as numbers trickle in. The Wall Street Journal analyzed estimates from eight states and pretty much confirmed what experts had predicted — that the new health care plans will be more expensive for the young and the healthy.

"Healthy consumers could see insurance rates double or even triple when they look for individual coverage under the federal health law later this year, while the premiums paid by sicker people are set to become more affordable," the WSJ's Louise Radnofsky reports.

Even so, there's still a chance rates could decrease over time if insurance regulators decide to lower them in order to compete in the marketplace. And if that happens, then, well, Obamacare is officially doing its job. We've already seen that happen in Oregon, and as Politico's Jason Milliman points out, since all rates have yet to go through the state review process, anything could happen.

"The prices that many people can expect to pay, though, may remain a mystery for a few more months," he writes. "The feds, who are reviewing rates for exchange plans in more than half the states, have released limited information so far about who’s even asked to sell on federal-run insurance marketplaces, let alone what they’d like to charge."

Join the conversation about this story »

 
 
 
  Reported by Business Insider 7 hours ago.

Health Insurance Rates May Double, Triple for Healthy Americans

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According to a new Wall Street Journal analysis, healthy Americans may see their health insurance rates double or triple upon Obamacare’s January 2014 grand opening.

Insurance premiums for sicker Americans will become less expensive as healthier Americans are forced to buy coverage or additional coverage to what they currently have or face government fines and penalties.

The Journal examined figures from eight states to demonstrate the cost increases for healthier Americans.



Virginia is one of the eight states examined by the Journal and offers a fairly typical picture.

In Richmond, a 40-year-old male nonsmoker logging on to the eHealthInsurance comparison-shopping website today would see a plan that costs $63 a month from Anthem, a unit of WellPoint Inc. That plan has a $5,000 deductible and covers half of medical costs.

By comparison, the least-expensive plan on the exchange for a 40-year-old nonsmoker in Richmond, also from Anthem, will likely cost $193 a month, according to filings submitted by carriers.



Conversely, premiums will be next to zero for a 40-year-old Virginian whose income was near the poverty level ($11,490 for a single person) due to a $234 a month government subsidy.

 
 
 
  Reported by Breitbart 6 hours ago.

Zane Benefits Publishes New Information on the Tennessee Health Insurance Exchange

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Online marketplace to open for Tennessee residents October 1

Park City, Utah (PRWEB) July 01, 2013

Today, Zane Benefits, the online alternative to group health insurance, published new information on the Tennessee Health Insurance Exchange.

According to Zane Benefits’ website, beginning in 2014 as part of the Affordable Care Act, health insurance coverage for individuals and small businesses will become available through new state health insurance exchanges.

All states have three options for setting up a state health insurance exchange for 2014: build a state-based exchange, enter into a state-federal partnership exchange, or default to a federally-facilitated exchange.

On December 10, 2012 Governor Haslam announced that Tennessee would not operate a state-based exchange. Therefore, Tennessee will default to the federally-run health insurance exchange.

According to Zane Benefits’ website, the Tennessee Health Insurance Exchange will be operated through a federally-run health insurance exchange, also referred to as the Health Insurance Marketplace. Starting in October 2013, Tennessee residents will be able to access information about all the plans available through the Exchange. The SHOP Exchange will also be available to small businesses with 100 or fewer employers. Coverage from the Exchange starts in January 2014.

A key part of the Tennessee Health Insurance Exchange is that eligible individuals and families will be able to access individual tax subsidies, capping the cost of their premium between 2% to 9.5% of income. Eligibility is based on household size and income (up to 400% FPL). The Exchange will also screen for Medicaid and public assistance programs.

Click here to read full article.

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About Zane Benefits
Zane Benefits was founded in 2006 to provide a revolutionized SaaS (Software-as-a-Service) administration platform ("ZaneHRA") for Health Reimbursement Arrangements (HRAs) and defined contribution health care. The flagship software provides a 100% paperless administration experience to small businesses and insurance professionals that want to offer better health benefits without a traditional group health insurance plan at lower costs. For more information about Health Reimbursement Arrangements or Zane Benefits, click here. Reported by PRWeb 4 hours ago.

Officials to weigh benefits of Alzheimer’s test

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Since the condition is incurable, some question whether a $3,000 test for Alzheimer’s should be covered by federal health insurance. Reported by Seattle Times 2 hours ago.
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