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Harken to exit Illinois Obamacare exchange

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Harken Health is abandoning the state's Obamacare health insurance marketplace.

Harken, a subsidiary of UnitedHealthcare, said Thursday it will not offer individual plans on the exchange next year. Insurers Aetna, UnitedHealthcare and Land of Lincoln already have announced they won't offer plans... Reported by ChicagoTribune 22 hours ago.

Report says Obama administration failed to follow health law

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The Obama administration failed to follow the president’s health care law in a $5 billion dispute over compensating insurers for high costs from seriously ill patients, Congress’ investigative arm said Thursday. The opinion from the Government Accountability Office is a setback for the White House and bolsters Republican complaints that administration officials bent the law as problems arose carrying out its complex provisions. The three-year program collects fees from employer and other private health insurance plans and channels the money to health plans that face large claims for treating patients with catastrophic medical problems. The Health and Human Services Department “lacks authority to ignore the statute’s directive to deposit amounts (collected under the program) in the Treasury,” the office’s general counsel, Susan Poling, wrote. The reinsurance program is one of three financial backstops created by the Affordable Care Act to support insurers as they built their customer base in the new markets for subsidized private policies. Reported by SFGate 21 hours ago.

Individual exchange health plans to go up average of 30 percent

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Rates for health insurance plans on the individual marketplace are likely to rise by an average of 30 percent next year, the... Reported by Deseret News 20 hours ago.

The 10 most important things in the world right now

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The 10 most important things in the world right now Hello! Here's what you need to know on Friday.

*1. USA Today issued an unprecedented scathing rebuke of US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.* In the 34 years USA Today has printed papers, its editorial board has never taken a position in a presidential election.

*2. OPEC reached an agreement to limit its production at its upcoming policy meeting in November to a range of 32.5 million to 33 million barrels per day,* down from the current estimated level of 33.24 million bpd.

*3. Saudi Arabia warned of "disastrous consequences" from a United States law allowing 9/11 victims to sue the kingdom.* The US Congress voted overwhelmingly to override President Barack Obama's veto of the act.

*4. World leaders are expected in Israel for the funeral of ex-prime minister and Nobel Peace Prize winner Shimon Peres.* Some 70 countries were to be represented, from US President Barack Obama to Prince Charles.

*5. Salesforce is trying to convince US and European regulators to intervene in Microsoft's LinkedIn acquisition,* but Microsoft is ready to spark a price war and "bring competition" to the cloud market that Salesforce dominates.

*6. A startup specifically designed to sell Obamacare is quitting Obamacare.* Harken Health Insurance had been launched in early 2016 to create tailored plans that would make money in the ACA.

*7. Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte appeared to liken himself to Nazi leader Adolf Hitler,* saying he would "be happy" to exterminate three million drug users and peddlers in the country.

*8. The US has ordered families of government personnel stationed in the Democratic Republic of Congo to leave amid fears about escalating violence.* "The potential for civil unrest is high in parts of Kinshasa and other major cities,"the State Department said

*9. India is considering new economic and diplomatic measures to bring pressure to bear on Pakistan.* Indian officials acknowledged this week that teams of elite troops had killed several Pakistani militants it believed were planning to attack major cities.

*10. Facebook's $2 billion bet on virtual reality is in jeopardy because of Oculus Rift developer Palmer Luckey,* who's financing an alt-right political group with roots in a white supremacist subreddit.

*And finally ...*

*The top 50 dream companies for business students around the world.*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: London is building Europe's tallest residential skyscraper Reported by Business Insider 14 hours ago.

Masii now #1 Comparison Site in Thailand

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SimilarWeb report: Masii.co.th wins highest traffic share of all financial compare sites in Thailand

Bangkok, Thailand (PRWEB) September 30, 2016

According to traffic figures from SimilarWeb accessed on Sep 28, 2016, new Thai comparison startup Masii took the top spot for visitors during the 28 days.

The report shows Masii.co.th with 352k visitors, followed by GoBear (307k), Silkspan (202k), and CompareAsia's MoneyGuru (69k). The visitors are measured for the 28 day period leading up to Sep 26, 2016.

"We are seeing a lot of success from offline marketing initiatives and are looking to double down on what's working," said marketing executive Asama Aphaiwong.

Masii.co.th is Thailand's newest place to compare car insurance, health insurance, credit cards, and mobile phones. They are backed by B.Grimm, one of Thailand's oldest and most reputable businesses with a history dating back to 1878.

"We're proud but know we have big work ahead. The Thai market is extremely promising, and we're honored the numbers show so many Thais and expats choosing Masii," said Lukas Mueller, VP of R&I. Reported by PRWeb 14 hours ago.

Frontrunning: September 30

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· Asia stocks slide as Deutsche sours mood, oil pulls back (Reuters)
· Deutsche Bank Drops to Record as Some Clients Reduce Exposure (BBG)
· Deutsche CEO tries to reassure staff as shares plunge (Reuters)
· Oil falls as investors cash in on OPEC deal rally, dollar rises (Reuters)
· Three Chinese fishermen killed in confrontation with South Korea coastguard (Reuters)
· Och-Ziff Plea Stalls Rise of Hedge-Fund Billionaire’s Protege (BBG)
· Qualcomm in Talks to Acquire NXP Semiconductors (WSJ)
· Syrian army, rebels wage fierce battles in Aleppo (Reuters)
· Euro-Area Inflation Accelerates to Fastest Rate Since 2014 (BBG)
· Pakistan 'completely rejects' Indian claim of cross-border strikes (Reuters)
· Clinton says Trump may have violated U.S. law on Cuba (Reuters)
· Promontory Financial Group Signs Up With IBM (WSJ)
· Refiners Stung by OPEC Output Deal Face a Bigger Problem (BBG)
· Global funds add to Japan, euro zone bonds, see no further sell offs (Reuters)
· Bulgaria bans full-face veils in public places (Reuters)
· Congress’s Retreat on 9/11 Saudi Bill Shows Fear of Backlash (BBG)
· Samsung slammed by Chinese state TV over Note 7 recall 'discrimination' (Reuters)
· In OPEC Hotel, Dealmaker’s Gambit Wins Saudi-Iran Agreement (BBG)
· Turkey pulls plug on 20 radio, TV channels in post-coup emergency decree (Reuters)

 

*Overnight Media Digest*

WSJ

- Qualcomm Inc is in talks to buy NXP Semiconductors NV in a deal that could cost more than $30 billion, accelerating a consolidation rush in the semiconductor industry. http://on.wsj.com/2dvNIzR

- Dunkin' Brands Group Inc said it would launch bottled Dunkin' Donuts coffee in U.S. early next year, which will be produced and distributed by Coca-Cola Co. http://on.wsj.com/2dvOj4J

- Nissan Motor Co Ltd may scrap an investment in the United Kingdom without more clarity on the country's plans for post-Brexit trade relations with the European Union, Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn said. http://on.wsj.com/2dvNw3z

- Salesforce.com Inc said it would ask regulators in the US and EU to block Microsoft Corp's $26.2 billion acquisition of LinkedIn Corp, saying the deal would hurt competition. http://on.wsj.com/2dvOAo3

 

FT

Nissan Motor Co Ltd wants Britain to pledge compensation for any tax barriers resulting from its decision to leave the European Union, or the Japanese automaker could scrap a potential new investment in the country's biggest car plant in Sunderland, Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn said on Thursday.

The Association of British Insurers in a new submission to government called for a regulatory environment that "is appropriate for the UK market", in the biggest hint yet that it will push for changes to the Solvency II capital rules following Britain's vote to leave the EU.

Telenor ASA has warned a UK regulator that pursuing a "legal separation" of BT Group Plc and its Openreach unit is a "dead end", according to a letter sent by the Norwegian telecom's boss to Ofcom Chief Executive Sharon White.

A planned reform of global banking rules being discussed by the United States, Europe, Japan and other major economies risks negatively affecting European banks and needs to be changed, the EU financial services commissioner said on Thursday.

 

NYT

- Harvard has brought in a new manager from Columbia University to run its $36 billion endowment, the largest of any university. N. P. Narvekar, 54, was appointed president and chief executive of Harvard Management Company, the university said in a statement on Thursday. http://nyti.ms/2dbOan8

- Nutanix Inc priced its $238 million initial public offering, with a valuation of $2.18 billion - slightly higher than the one it received in the private markets two and a half years ago. http://nyti.ms/2dE7tkL

- Federal auditors ruled on Thursday that the Obama administration had violated the law by paying health insurance companies more than allowed under the Affordable Care Act in an effort to hold down insurance premiums. http://nyti.ms/2dr8YkS

- The Obama administration, in its latest effort to update workplace policies it says have lagged far behind the realities of Americans' lives, will require federal government contractors to provide paid sick leave to their workers. http://nyti.ms/2daEXYS

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Ontario, Quebec and California environment ministers met in Toronto Thursday and discussed Ontario's plan to join the Western Climate Initiative, which is dominated by the U.S. state whose population is double that of the two provinces. http://bit.ly/2dJJC6i

** At least two unexplained cases of sudden, partial paralysis in young children have been confirmed in Canada, and doctors believe the cases could be linked to the return of a virus that in 2014 sent hundreds of North American children to hospital with severe respiratory illness. http://bit.ly/2d0MRCa

** Enbridge Inc will sell a key Saskatchewan pipeline system for $1.075 billion as it looks for financial room to help it proceed with its massive takeover of Houston-based Spectra Energy Corp. The deal announced late Thursday will see private midstream firm Tundra Energy Marketing Ltd buy Enbridge's South East Saskatchewan pipeline system. http://bit.ly/2dwoxZE

NATIONAL POST

** Loyal BlackBerry fans may still be able to get their thumbs on a last new, in-house designed handset despite the company's decision to stop developing hardware internally by the end of its fiscal year. BlackBerry Ltd CEO John Chen is in the midst of testing a handset prototype - it sounds like it features the beloved keyboard - that was already in the works when the company decided to give up hardware development to focus on software, he told reporters at a round-table discussion at the Waterloo headquarters on Wednesday. http://bit.ly/2dEDqcy

** Bank branch closures and staff cuts aren't new to the financial services industry as it adjusts to customer demands for more online and mobile services, and competition from fintech rivals. But Laurentian Bank of Canada's announcement late Thursday that 50 branches will be merged, eliminating around 300 employees in the process, was particularly bold, says Rob Sedran, an analyst at CIBC World Markets. http://bit.ly/2cQe7pk

** The Competition Bureau is going after the Vancouver Airport Authority for restricting competition among in-flight catering companies. An investigation by the bureau found that the airport authority has "refused" to give new in-flight catering suppliers access to the Vancouver International Airport, even though the airlines that use the airport want more choice in suppliers. http://bit.ly/2dEEuxc

 

Britain

The Times

British Steel will be capable of making profits of £150 million ($194.46 million) a year if it gets the right government support, Roland Junck, the company's executive chairman said. (http://bit.ly/2dbg3M3)

Jeremy Corbyn and Labour MPs are edging towards a "coalition agreement" that would allow members of the parliamentary party to choose who fills some shadow cabinet posts. (http://bit.ly/2dbllHl)

The Guardian

London Mayor Sadiq Khan is planning to launch the UK's most comprehensive inquiry into the impact of foreign investment flooding London's housing market. (http://bit.ly/2dbhgmA)

The European head of Airbnb has denied claims that the company is driving up property prices and perpetuating London's housing crisis. (http://bit.ly/2dbhiL7)

The Telegraph

Commerzbank, the second-biggest bank in Germany, has suspended its dividend and revealed more than 9,000 job losses. (http://bit.ly/2dbiBK0)

Sky News

Two of Europe's biggest web hosting service providers, Strato and Hellman & Friedman, are teaming up with private equity groups in a bid to win control of a British-based Host Europe. (http://bit.ly/2dbimic)

Government ministers and stakeholders from the UK, France and China have attended a ceremony to officially agree the £18bn Hinkley Point C nuclear power station. (http://bit.ly/2dbjmTB)

The Independent

Vitol, the world's biggest oil trader, faces a potential scandal over claims it ripped off the people of impoverished Mozambique for critical fuel by at least $80 million last year. (http://ind.pn/2dbjJgY)

Deutsche Bank came under mounting pressure after it emerged that some hedge funds worried about its financial strength had started to trim their exposure to the troubled lender. (http://bit.ly/2dbkVAP)

  Reported by Zero Hedge 9 hours ago.

List Leaders: Meet the top 5 health insurers in Oregon

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The five largest accident and health insurance companies serving customers in Oregon controlled 61 percent of the state's market share last year. That's unchanged since 2014 for the group, which collectively grew their total written premiums by 7 percent, to $6.6 billion in 2015. The figures come from the Oregon Department of Consumer & Business Services, which regulates the industry. Click on the images above to see the 5 accident and health insurance companies with the highest total premiums… Reported by bizjournals 7 hours ago.

Bold, Smart, Progressive Ideas To Strengthen Social Security

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For reasons I'll get to in a moment, I was really struck by the title of this excellent, important new paper by my CBPP colleague Kathleen Romig: *Increasing Payroll Taxes Would Strengthen Social Security*.

It is well understood that Social Security's financing needs shoring up; we've been drawing down the trust funds to meet current obligations and by 2034 the funds will be exhausted. That's often mistakenly taken to mean that Social Security will no longer pay out benefits, which of course is wrong: 86 percent of its income comes from payroll taxes, which will continue to support the program, allowing it to pay about three-fourths of scheduled benefits in 2035 and beyond. To be clear, that is a totally unacceptable outcome, and one that could be--must be--avoided using Romig's roadmap. She is absolutely correct when she describes, contrary to the hysteria I often hear on this issue, that Social Security's shortfall is "significant, though manageable."

In fact, the shortfall amounts to 1 percent of GDP over the next 75 years. So how can we close that gap? Much of the solution will have to involve increasing the payroll tax revenue that, as noted, is the mainstay of the program's funding.

Romig's key argument is that such an increase is justified by recent trends: "Social Security's tax base has eroded since the last time policymakers addressed solvency in 1983, largely due to increased inequality and the rising cost of non-taxed fringe benefits, such as health insurance."

But Americans wouldn't stand for reversing that erosion through paying more into the program, right? In fact, Romig notes that "...the majority of Americans oppose cuts to Social Security and support strengthening the program by contributing more in taxes." Other than Medicare, there may be no other government program that has this kind of support. So we should tap it.

To do so, she suggests three revenue-enhancing changes:· *Increasing or eliminating Social Security's cap on taxable wages*. The current salary cap on payroll taxes is now118,500 a year. "Raising the cap would help mitigate the erosion of Social Security's payroll tax base caused by rising wage inequality. Most workers' taxes would not change...changes to the tax cap could close roughly a quarter to nearly nine-tenths of Social Security's solvency gap, depending on how they were structured."· *Expanding compensation subject to Social Security payroll taxes*. This would be a big change, but a worthy and a progressive one. The play is "to include fringe benefits such as employer-sponsored health insurance and flexible spending accounts. Fringe benefits are a growing slice of compensation, and including them in Social Security's tax base would eliminate the discrepancy between those who receive fringe benefits and those who don't. Affected workers -- who would disproportionately be lower- and middle-income -- would pay more in taxes but also receive more in Social Security benefits. Including employer-sponsored health insurance premiums could close over one-third of Social Security's solvency gap; including other fringe benefits could close [another] one-tenth."· *Increasing Social Security payroll tax rates*. As other aged wonks will remember, this wouldn't be the first time the rate was increased, as the early 1980s commission headed by that wild-eyed radical Alan Greenspan also recommended various revenue boosters that became law in 1983. "Increasing rates alone could close the entire solvency gap; even a modest change, such as a gradual increase of 0.3 percentage points each for employees and employers (or less than3 per week for an average earner), could close about one-fifth of the gap."
The two figures below show the extent to which the compensation base of the program has eroded, due in part to rising earnings inequality pushing a larger share of earnings above the payroll cap. Note first how that total amount of compensation has drifted about the taxable earnings base. The base for the payroll tax used to be three-quarters of total compensation; now it's about two-thirds.

There are two main reasons for that: higher inequality and the fact that an increasing share of compensation goes to health care and other fringes that are outside the payroll tax base.

The earnings inequality problem is clear in the next figure. The last time we addressed the shortfall, the payroll tax covered 90 percent of earnings. Now it covers only 82 percent.

It is often said that there are three legs to the retirement-security stool: savings, pensions, and Social Security. In benighted DC discussions, Social Security is often derided as the shakiest leg. In fact, it's the firmest, as decades of wage stagnation and risk shifting (both the shift from defined-benefit to defined-contribution pensions and the simple shedding of pension plans) have undermined the other two legs.

Romig's big three ideas are great ways to make the strongest leg of the stool even stronger, through broadening the base to correct the factors responsible for its erosion. Yes, that's a tax increase, which is why I was struck by the boldness of her title. We are in an era where even the Democratic candidate for president will not propose tax increases on any but the top 5 percent; where we are somehow supposed to fund our transportation infrastructure on a gas tax that's been frozen in nominal terms since 1993.

It is only in magical lands that we can get what we want and need without paying for it. In the real world, this is the way forward, and kudos to Romig (and CBPP) for saying so.This post originally appeared at Jared Bernstein's On The Economy blog.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 4 hours ago.

Minnesota regulator: Insurance market in dire situation

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ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Minnesota’s top health insurance regulator says the state’s individual market is in “an emergency situation.” Department of Commerce Commissioner Mike Rothman said Friday that all seven companies offering plans through the state’s exchange or directly to consumers were prepared to leave the market for 2017 following a major insurer’s exit […] Reported by Seattle Times 3 hours ago.

MN insurance premiums jump, state calls increases 'unsustainable'

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Minnesota insurers will increase rates for individual health plans by an average of more than 50 percent next year, a trend toward increasing costs that regulators are calling unsustainable. The surge in premiums, announced by the state Friday, was expected after the federal government revealed premium increase requests from insurers earlier this summer. State regulators had final say over whether those increases would be approved and released details Friday. "Minnesota’s individual health insurance… Reported by bizjournals 1 hour ago.

Insurance startup withdraws from ACA exchanges

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Harken Health Insurance, a startup controlled by UnitedHealth Group, is withdrawing from exchanges created by the Affordable  -More-  Reported by SmartBrief 16 minutes ago.

Apple's push into healthcare now includes Apple Watch data

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Apple and Aetna both have something to gain from a new partnership that allows Aetna customers to get discounted Apple Watches through their insurance: Your data.

Aetna customers who opt to purchase Apple Watches through the partnership between the two companies will be sharing their health data with the tech giant and the insurance provider. 

Aetna and Apple announced Tuesday that the insurance provider would be the first to subsidize purchases of the Apple Watch for its customers. Along with its Apple Watch subsidy, Aetna will develop iOS apps around medical care, medical billing, Aetna insurance plans and adherence to medication.  Read more...

More about Wearable Tech, Wearables, Fitbit, Health Insurance, and Apple Reported by Mashable 8 hours ago.

Opportunities in Expat Health Insurance segment

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Generally people think of individual International Health Insurance if they are not covered under a... Reported by Finextra 2 hours ago.

Will Distrust of Hillary Cause People to Vote against their Own Interests?

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It is mind-boggling that some people will consider voting against their own best interest because of what they say is 'distrust' of Hillary. I know gay people who will vote for Trump knowing the Party whose principles they claimed to support is gone. These few people are hopeless and not even worth trying to convince otherwise. They are willing to vote for the candidate running on the most anti-gay Platform ever written. The candidate committed to nominating judges who will vote to take away any gains the LGBT community has made. Supporting a homophobic, xenophobic, sexist, racist, bully says as much about them as the candidate.

Those who I would like to understand better are represented by three young women interviewed by Nicole Wallace for the Today Show last Thursday morning. Three apparently very bright young women, moms, in North Carolina who said they watched the debate and thought Hillary did much better but had not yet made up their minds who to vote for.

One said Donald Trump's healthcare plan would destroy her ability to get insurance and take care of her child who has diabetes. She is a single mom and said Donald Trump has no idea what life is like for her living from paycheck to paycheck. Wallace asked her what there was about Hillary that she wouldn't commit her vote to her now. Her response was "she didn't quite 'trust' her" and mentioned her emails. She said she hoped to make up her mind before she had to vote but may only decide when actually casting her ballot.

Wallace should have asked her 'what impact Hillary Clinton's private email server had on her family and could any impact compare with losing her and her child's health insurance'? A good question would have been 'Is there anything about electing a highly qualified woman, one who has brought up her own child, and is now a grandmother, that resonates with her'?

Then I would like to question every millennial who says they may vote for a third Party candidate because they 'distrust' Hillary. It would be interesting to ask them how they have come to distrust Hillary so much. Was it 25 years and a billion dollars of Republican attacks? Was it the email server? Then I would ask them the same question, how Hillary's use of the private email server impacted your life?

It could be instructive to ask every millennial to make a list of the issues that concern them? What are their key issues? Is there anything Donald Trump says that meets the needs they have?

If they say they are voting for either Gary Johnson or Jill Stein I would ask if they know their platforms. Do they know the policies they have recommended? Without knowing for sure it would surprise me if most know where those candidates stand on most issues they care about. In many cases the candidates haven't said.

From listening to millennials I know I would want to ask if the candidate they intend to vote for has promised to work towards; making college free for some and debt free for others; lowering interest rates on student loans; raising the minimum wage; rebuilding the nation's infrastructure; toward universal healthcare; or fighting climate change?

This 'distrust' of Hillary has reached epic proportions but what is it really based on. Yes the current email issue is a self-inflicted one which took Hillary too long to apologize for. But she has now and the fact is her use of the private email server has never been shown to have hurt one individual or the nation in any way.

The old so-called 'scandals' which are really ancient history to most millennials; Whitewater, Travelgate, and even accusing her of murdering Vince Foster, have all been investigated and shown Hillary did nothing wrong. So I congratulate the Republican Party for so thoroughly smearing a decent person that now nearly 58% think she isn't trustworthy.

To women and millennials I ask again you take the time to think about all the issues important to you. Those that will impact your life and that of your friends and family. Make that list and check every item off for each candidate. I am 100% positive you will see only Hillary Clinton has worked on all the issues you care about. She has done so successfully in the past and has made a commitment to continue to work on them and has delineated clear policies to make progress.

Don't let some amorphous 'distrust' get you to vote against your own best interests. If you end up helping to elect Donald Trump you will live to regret it.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 26 seconds ago.

Zipari Announces New Client: Minuteman Health

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Minuteman Health taps Zipari provider search solution for a better member experience and to learn more about existing and prospective members

Brooklyn, NY (PRWEB) October 03, 2016

Insurance software startup, Zipari, announced that it has been selected as a technology partner for Boston-based Minuteman Health. Minuteman Health provides affordable health insurance options for individuals and employers in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, and has retained Zipari for its provider search solution.

Zipari’s Provider Search gives Minuteman Health prospects and members a seamless way to search and compare doctors and facilities. Automated data feeds keep provider information up-to-date. Personalized advanced search compares and saves favorite doctors and facilities. Detailed provider profiles are accessible anywhere which helps Minuteman Health promote shopping for consumers. Click-to-call and automated directions facilitate a positive member journey.

“A quality provider search is an important way to reinforce a health insurance company’s brand, and offer an opportunity to learn more about potential members and existing members,” said Zipari’s CEO and Co-Founder, Mark Nathan. “It should not only offer frictionless ease of use, but should provide a key touchpoint for the insurance company to become smarter about what its members and prospects need so they can deliver it quickly and in a targeted fashion that is welcomed. We offer that – through our deep experience, focused on health insurance – and we’re excited to provide that to Minuteman Health.”

“When we say we offer high quality care through a network of top-rated hospitals and physicians – we need to help consumers and members verify it in an easy seamless way,” said Lisa McTighe, Director of Marketing and Communications of Minuteman Health. “Today’s health insurance needs to be intuitive in how you use it, starting with its digital presence. That’s why we are always looking for solutions that illustrate our commitment to our members’ experience.”

About Zipari
Based in Brooklyn, New York, Zipari, is a technology startup that develops solutions for carriers to engage with consumers in new and innovative ways. Powered by consumer analytics, Zipari’s insurance-specific Consumer Experience Platform and CRM Applications provide carriers with real-time insights into consumer behavior at every touch-point, allowing them to provide a seamless customer experience.

About Minuteman Health
Minuteman Health, Inc. is a non-profit health maintenance organization (HMO) committed to removing inefficiencies from today’s health insurance system and providing high-quality care and affordable premiums for individuals and employers in Massachusetts and New Hampshire.

Minuteman Health’s provider networks include hospitals, physicians, and specialists who provide high quality care at lower costs in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Updates on Minuteman Health’s growing provider networks can be found at http://www.minutemanhealth.org.
     
Minuteman is marketed in Massachusetts through its website, brokers, Health Services Administrators (http://www.HSAinsurance.com) and the Massachusetts Health Connector. It is marketing in New Hampshire through its website, brokers, and the Federal Healthcare Exchange. Reported by PRWeb 1 day ago.

FlexJobs Reports: Millennials’ Interest in Travel and Work Flexibility Higher than Gen X and Boomers

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15 Percent of Millennials Identify as Digital Nomads, Cite Travel as a Primary Reason to Work

Boulder, CO (PRWEB) October 03, 2016

According to FlexJobs’ survey, travel is a surprisingly popular motivator for why people work: 70 percent of millennials say the desire to travel is a primary reason to work, second only to paying for basic necessities (88 percent). Gen X respondents ranked travel (60 percent) as the fourth most important reason for working, and boomers ranked travel (47 percent) fifth in importance. 15 percent of millennials in the survey identified as digital nomads/travelers, compared to 11 percent of gen X and 8 percent of boomers.

While work-life balance, workplace flexibility, and salary are the top three factors the three generations consider when evaluating a job prospect, rankings vary: 82 percent of millennials cite work flexibility as a factor compared to 81 percent of gen X and 79 percent of boomers. Work schedule was also more important to millennials (65 percent), whereas only 57 percent of gen X and 62 percent of boomers said it was a consideration.

“Since millennials are now the largest generation in the U.S. labor workforce, it’s critical that companies pay attention to how, where and when they work best,” said Sara Sutton Fell, Founder and CEO of FlexJobs. “82 percent of millennials said they would be more loyal to their employers if they had flexible work options and nearly a quarter would be willing to work more hours. So offering millennials work flexibility isn’t just a strategy to avoid negative consequences like losing talent--employers have a lot to gain by modifying their strict, traditional, office-based model of working.”

Other findings include:

Millennials Place High Value on Work Flexibility
Millennials place an extremely high value on work flexibility:· Work-life balance (84%) was ranked the most important factor when evaluating a job prospect.
· Work flexibility came in as the second most important factor (82%), and salary ranked third (80%), all ranked well above other factors such as health insurance (48%), company reputation (45%), and 401(k)/retirement benefits (36%)
· 34% have actually left a job because it did not have work flexibility
· 14% have considered leaving a job because it did not have work flexibility
· 24% are currently looking for a new job because of work flexibility issues

Workstyle Reasons Millennials Are Interested in Work Flexibility
Work flexibility appeals to different groups within the generation.· Millennials identified primarily with the following groups: working parents (40%), freelancers (26%), introverts (30%), entrepreneurs (18%), students (17%) and digital nomads (15%)
· Millennials interested in work flexibility are highly educated and experienced workers. 74% of respondents have a college or graduate degree and 20% are already manager level or higher.

Employer Benefits
Millennials report being willing to make bottom-line saving sacrifices in exchange for telecommuting options:· 35% of respondents said they would take a 10% or 20% cut in pay
· 27% are willing to forfeit vacation time
· 22% would be willing to work more hours
· 82% of respondents also say they would be more loyal to their employers if they had flexible work options
· 60% of millennials think they would more be more productive at home vs an office

Generational differences*· While millennials tend to be associated with freelance work more so than other generations, these results showed they were less inclined: only 42% of millennials were open to freelancing as a flexible work arrangement. 47% of gen X and 44% of boomers expressed interest in freelancing.
· Millennials report “needing and wanting to work” versus just “needing to work” at a higher rate (71%) than gen X (65%) and boomers (66%).
· Millennials report being required to be at the office to work at a much higher rate (34 percent) than gen X (26%) and boomers (19%).
· Yet, millennials show a stronger preference for working at a coffee shop, coworking space, library, or other place besides the office (11%) compared to gen X (8%) and boomers (6%).

Generational similarities:· None of the generations site the office during traditional hours as their location of choice for optimum productivity.
· None of the generations seem to be overly concerned about the negative impact a flexible work arrangement might have on their career progression.
· The three generations reported having been the victims of job scams at a similar rate (14%).
· All three generations use social media similarly in their job search, with LinkedIn being the primary channel and Facebook a distant second.

*Generational breakdown of the respondents:
Millennials (678 respondents), Gen X (1,358 respondents), Boomer (845 respondents).

For more information visit: https://www.flexjobs.com/employer-blog/flexjobs-survey-millennials-interested-travel-work-flexibility/

To request additional information, please contact Kathy Gardner at kgardner(at)flexjobs(dot)com.

About FlexJobs
FlexJobs is the leading online service for professionals seeking telecommuting, flexible schedule, part-time, and freelance jobs. With flexible job listings in over 50 career categories, and opportunities ranging from entry-level to executive and freelance to full-time, FlexJobs offers job seekers a safe, easy, and efficient way to find professional and legitimate flexible job listings. Having helped nearly 2 million people in their job searches, FlexJobs has appeared on CNN and Marketplace Money and in TIME, Forbes, Fortune, and hundreds of other trusted media outlets. FlexJobs' Founder & CEO Sara Sutton Fell has also launched two additional partner sites, Remote.co and 1 Million for Work Flexibility, to help provide education and awareness about the viability and benefits of remote working and work flexibility. Sutton Fell is also the creator of The TRaD* Works Forum (*Telecommuting, Remote, & Distributed), dedicated to helping companies leverage the benefits of telecommuting, remote and distributed teams. Reported by PRWeb 1 day ago.

Dreamforce Features New Pet Tech Company

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Figo, one of the eminent cloud-based technology startups to come out recently, is honored to be recognized by Salesforce at this year’s conference.

(PRWEB) October 03, 2016

Join Figo on Oct. 4-5, at Dreamforce 2016 in San Francisco, as they showcase their cloud-based platform and discuss their innovative approach to customer service.

Dreamforce is the world's largest software conference, and the destination for discovering inspiring startups. This year they've singled out Figo, among approximately 35 other startups from around the world, to be featured in their exclusive Startup Valley event.

“We are thrilled to be part of Dreamforce and to be able to share our experience with a larger audience,” said Figo founder and CEO Rusty Sproat. "Having come out of a Google Tech Hub [Chicago's 1871], we built our company using a no-stack approach. Salesforce has been an integral part of how we have been able to scale and transform the customer experience.

Figo is an exciting new contender in the pet marketplace that has melded their proprietary Pet Cloud technology with affordable pet health insurance.

Some features of the Figo Pet Cloud include:
Upload and access medical records, vet bills, pictures and other important files
Receive vaccination, appointments and important reminders
Find groomers, hotels, daycare, parks and pet friendly businesses in seconds
Online Pet Profiles, digital tags and group texting to reunite lost pets faster
File a claim via your smartphone and get paid electronically

“Figo is all about making life easier for people and their pets,” explains Sproat. “From day one, we set out to start a company that would entirely change the way we manage our pet’s lives and health. The Pet Cloud puts the entire life of your pet in the palm of your hand, and our healthcare plans are simple and easy to understand.”

On Tuesday, Oct. 4, starting at 12:30 p.m., Figo VP of Sales and Operations Justin Lyons will be speaking on the Dreamforce panel "How can small businesses crush the competition in customer support?" at the San Francisco Marriott Marquis Hotel, Foothill F.

On Wednesday, Oct. 5, Figo will be fielding questions on entrepreneurship, their technology, and how they use Salesforce to thrive, at Dreamforce's Startup Valley located on the 1st Floor of the Moscone West.

About
Born in a Google Tech Hub—Chicago’s premiere 1871 incubator for digital startups—Figo is the first lifestyle and technology brand to meet the demands of the 21st century pet owner. Their straightforward mobile experience melds innovative cloud technology with affordable and easy to understand insurance. Figo has been featured in Crain’s Chicago Business, Inc. Magazine, Fortune, The Chicago Tribune, and on NBC. Recently, they received the 2016 SMA Innovation in Action Award. Reported by PRWeb 1 day ago.

Another insurer withdraws from Kentucky's insurance market

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Baptist Health Plan will withdraw from Kentucky's individual health insurance market for the 2017 plan year. Baptist Health Plan is Kentucky's fourth-largest health insurance provider, according to a news release from the Kentucky Department of Insurance, and about 7,000 Kentuckians will be affected. In a letter to Kentucky insurance commissioner Brian Maynard, Baptist Health Plan president James Fritz said Baptist enrolled more members in the individual market than expected in 2016, but “the… Reported by bizjournals 1 day ago.

Patriotism over Partisanship

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*Now Is the Time for All Good Men & Women to Come to the Aid of their Country*
The United States of America is on suicide watch. We all should pray that we wake up before it's too late.The nominee of one of our major parties poses a mortal threat to everything America at its best has been and is. American values and our very democracy are at stake in this year's election.

This is not a "reality show"; it's reality. It's not a football game; it's our country. It's not at all like, "I'm for Michigan, and no matter happens I'll always be against Ohio State." Our future depends on patriotic Americans putting the nation above partisanship.Many newspapers that have long identified with the Republican Party are endorsing Hillary Clinton this year. The Arizona Republic, which had never before in its history, going back to 1890, backed a Democrat for the presidency, endorsed Mrs. Clinton. "This year is different," the editors explain. "The 2016 Republican candidate is not conservative and he is not qualified."The Dallas Morning News, which had not endorsed a Democrat for president since before World War II, says: "There is only one serious candidate on the presidential ballot in November. We recommend Hillary Clinton.""Trump's values are hostile to conservatism." The Cincinnati Enquirer, which had endorsed every Republican candidate for the past 100 years, also joined the ranks of patriotism and sanity, saying that "Trump is a clear and present danger to our country" and "We need a leader who will bring out the best in all Americans, not the worst. That's why there is only one choice when we elect a president in November: Hillary Clinton."Donald Trump's campaign consists of lies--hundreds of lies. Today I'll focus on its two foundational lies, each the result of a highly successful disinformation campaign.

*America is Great Nowsize>*The first foundational Trump lie is that America is in awful shape and we must change course. While it's true that there are many Americans still hurting and we need to help them (which Mrs. Clinton has clear proposals to do, while Trump offers nothing but "I'll bring back those jobs--believe me!"), Trump's characterization of our nation and its direction is a web of lies. When George W. Bush left office, we were rapidly falling into a new Great Depression. How different it is today. In 2015, median household income rose by 5.2%, the biggest increase on record. More people (3.5 million) rose out of poverty last year than in any year since 1968. Unemployment, which peaked in the Bush Recession at 10% in 2009, is now less than half that (4.9%). Roughly 15 million new jobs have been created under Obama. The stock market hovers around record highs. The federal deficit is $327 billion, 80 percent lower than the $1.632 trillion it was in Bush's last fiscal year. Great progress has been made in clean energy. Oil imports have been cut by more than 60%. Violent crime is down by 16%. About 16 million more people have health insurance. The American military, which Trump constantly badmouths, is far and away the strongest in the world.The truth is that what Trump proposes is a return to the policies--massive tax cuts for the richest and deregulation of the financial industry--that produced not only the 2008 collapse (which Trump cheered because he could make money off it) but also the Great Depression. The slogan for Trump's trickle-down economics should be: "Make America a Great Depression Again!"

*Hillary Isn't What You Thinksize>*

The other foundational lie of the Trump campaign is that Hillary Clinton is a horrible person who is totally dishonest and untrustworthy. While it is, of course, true that Mrs. Clinton has not always been truthful (who among us has?), she has faced 25 years of intense scrutiny and attacks that would have destroyed almost anyone (Trump whines like a baby whenever anything doesn't go his way). Many of them--such as that she is a murderer, which Trump has again floated--are absurd. Much of Hillary's image as "crooked" and a "liar" stem from charges that were leveled during her husband's administration. All of them were thoroughly investigated by anti-Clinton special prosecutor Ken Starr and found to be baseless.What we constantly hear about now are "emails,""Benghazi," and "the Clinton Foundation." The private email server was certainly a mistake, but there is no indication that any harm came of it. Benghazi was a tragedy, but four Republican-led investigations, one of which climaxed in grilling Mrs. Clinton for eleven hours, found no wrongdoing on her part. And the supposed "scandal" involving the Clinton Foundation is entirely Trumped-up. It is a charitable organization that has done enormous good around the world, and the Clintons have never made a penny from it. Yet Trump lies and says they "enriched" themselves from the Foundation. Perhaps he was looking in a mirror, since he has repeatedly used the Trump Foundation for his personal gain.In fact, Hillary Clinton is the most qualified person ever to seek the presidency. Her accomplishments over her adult life are staggering: promoting the welfare of children, human rights, women's rights, the enormously successful Children's Health Insurance Program, getting through Congress a bill to rebuild after 9/11 and pushing a health bill for 9/11 first responders within the first 48 hours after the attack. (In contrast, Trump's immediate reaction to the fall of the twin towers was to brag that now his building was the tallest in the Financial District. Really. He said that on September 11, 2001.)Hillary Clinton may not be your cup of tea, but Donald Trump would be a cup of arsenic for America.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 1 day ago.

A Medical Journal Asked Both Candidates About Health Care. Guess Who Responded

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Hillary Clinton’s plan for improving U.S. health care is outlined in a leading medical journal on September 28, and in her plan the candidate describes her goals to reduce prescription drug costs and spur more basic research into diseases.

“As President, I will fight for every American to have access to affordable, quality health care — regardless of their ZIP Code, income, or medical history,” the Democratic presidential nominee wrote September 28 in the New England Journal of Medicine. [Democratic Party Platform: We Fact-Checked the Science]

The journal published the commentary as an opinion piece. Editors at the journal invited both Clinton and her opponent, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, to answer questions about their plans to improve U.S. health care, but only Clinton responded, the editors said. [Republican Party Platform: We Fact-Checked the Science]

In the commentary, Clinton says she has four big goals for U.S. health care. These include:

*Improving the Affordable Care Act (ACA):* Although Clinton praised the ACA for helping to increase the number of Americans who have health insurance, she also wrote that she will “build on the progress” of the law. She said work is needed to increase the coverage of Medicaid in the 19 states that have so far refused to expand their Medicaid coverage, which leaves 3 million Americans without insurance.

She also said there should be a “public option” in the ACA, meaning a government-run insurance plan. Clinton wants this option made available in every state, and she said it would compete in the insurance marketplace alongside private plans to give Americans more insurance choices.

*Making health care more affordable: *Citing rising out-of-pocket drug costs for Americans, Clinton said she will work to lower costs. One way to do this, she said, is to allow for more competition in the market “by streamlining approval of high-quality biosimilar and generic drugs.” Clinton also said she plans to create a new team “charged with identifying excessive price spikes in long-standing, life-saving treatments, and give them effective new tools to respond.”

Although Clinton did not mention it directly, she could have been referring to a recent rise in the price of the EpiPen, which treats life-threatening allergic reactions. The company that makes EpiPens garnered controversy recently when it was reported that the price of the drug rose dramatically in recent years.

*Making health care less fragmented: *Clinton advocated for a health care system that “treats the whole patient” and “reaches every American community.”  She said there should be efforts to form partnerships between public health departments, health care systems and community-based organizations. She stressed that mental health care should be incorporated with all other aspects of patient care, and that efforts should be made to “ensure that mental health care is not siloed.”

*Investing in basic research:* Clinton said she will increase funding for biomedical research for all diseases, and that she will make specific investments for researchers to study diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease and HIV/AIDS. “Encouraging the next generation of health innovation and entrepreneurship will help Americans lead longer, healthier lives,” she said.

This isn’t the first time an article by Clinton has been published in the New England Journal of Medicine. In 2006, she co-wrote an opinion piece with then-Sen. Barack Obama, on improving patient safety.

President Obama made headlines earlier this year when he published a complete academic paper in the journal JAMA.

Original article on Live Science.

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Copyright 2016 LiveScience, a Purch company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 1 day ago.
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