Quantcast
Channel: Health Insurance Headlines on One News Page [United States]
Viewing all 22794 articles
Browse latest View live

Walmart agrees to $7.5 million settlement in same-sex benefits lawsuit

$
0
0
Walmart is poised to pay millions of dollars to thousands of former and current employees after it agreed to settle a lawsuit claiming the company denied health insurance to same-sex spouses.

 
 
 
 
 
 
  Reported by USATODAY.com 1 hour ago.

Aetna, Humana face federal antitrust lawyers in court

$
0
0
Fight comes as regulators show greater concern over health insurance consolidation

 
 
 
 
 
 
  Reported by USATODAY.com 7 hours ago.

Kolar CMC finds lapses in outsourcing of employees

$
0
0
*The city municipal council on Saturday resolved to look into the lapses in appointment of data entry operators and other employees on outsourcing basis. Speaking in the council meeting, members BMMubarak, Narayanaswamy, CSomashekhar and SRMuraligowda said that the tender for filling these posts on outsourced basis had not been brought to the notice of the members. The officials have filled the vacancies of stenographers, data entry operators and valvemen in violation of the established procedure. The meeting resolved to probe the issue and initiate action against officials found guilty. *

The councillors further said that the contractors who were hiring employees for the municipality on a outsource basis, were cheating employees by not paying them salaries. He said that following the death of Manjula, a contract worker, it was decided that all municipal councillors should contribute their one month's honorarium to her family. Though salary had been withheld, the amount is yet to be paid to the family of Manjula, they pointed out.

The officials said that a certificate had been sought from the family members of Manjula and the money would be disbursed once they submit the document. Municipal commissioner SARamprasad told the meeting that the council had decided to provide health insurance for municipal workers under 22.74% grant scheme. The facility will be extended from April 2017.

Councillor Muraligowda said that the income and expenditure for the months of June and July had not been mentioned in the agenda. He alleged that AVMAgency, which had obtained the contract for maintaining pumps and motors of the borewells, had sub-contracted the responsibility, in violation of rules. Despite this fact, the agency is being paid Rs 20,000 per month. Therefore, the contract awarded to the said agency should be scrapped and money paid so far should be recovered.

Councillors Somashekhar and Muraligowda said that a Rs 3-lakh tender was floated to remove jali trees on the banks of Kolaramma tank. Though the contractor has done even 10% of the work, he had been paid the entire bill. Therefore, a complaint should be registered against him and action should also be initiated against officials who have cleared the bills. Municipal president Mahalakshmi said that action would be initiated against the persons found guilty after looking into the matter.

Councillor Mubarak said that people belonging to Thoti community have been burying their dead in the area near Gandhinagar. The land belongs to the municipality and khata of this land should be changed in the name of community, he sought. Reported by Deccan Herald 53 minutes ago.

Repealing Obamacare Would Give A Tax Cut To Millionaires, Like Donald Trump

$
0
0
More than 20 million Americans could lose health insurance from the repeal of Obamacare. But not everybody would suffer. And among those who stand to gain are the richest people in America.

That’s because Obamacare didn’t just change insurance arrangements. It also raised taxes on corporations and individuals. Repealing the law would mean repealing those taxes, with significant benefits going to millionaires and multimillionaires. President-elect Donald Trump might even be one of them.

When Democrats sat down to craft what became the Affordable Care Act, they committed to creating a fiscally sound program ― for every new dollar in government spending, they pledged, they would find at least one dollar of new revenue or one dollar of lower spending somewhere else. And Democrats were good to their word. They wrote legislation that, according to the Congressional Budget Office, has actually resulted in net savings for the federal treasury.

To achieve this goal, Obamacare’s architects drew on several sources of money. A huge chunk is coming from hospitals, drug makers and other parts of the health care industry in the form of new fees or reductions in the compensation these companies get from Medicare.

Additional money comes via the individual mandate ― that is, from people who end up paying the income tax penalty for not buying coverage when the law deems it affordable. This year, it looks like roughly 7 million tax filers ended up paying the penalty, at an average of $498 each, according to a tabulation by Jed Graham of Investor’s Business Daily.

When it comes to individual taxes, however, by far the largest revenue source is a new levy on income. Technically it is part of the Medicare Hospital Insurance tax. But this new tax is a “surcharge,” and it differs from the rest of the Medicare tax in two critical respects.

One is that it falls exclusively on wealthy households ― specifically, on married couples with annual incomes above $250,000 and on single people with annual incomes above $200,000. When Obamacare first became law, the Brookings-Urban Institute Tax Policy Center estimated that initially fewer than 3 percent of tax filers would have incomes high enough to incur the new tax, with the percentage growing slowly over time because the law does not adjust the thresholds for inflation.

The other distinctive quality is that this surcharge includes investment income. That’s a big deal, since the rest of the Medicare tax covers wages only. Wealthy Americans are more likely than others to make a lot of money from stocks, real estate and other holdings, and that’s especially true for the richest of the richest.

For affected households with annual incomes in low six digits (between $200,000 and $500,000), the average tax increase upon the law’s implementation was just $467 a year, according to calculations by the Tax Policy Center. That worked out to an increase of 0.2 percent. Millionaires, however, faced a steeper increase. For filers with annual incomes above $1 million, the average tax increase was $36,310, or an increase of 1.2 percent.

They can afford that kind of money, for sure. But it’s safe to assume most of them would be happy not pay that tax anymore. Which is great, except that if the tax goes away, so will the revenue ― to the tune of $346 billion over the next 10 years, by the CBO’s reckoning.

That’s money Republicans wouldn’t have at their disposal for the Obamacare “replacement” scheme they have promised, making it more difficult to extend insurance coverage as much as Obamacare has. Not coincidentally, the major conservative plans now in circulation typically result in some combination of fewer insured and less generous coverage.

The policy trade-off here is straightforward. Lawmakers can reduce taxes on the wealthiest Americans or they can plow that money into helping some subset of poor and middle-class Americans pay their medical bills.

Want to guess which option Republicans will choose?

-- 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 5 hours ago.

ESIC increases monthly wage limit to Rs 21,000

$
0
0
In a bid to bring more workers from unorganised sector under the health insurance scheme, the Employees State Insurance Corporation, ESIC has increased the monthly wage limit to 21,000 rupees. Union Labour Minister Bandaru Dattatreya told a news agency in Hyderabd today that earlier coverage under the ESIC scheme was enhanced to 15,000 rupees in 2010. Reported by All India Radio 4 hours ago.

How to avoid a health insurance premium hike in January

$
0
0
Some 400,000 customers are due to renew in January but how can they mitigate the impact of further price rises? Reported by Irish Times 11 hours ago.

Minnesota uses software to screen for ER overuse

$
0
0
Patients who consistently head to hospital emergency rooms for run-of-the-mill illnesses are one of the biggest, and costliest, headaches for health-policy planners. But a new screening program in Minnesota aims to steer them elsewhere. The Star Tribune reports on the effort, which uses software to flag patients on public health insurance who make repeated ER trips — as many as 150 times per year. The system then moves those patients to a single primary care provider, hospital and pharmacy. Officials… Reported by bizjournals 5 hours ago.

Stop re-traumatizing the San Bernardino shooting survivors who need treatment

$
0
0
To the editor: Employees who have been traumatized by the San Bernardino shooting on Dec. 2, 2015, deserve better assessment and treatment than state and county officials have tried to bureaucratically administer. Both health insurance systems and related California workers’ compensation programs... Reported by L.A. Times 52 minutes ago.

7 Crazy Awesome Secrets You Never Knew About Trader Joe's

$
0
0
For Glamour, by Lynsey Eidell.It's no secret that Trader Joe's is the bomb-dot-com. (I mean, have you tried their cookie butter? Heaven. On. Earth.) But you probably don't realize just how amazing the chain really is. A former employee who worked for the [DEL: product paradise :DEL] grocery store for a year dished to Popsugar about the inner-workings of the store. Spoiler alert: There's no hidden dirt—just more reasons to love it there. Here are seven little-known secrets about Trader Joe's.

*For starters, the pay is pretty legit.*

The employee that spoke to Popsugar started out making $12 an hour at Trader Joe's, well above the state's minimum wage. After three months of working at least 30 hours a week, employees get health insurance and a 401k—and you can expect a raise at least once or twice a year.

*They donate a* *lot* *of food.*

Basically anything you wouldn't be excited about buying, but is still perfectly good to eat, according to Popsugar. "They donate flowers, produce—everything—to local organizations," the employee told Popsugar.

*The secret to their amazing customer service? Overstaffing.*

"They totally overstaff so that you don't feel like your stocking duties or your register duties trump interacting with customers—they encourage you to be nice to customers," the employee told Popsugar.

*Every store employs artists.*

To create all that chalkboard signage you see throughout the store. "Literally all of the signage around the store is custom-made by two or three artists who hang out in the back and almost exclusively do that, and register work every once in a while," the employee told Popsugar.

*There's also a person in charge of cooking all the new products.*

"Each Trader Joe's has a break room, and they have one person who's in charge of cooking new stuff that the store gets and making it available for the entire staff who comes through the store that day to try it," the employee told Popsugar. "They want you to try all the products so you can have an opinion so that when you recommend stuff to people, it's not baseless."

*The bell-ringing is actually a* *secret code*.

One bell? That means the lines are getting too long and everyone needs to get to their register. Two bells means an employee needs to come over and help with something. "For example, let's say the bag of spinach you bought is partially opened or looks bad; you ring two bells and an employee will come over and grab a new one for you," the employee told Popsugar. And three bells is code for send a manager.

*You can return* *anything*. Seriously.

Talk about a game-changer. According to Popsugar, you could buy anything, try it, and if you don't like it or there's something wrong, bring it back for a full refund. BRB, we're going to sample everything.

More from Glamour:

What's That Salad the Kardashians Are Always Eating on Their Show?

Ryan Reynolds Reveals He Fell in Love With Blake Lively While on a Double Date With Someone Else

34 Times Kate Middleton and Prince William Gave Us Major Relationship Goals

13 Celebrities Who Have Hot Siblings

12 Photos of the Friends Cast Before They Were Famous That Will Make You Ridiculously Happy

A Look at the Emmy It Girls of the Past 20 Years: Taraji P. Henson, Tina Fey, and More

-- 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 2 minutes ago.

Ohio Democrat vows to stall Senate work unless mine workers get relief

$
0
0
More than 15,000 retired coal miners will lose their health insurance if Congress doesn’t act soon

 
 
 
 
 
 
  Reported by USATODAY.com 21 hours ago.

The New Health Care: The Problem With One-Size-Fits-All Health Insurance

$
0
0
Rich and poor mostly must buy the same sort of plan, even though income affects how much health care you might be willing to pay for. Reported by NYTimes.com 15 hours ago.

Court Delays GOP Lawsuit To Gut Obamacare

$
0
0
WASHINGTON ― A federal appeals court panel agreed Monday to the House Republicans’ request to hold off on further actions on their own lawsuit to eradicate financial assistance for the poorest people covered by Obamacare health insurance plans.

House Republicans brought the lawsuit in 2014, alleging that President Barack Obama’s administration unlawfully is spending federal money on these subsidies without a congressional appropriation. President Barack Obama’s Justice Department contested the case, but a federal judge sided with the GOP in May, prompting an appeal. 

But with President-elect Donald Trump poised to take office and with Republicans retaining control of Congress after Election Day, the House GOP last month asked the appeals court to postpone considering the case. Congressional Republicans are aiming for votes repealing key aspects of the Affordable Care Act next month and to work for up to three years assembling legislation to succeed it.

At issue is extra help for the lowest-income people who are enrolled in private health plans obtained via the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance exchanges.

In addition to tax credits the law provides to low- and moderate-income households to defray monthly premium costs, those at the lowest end of the income scale qualify for reductions in out-of-pocket costs like deductibles and copayments.

The law requires health insurers to cap those costs for people who earn between the federal poverty level and 250 percent of that amount, or a range of $11,880 to $29,700 a year for a single person. The federal cost-sharing reduction payments are then made directly to the insurers to compensate them.

If the lawsuit ultimately were successful, health insurance companies would still be required to reduce out-of-pocket costs for these customers, but would no longer be reimbursed for their expenses, a loss of approximately $5 billion a year.

The majority of Obamacare enrollees, or about 7 million people, qualified for these subsidies this year.

A win in this lawsuit would give Trump and congressional Republicans a victory in their campaign against the Affordable Care Act, but at a severe cost.

Eliminating the cost-sharing subsidies would throw the Obamacare market into chaos, largely because insurers may be permitted to withdraw from the exchanges absent the cost-sharing patients, jeopardizing coverage for millions, including those who don’t even qualify for this financial assistance.

A three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has now delayed the case until at least Feb. 21. After that date, the two sides have to submit plans for how they’d like the litigation to proceed, which is in line with the House GOP’s motion to the court last month. At that point, the incoming Trump administration will become the defendant in the case and will decide along with the House GOP plaintiff’s about the next steps.

“In light of public statements by the President-elect and his campaign, there is at least a significant possibility of a meaningful change in policy in the new administration that could either obviate the need for resolution of this appeal or affect the nature and scope of the issues presented for review,” the Nov. 21 motion says. “The status quo will be maintained during the abeyance period, because the district court stayed its ruling, permitting appellants to continue paying insurers the funds at issue on a monthly basis.” 

As president, Trump would have the authority to simply order these payments cut off. Trump has never taken a position on whether he agrees with House Republicans that the money is being spent illegally, or whether he concurs that the House of Representatives even has legal standing to sue the executive branch in a case like this. The Obama administration disputes both aspects of the lawsuit.

Cristian Farias contributed reporting.

-- 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.

GOP Leader Makes Dubious Claim That More People Will Have Health Insurance Without Obamacare

$
0
0
WASHINGTON ― House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) suggested on Monday that more people would have health insurance once Republicans repeal Obamacare ― and that Congress would be able to retain popular provisions requiring companies to insure people with pre-existing conditions.

Asked how Republicans could be confident premiums wouldn’t skyrocket if they repealed the 2010 Affordable Care Act, McCarthy told reporters it came down to a “philosophical difference of belief.”

“We believe with more people into the market, you get greater choice and that the demand is higher,” he said. “You allow those that can’t afford it to enter the same market where they have more options, that the price will go down.”

Of course, there’s a similar concept animating Obamacare. The general idea is that by requiring people to get health insurance, more people ― including healthy people ― will sign up for benefits, thus lowering the overall cost for everyone.

It’s impossible to precisely gauge what effect a GOP health care reform package might have on the cost of health insurance or the number of people covered, because there currently is no plan beyond a broad, vague outline House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) unveiled earlier this year. President-elect Donald Trump’s positions on the issue have veered from vowing universal coverage to aligning himself with the more limited vision espoused by mainstream Republicans.

The national uninsured rate is currently at an all-time low, below 10 percent, directly as a result of the Affordable Care Act’s coverage expansion. The law achieved this by providing financial assistance to low- and moderate-income households, by guaranteeing that health insurers had to cover any willing customer regardless of pre-existing conditions and by instituting a mandate that most people obtain adequate health coverage or pay a tax penalty if they don’t. 

Republicans plan to repeal Obamacare next year and delay enacting any “replacement” proposal for up to three years in a dangerous gambit that could unravel the insurance market in the meantime.

Whatever final form a Republican health care proposal may take, the budgets approved by the GOP Congress in recent years and proposals ― including Ryan’s and legislation authored by Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.), who is Trump’s pick to be secretary of Health and Human Services ― offer a rough roadmap that illustrates their overarching principles.

The Obamacare “replacement” will almost certainly spend less money helping poorer people obtain coverage, weaken the promise of coverage for people with pre-existing conditions because it would lock out individuals who become uninsured at any point, and employ a less stringent approach than the individual mandate to induce healthier people into the insurance pool so their premiums offset the expenses of those with costly medical problems.
It would be unprecedented in health policy and in health care markets to somehow cover more people than the current system without providing financial assistance that’s at least as generous, an ironclad guarantee of coverage for people regardless of their medical histories and a strong mechanism to encourage healthier consumers’ enrollment.

Claims like McCarthy’s seemed based on the notion that by deregulating health insurance markets, healthy consumers would have access to skimpier coverage that would be cheaper than the plans on the Obamacare health insurance exchanges. And while this segment of the market ― which Obamacare has struggled to reach ― may benefit from lower premiums, people in it would face higher potential out-of-pocket costs for services that aren’t covered by the less-regulated plans.

Meanwhile, those who are older or sicker would face higher premiums and could be denied access to coverage if insurers were permitted to raise their rates based on age and pre-existing conditions ― something GOP proposals typically advocate.

Much of this is speculation because Republicans haven’t been clear about the details of their alternative, but it’s clear they plan to do something.

“We’ve taken the approach of Obamacare,” McCarthy said, adding that Democrats said premiums would go down and “found that that’s not true.” 

The sticker prices for health insurance for healthier and wealthier people who don’t get benefits from an employer are generally higher than they were before the Affordable Care Act became law for several key reasons. The law requires insurers to cover benefits like prescription drugs and maternity care that frequently weren’t covered before. Banning discrimination against people with pre-existing conditions also opened up the insurance market to those with the greatest medical needs and highest costs. 

But the Affordable Care Act’s subsidies for monthly premiums and out-of-pocket costs can significantly reduce what low- and middle-income Obamacare enrollees pay. And Republican proposals typically offer much less generous financial assistance for health insurance costs, if they offer any at all.

As for when Republicans’ changes would take effect, McCarthy said there would probably be a delay to implement the repeal of Obamacare, creating a crisis Republicans think Democrats will help them solve. But it’s just as likely Democrats won’t do that and will instead insist that Republicans bring the law back, as recent comments from some Democratic lawmakers illustrate.

That sort of impasse could create an greater crisis in which insurance companies offer more expensive plans and healthy people therefore forego coverage. It could even convince insurers to exit the health insurance exchanges entirely to avoid the risk of participating in a struggling marketplace on track to being eliminated.

One reporter asked McCarthy how Republicans could avoid raising prices while keeping popular provisions that Trump says he wants to preserve ― like ensuring health insurance access for people with pre-existing conditions and allowing young adults to stay on their parents’ insurance until they’re 26. While McCarthy didn’t vow that Republicans would actually keep those provisions intact, he seemed to think removing the individual mandate wouldn’t devastate the law.

Asked how, without the mandate, Republicans would prevent people from only getting health insurance once they got sick, McCarthy said, “Wait to see what we draft.”

In other words, he thinks Republicans need to repeal the law before anyone can find out what they’ll replace it with.

-- 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 23 hours ago.

Zenefits CEO David Sacks to step dow

$
0
0
Zenefits, a once high-flying human resources software startup that defined Silicon Valley’s recent technology boom, has been trying to recover its footing after being rocked by scandal over its business practices earlier this year. [...] David Sacks, the chief executive officer of Zenefits and the tech veteran who was charged with rejuvenating the embattled company, plans to leave his position. Last week, the Information reported that Sacks was considering stepping aside as chief executive officer and the Wall Street Journal said that Sacks is expected to join Trump’s transition team. Conrad was ousted from Zenefits this year after BuzzFeed News discovered that the company had allowed unlicensed brokers to sell health insurance to customers, and that some employees in the company had used a software program to game state insurance licensing tests. [...] Sacks, who was also an early investor in Zenefits, has been trying to turn the company around. Reported by SFGate 22 hours ago.

Trump the Union-Busting Employer Will Now Dictate Nation’s Labor Policy

$
0
0
 

(Photo: AP/Evan Vucci)

Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally, Sunday, Oct. 30, 2016, in Las Vegas.

President-elect Donald Trump’s career as a businessman with ventures and investments around the world will present an unprecedented number of presidential conflicts of interest when he moves into the Oval Office. As the employer of some 34,000 people, Trump is hardly a disinterested party when it comes to dictating national labor and employment policy. His appointments to the federal courts, the National Labor Relations Board, and the Department of Labor, as well as his consideration of worker-related legislation and his ability to use executive action to resolve labor disputes are rife with potential conflicts, ethics experts say.

One glaring conflict—his refusal to bargain with unionized workers at his Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas—could take center stage once Trump becomes president in January.

Five days a week, Maria Mendoza cleans the bathrooms, kitchens, and living areas of Trump’s Las Vegas hotel. She cleans as many as 13 rooms a day, sometimes spread across five different floors. After each day of work—which she’s done for six years—the joints in her fingers hurt, and her shoulder aches from lugging the 30 pounds of dirty linens at a time. She earns $14.71 an hour, and while the hotel offers health insurance, it’s too expensive for Mendoza to afford. 

That’s not the industry norm. Workers at other hotels on the strip often make $3 more an hour, enjoy free healthcare, and have access to a pension plan. That’s because Las Vegas is a union town—95 percent of the hotels and casinos on the strip are unionized. The Culinary Workers Union Local 226 represents 57,000 casino and hotel workers in the city, the majority of whom are Latino and women.  

About two years ago, the Culinary Union began an organizing drive at the 64-story hotel that Trump manages and co-owns with close friend and casino tycoon Phillip Ruffin. The owners, doing business as Trump Ruffin International LLC, were not happy. As the Huffington Post reported, they promptly hired an anti-union consulting firm, paying it more than $500,000 over the course of six months. Nevertheless, the bosses’ attempts to dissuade their employees failed. In December of last year, hotel workers—including Mendoza—narrowly voted, 238-209, in favor of unionization.

Trump and Ruffin then contested the election with the National Labor Relations Board, filing 15 separate complaints alleging that the union had threatened voters, and refusing to come to the bargaining table. The NLRB dismissed each complaint, and in March certified the union as bargaining agents for the hotel workers. Yet Trump still did not recognize the union. Just five days before the election, the NLRB ruled that Trump and Ruffin were violating federal labor law by refusing to bargain with the union. The two owners promptly filed an appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, hoping that the federal court would overturn the NLRB’s ruling.

Even though Trump is now the president-elect, Mendoza says things haven’t changed. “I still see him as my boss,” she told The Prospect through a Spanish-speaking interpreter. “I feel that even though he is [president-elect], he still needs to listen to his workers and sit down and negotiate a contract. And we’re still going to keep fighting for what we deserve.”

The union has been organizing a national boycott of Trump’s businesses since September as a way to pressure him to come to the bargaining table and organizers say that they will continue to hold protests—like the one that featured a wall of taco trucks around the Las Vegas hotel—outside his properties.

“Yes, we’ve never had a [collective bargaining agreement] with the U.S. president before,” admits Bethany Khan, communications director for the Culinary Workers Union, “but we’ll continue to hold companies and the boss accountable, including if the boss is the President of the United States.”  

The nature of his job as president could propel Trump smack into a conflict of interest with the union dispute. As Henry Graber wrote in Slate, Trump will soon have the authority to fill two vacant spots on the five-member NLRB, allowing him to once again give the board a pro-business majority. Later on, he will also be able to appoint the NLRB’s general counsel, who determines which cases the board hears. Those appointees will then be in a position to rule on future labor disputes between the Culinary Union and Trump’s Vegas hotel, or on other disputes between unions and workers and Trump’s business operations.
Additionally, as Graber points out, the chief judge on the D.C. circuit is Merrick Garland, nominated to the Supreme Court by President Obama, but strongly opposed by Trump and Congressional Republicans. “Now,” Graber writes, “Garland will rule on Trump’s hotel while Trump will fill what might have been Garland's place on the Supreme Court.”

Trump will at some point also appoint new judges to the D.C. circuit, which is charged with hearing all cases that emerge from the NLRB, the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau, and the Environmental Protection Agency—all of which could also deal with future disputes related to Trump’s businesses.

As president, Trump could also block certain labor policies that would impose added costs on his businesses. For instance, as Dave Jamieson explains in the Huffington Post, Trump may be able to single-handedly determine the fate of Obama’s new overtime rule, which would give overtime pay to more than four million workers, some of whom surely work for Trump’s enterprises. Additionally, if, by some miracle, the GOP-controlled Congress decides to pass a federal minimum wage increase or some other type of policy that benefits workers and hurts Trump’s bottom line, he could simply veto it.

Meanwhile, Trump’s Department of Labor could also be rife with conflicts of interest. The last Republican labor department, headed by Elaine Chao (tapped by Trump for his transportation secretary), was notorious for its weak enforcement of wage and hour laws, and for subjecting unions to intense and costly auditing processes. Theoretically, Trump could use the department to target specific unions, like the culinary workers, for investigation.

On top of that, one of the leading candidates for Trump’s labor secretary is Andy Puzder, the CEO of CKE Restaurants, which owns the Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s fast-food chains. About 60 percent of DOL investigations under Obama into Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s restaurants, mostly franchisees, were found to have violated wage and hour laws. As Ben Penn reports for Bloomberg BNA, if Puzder does become labor secretary, that could present a slew of ethical problems.

Though he has walked back promises to put his assets into a blind trust and has insisted that the president can’t have a conflict of interest, just last week Trump pledged to resign control of all of his businesses. Yet experts are still concerned that such a move is not guaranteed to remove the appearance of conflict of interest, or to insulate Trump from corruption. The only way for Trump to genuinely avoid conflicts would be for him to be to relinquish ownership and divest himself of all his business holdings, say watchdogs and ethics experts—something he has yet to say he will do.

That leaves labor advocates wondering whether Trump the union-busting employer will continue his assault on workers when he assumes the presidency.  Reported by The American Prospect 7 hours ago.

Repealing Obamacare? Here's a better idea - Medicare for all

$
0
0
Now that the dogged opponents of the Affordable Care Act have caught the Obamacare bus, transforming U.S. healthcare is back on the political agenda.

Repeal of the ACA will not curb the persistent, systemic inequities of our profit-focused healthcare system.

Tens of millions, even those with health insurance, still struggle with un-payable medical bills due to rising deductibles and co-pays and skyrocketing prescription drug costs and hospital charges.

Insurance networks sharply restrict patient choice. Millions remain without any health coverage, or simply avoid getting the care they need because they can't afford it - at great risk to their health. Disparities based on race, gender, age, or where you live remain rampant.

Even advocates of repeal are fearful of the impact of throwing millions off the expanded Medicaid coverage or eroding the ACA crackdown on insurance industry abuses, such as barring coverage for those with pre-existing conditions.

One widely promoted theme is to replace the tax subsidies the ACA provides to buy private insurance on the ACA exchanges with tax credits or health savings accounts to buy insurance on the open market. But those offer consumers even less protection from skyrocketing premiums or being forced to settle for bare bones junk insurance plans with limited benefits and higher out of pocket costs.

Another proposal is subsidizing federal funding of Medicaid expansion with state block grants. That, too, is problematic, opening the door to severe state budget cuts that would leave many lower income people and families without needed coverage.

Then there's the Paul Ryan plan to privatize Medicare - a sure fire way to impoverish millions of seniors forced to fend for themselves on the inefficient, more expensive private market.

The rightwing policy wonks label these approaches "consumer-driven free market health solutions."

If the well funded, "grassroots" campaign in response is led by the Beltway Foundations and NGO's to only defend the troubled ACA, then, yes, that's precisely what will happen.

But the "free market" is exactly what created the healthcare crisis in the U.S. in the first place, creating a healthcare system largely based on ability to pay that ranked first in the world in spending and far behind most industrial nations in access, out-of-pocket costs and a variety of quality benchmarks.

Instead, let's build the demand to protect, improve and expand Medicare. It's the standard by which any healthcare system should be measured. If the Trump administration and the Republican-controlled Congress want to define what the healthcare system should be, let's start with a truly patient-based approach.

Nurses' credo for transforming the U.S. healthcare system is to establish a single standard of safe, therapeutic care for all, based on the clinical judgment of doctors, nurses, and other providers.

Only an improved Medicare for all can guarantee healthcare for all based on patient need. Eliminating private insurance and the high premiums, co-pays and deductibles will save families thousands of dollars, free up millions for businesses, increase wages for workers, and save hundreds of billions for taxpayers.

Gone would be the 20 percent waste that is endemic to a system based on private profit. No longer will taxpayers bail out for-profit insurance companies and corporate hospital chains and greedy nursing home operators.

Rather than guarantee high executive salaries and trapped customers, we can expand Medicare through increasing the existing fair share financing.

Here's a check list for reform:

• Complete choice of doctor.
• Demonstrated low overhead - Medicare is well known for administrative costs of just 3 percent compared to far higher figures for private insurers due to profits and paperwork.
• Control drug prices? (Yes, if given authority to negotiate bulk discounts with prescription drug corporations.)
• Popular, fair healthcare program supported by nurses, doctors, and a majority of Americans!

Improved Medicare for All checks all the boxes. If Ryan really believes repealing the ACA will "leave no one worse off," the only way to achieve that is Medicare for all.

California, with Democrats in control of the governor's office and state legislature, is one state that can set a national model of how to do reform right by adopting a Medicare for all type system.

Medicare remains one of the most popular social reforms in U.S. history. Expanding it to cover everyone is an idea favored by 58 percent of Americans, as a May Gallup poll demonstrated. It's the real healthcare reform we need.

-- 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 19 hours ago.

News24.com | Motsoaledi reaffirms passion for NHI amid criticism from Cosatu

$
0
0
Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi has defended the National Health Insurance programme and has vowed to see its implementation through at all costs. Reported by News24 13 hours ago.

Healthcare Leaders Converge in Atlanta for 7th Annual Health IT Leadership Summit

$
0
0
Andy Slavitt of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid, Corey Wiegert of IBM Watson Health to be Keynote Speakers

Atlanta, GA (PRWEB) December 06, 2016

Healthcare leaders from across Georgia will discuss healthcare innovation and the impact of new federal healthcare regulations at the 7th annual Health IT Leadership Summit, to be held Wed., Dec. 7 at the Cobb Galleria Centre, Atlanta.

Andy Slavitt, acting administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), will be the morning keynote speaker at the summit, which brings together leaders from across the healthcare continuum to discuss how the industry can drive innovations that enable better healthcare delivery at lower costs to more people.

As acting administrator, Slavitt oversees programs that provide access to quality health care for 140 million Americans, including Medicaid, Medicare, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, and the Health Insurance Marketplace. Slavitt and the CMS team are focused on improving quality, health outcomes, access and affordability while addressing health equity and protecting program integrity, including combating health care fraud.

Slavitt will kick off the morning program with a legislative update and discussions around the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA), establishing new ways to pay physicians for Medicare beneficiaries.

“Community and clinician engagement through events like the Health IT Leadership Summit are a priority for CMS as they help facilitate both collaboration and education,” Slavitt said. “We look forward discussing the MACRA Final Rule with the thought leaders in attendance on December 7th.”

Tim Gronniger, deputy chief of staff, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, will join Slavitt in a MACRA update.

In the afternoon, Cory Wiegert, VP, Offering Management of IBM Watson Health, will address “New Insights to the Healthcare Ecosystem: Driving Value Around the End Consumer.”

Wiegert is the Offering Management executive for the Value Based Care portfolio of products in IBM’s Watson Health business unit. In this role, he is responsible for product strategy, design and delivery of the offerings focused on solutions which help healthcare organizations with their transformation to a focus on quality and outcome based delivery. With over 20 years of success product management experience in enterprise software and analytics applications, he brings a unique perspective on how technology which transformed other industries can be applied to accelerate the transformation in healthcare.

The Health IT Leadership Summit was created in 2010 by the Georgia Department of Economic Development (GDED), the Metro Atlanta Chamber (MAC), and the Technology Association of Georgia’s Health Society (TAG Health).

Proceeds from the event will go to support the Institute for Healthcare Information Technology (IHIT), a non-profit organization dedicated to improving healthcare through the advancement of technology and education in Georgia.

Many local healthcare providers, technology companies and educational organizations are involved in sponsoring this year’s Summit. Among them is the Atlanta Technology Development Center (ATDC).

"ATDC is proud to be a sponsor of this year's Health IT Leadership Summit to help showcase what our companies and others in the sector are doing to advance and improve the quality of healthcare," said Jane McCracken, ATDC’s healthcare catalyst. "As Georgia's technology incubator, ATDC works with entrepreneurs to help them learn, launch, scale, and succeed. The companies in our ATDC Signature and ATDC Accelerate portfolios span a broad range of technologies including healthcare IT, biotech, medical device, and diagnostics companies."

About the Health IT Leadership Summit

Now in its 7th year, the Summit brings together leaders from across the healthcare continuum to discuss how the industry can drive innovation to enable better healthcare delivery at lower costs to more people. Supported by a founding partnership that includes the Georgia Department of Economic Development, the Metro Atlanta Chamber and the Technology Association of Georgia’s Health Society, the event will offer attendees a full day of informational sessions, innovative exhibits and networking opportunities centered around the theme of “Connecting Healthcare…Making IT Work for You.” Key presentation topics will focus on interoperability, IT security, clinical applications and funding. To learn more about this year’s Summit — including information regarding sponsorship and registration, visit http://healthitleadershipsummit.com/. Follow us on Twitter @HealthITSummit. Reported by PRWeb 10 hours ago.

Signed Out Of Prison But Not Signed Up For Health Insurance

$
0
0
Most of the state prison systems in the places that expanded Medicaid under Obamacare have come up short on enrolling exiting inmates, despite the fact that many of them are chronically ill. Reported by NPR 10 hours ago.

Harmony Healthcare Chosen as a Finalist for Tampa Bay Corporate Philanthropy Award

$
0
0
Harmony Healthcare, has been named one of the Tampa Bay Business Journal’s 2016 Corporate Philanthropy Awards finalists.

Tampa Bay, Florida (PRWEB) December 06, 2016

Harmony Healthcare, a leader in Human Capital Management services, has been named one of the Tampa Bay Business Journal’s 2016 Corporate Philanthropy Awards finalists.

Per the Tampa Bay Business Journal, “The Corporate Philanthropy program is designed to spotlight the many corporate sanctioned giving and volunteer programs that stand out in our community.”

The annual awards celebration will take place at Tropicana Field on December 9, 2016.

Founder and CEO Christopher H.G. Brown is proud of his company’s nomination. “Harmony has won many awards but this award creates the greatest sense of pride and community. We appreciate the recognition but more appreciate that we can give back to the community to those who need and deserve it. Our Victims to Victorious Campaign has been one of the joys of my career.”

More information on Harmony Healthcare’s community involvement can be found at https://harmony.solutions/harmony-charities/.

About Harmony Healthcare
Harmony Healthcare provides interim, outsourcing, project management and reviews, as well as direct-to-hire services for clients. The company specializes in hiring revenue cycle and Health Information Management professionals for client facilities. The company’s experts are highly trained, can spot problems and lead a client organization through the best processes, procedures and solutions.

With a large breadth of expertise, the company is able to provide support in areas ranging from clinical documentation improvement and coding to auditing and GSA government compliance at Veterans Administration hospitals and U.S. military bases.

Harmony employs more than 500 people and has staff at client sites across the United States. The company maintains low turnover by providing 100 percent covered health insurance, paid time off, paid travel expenses and keeping the back-office operation inexpensive.

Harmony Healthcare also boasts a 418 ranking, with a three-year sales growth of 922 percent, on the 2016 Inc. 5000 list.

“Harmony Healthcare was founded on the principals of integrity, character, hard work and discipline.”

Learn more about Harmony Healthcare https://harmony.solutions/about/

About Christopher Brown
With a career marked by a sharp entrepreneurial eye and the love of a good challenge, Brown founded Harmony Healthcare in 2010 after recognizing just how revolutionary the change from paper to digital medical records would be for healthcare facilities. His company helps clients solve problems associated with digital medical records and health information management that have coincided with the change in the way healthcare facilities collect patient information, code it, communicate with insurance companies and collect revenue in a timely manner.

Brown learned some of his best leadership lessons from the well-known, much-loved, and highly successful UCLA Basketball Coach John Wooden. Many of Wooden’s words of wisdom apply both on and off the basketball court. “It’s not what you do, but how you do it,” is one of Brown’s favorite quotes from Wooden.

His 2001 book, “Insights, A guide to Successful Recruitment Strategies and Training” is a comprehensive guide to recruitment, staffing and human resources training. Learn more about Christopher Brown https://harmony.solutions/revenue_cycle/cbrown/ Reported by PRWeb 6 hours ago.
Viewing all 22794 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images