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Arkansas lawmakers approve health plan seen as compromise with Obama Reuters LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas (Reuters) - Arkansas lawmakers on Tuesday approved extending health insurance to more of the state's low-income citizens through a measure that could be a model for other conservative-leaning states as a compromise to ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
Health Insurance and Personal Responsibility The Moderate Voice Little attention is being paid to personal responsibility in setting health insurance premiums. While health status and pre-existing conditions have been determinant factors in the past for obtaining individual health insurance and the premium rates ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
House panel approves scaled down low-income health plan Sun-Sentinel The plan, PCB SPPACA 13-03, would attempt to cover low-income Floridians with some manner of high-deductible insurance or programs that are not insurance but rather offer discounts for medical care or drugs. The state would pay each eligible individual ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
Senate panel approves health care incentive San Francisco Chronicle The Senate's Ways and Means committee unanimously approved the plan, which would extend a state tax break to small businesses that already receive a federal tax break for helping cover their employees' health care costs. The legislation will now move ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
Health coverage help available Appleton Post Crescent WASHINGTON — More than 433,000 Badger State residents will be eligible for tax credits beginning next January to help them pay for health insurance, according to a new report released Tuesday, but nearly four out of five of them may not know about it. See all stories on this topic » | ||
Health insurance backlog likely to remain high Galesburg Register-Mail Illinois' bill backlog for employee and retiree health insurance will remain the same next year even if the state realizes all of the savings expected from higher employee payments and other cost-control measures. Officials with the Department of ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
Health Workforce Not Ready to Handle the Affordable Care Act Wall Street Journal "We are at a critical juncture," said Dr. Steven Wartman, President and CEO of the Association of Academic Health Centers. "As the 2014 deadline for most Americans to have health insurance approaches, the health care workforce is not ready, and we are ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
Appeals court rules Milwaukee Police Association can't bargain over health ... The Republic Scott Walker pushed a law through the Legislature two years ago that stripped most public workers of their union rights and required them to contribute about 6 percent of their earnings to their pensions and pay 12 percent of their health insurance costs. See all stories on this topic » |
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