Adult Dental Coverage Expanding Slowly in Medicaid
The health law mandated dental care for children, but not for adults. Still, some states are slowly making more services available.
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The health law mandated dental care for children, but not for adults. Still, some states are slowly making more services available.
A quiet seven-bedroom facility is one of four publicly funded mental health centers in New York City that provide an alternative to hospital stays for people on the verge of a mental health crisis.
More people are getting insurance coverage for addiction treatment, but there’s already a shortage of trained professionals.
Special online markets weren't widely available in Obamacare's first year.
As the number of elderly inmates needing long-term care rises, some states are looking for alternatives beyond prison walls.
Most employee wellness plans have few participants and little effect on health care costs. A program in King County, Washington, is an exception.
Patients in rural hospitals often have to wait days to see a psychiatrist. South Carolina is a leader in turning that around.
More states are creating all-payer claims databases. Find out how they work.
The Affordable Care Act offers subsidies for low-income families who currently qualify for the federal-state Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), forcing states to make a decision on CHIP's future.
Each of the states currently weighing expansion of Medicaid has a different idea of what it would look like.
Many states are taking advantage of a $3 billion health law program meant to help older Americans avoid nursing homes and instead get long-term care in their own homes -- something many of them prefer.
The Affordable Care Act offers state grants to reward doctors for quality health care.
A Stateline survey indicates at least 1.5 million people have already signed up or have been pre-qualified for expanded Medicaid in the 19 states that have provided counts.
Although tribal members are entitled to free health care, most Indian health facilities do not offer a full array of services.
Peer programs such as Georgia's "certified peer specialist" licenses could become especially important once the Affordable Care Act takes effect early next year.
Autism advocates expected Obamacare to require insurers to cover treatment. But political pressure from states and insurers yielded a more ambiguous result.
States hope they will be better able to care for the federal health law's 30 million newly insured patients by relaxing decades-old "scope of practice" laws that determine what care nurse practitioners can deliver.
Some of the nation's unhealthiest people aren't likely to receive those benefits, because the requirements in the law pertain only to private insurers, Medicare and Medicaid expansion programs.
Consumers want to know: Will health insurance cost more, less, or about the same on the new health insurance exchanges?
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