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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Dec 15 2014

Full Issue

Big Firms Take Wait-And-See Attitude To Private Exchanges

Major employers are waiting for proof that switching to the private exchanges will save them money, reports Reuters. Meanwhile, Centene Corp, a Medicaid insurer, gave a stronger-than-expected outlook for next year.

Reuters: U.S. Corporate Health Exchanges Find No New Blue Chip Clients

Healthcare companies including Aetna Inc, Mercer and Towers Watson Co have invested hundreds of millions of dollars to build exchanges that allow company employees to buy their own insurance, betting that Corporate America wants to get out of managing workers' health benefits. By last year, blue chip names like Sears Holding and Walgreen Co had signed on and industry experts predicted that more than 20 percent of the nation's employees would soon buy their health insurance in this way, compared with less than 2 percent today. But Reuters interviews with nearly a dozen industry executives has found that no major U.S. company signed up their employees for the first time to a private health insurance exchange for 2015. (Humer, 12/15)

The Wall Street Journal: Centene Gives Strong Guidance For Next Year

Centene Corp. on Friday gave a stronger-than-expected outlook for next year, as the Medicaid-focused health insurer benefits from expansions into big states like Florida and Ohio and from surging membership rates. (Dulaney, 12/12)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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