Modest Premium Hikes, Higher Consumer Costs Likely For Job-Based Plans
As many companies provide employees with their coverage details this fall, spousal surcharges and health savings accounts on the rise.
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As many companies provide employees with their coverage details this fall, spousal surcharges and health savings accounts on the rise.
Opponents wage costly campaign, eroding public support.
With an improving fiscal climate, many states are increasing benefits for Medicaid recipients and paying their providers more.
These high-priced medications are often shifted to the top tiers of drug plans, so consumers dealing with cancer, multiple sclerosis, HIV and other complicated diseases can end up paying thousands of dollars for their prescriptions.
The health law called for all FDA-approved birth control methods to be completely covered by insurance, but research suggests that many women still pay for some of the costs for options such as IUDs and injectable contraceptives.
In North Carolina and elsewhere, hidden costs have popped up on "fully covered" services ranging from contraception to cancer screening to annual checkups, and it's leaving a growing number of people to cover thousands of dollars out of pocket.
Under a new state law, Massachusetts insurers have to post how much tests and procedures cost at different providers in a consumer-friendly way.
People who have lost significant weight are uneasy about how much to reveal in online dating profiles, and research shows they have good reason to be.
An investigation by the HHS inspector general says beneficiaries getting the treatments at "critical access" hospitals pay between two and six times more than those at other hospitals.
A consumer reporter shares what she learned when getting ready to join the federal health plan for seniors.
KHN consumer columnist Michelle Andrews examines how subsidies for health insurance can be divvied up among family members choosing separate plans and how a miscalculation of the premium will be handled on your taxes.
States and the federal government aim to renew coverage for 15.3 million already signed up on exchanges and Medicaid -- and enroll about 10 million more who are currently uninsured.
But a new pitch by Republican candidates to make the birth control pill available without a prescription could have unintended financial consequences for women.
Experts says a series of recent threats, including the first Ebola patient to develop symptoms in the U.S., raise questions about the state's capacity to deal with contagious diseases.
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