The following insurers made headlines this week. They are listed below, beginning with the most recent.
Author: Staff
After agreeing to a class-action lawsuit settlement, one of California's largest health insurers, Anthem Blue Cross, will refund $8.3 million to approximately 50,000 policyholders, according to the San Francisco Business Times.
A tenth nonprofit insurance cooperative formed under the Affordable Care Act is going to close, according to The Salt Lake Tribune.
In early October, Blue Shield of California said it is booting Stanford (Calif.) Hospital and Palo Alto, Calif.-based Lucile Packard Children's Hospital out of its individual and family plan networks next year due to high costs. That decision isn't sitting…
The six-hospital system Legacy Health and Springfield, Ore.-based PacificSource Health Plans have signed a letter of intent to create a new partnership in which Legacy Health will purchase a 50 percent stake in the payer.
Anthem, the Blue Cross and Blue Shield licensee in Wisconsin, will stop offering individual plans on the health exchange marketplace in three Wisconsin counties beginning in January, according to WAOW.com.
Stockholders in both Los Angeles-based Health Net and St. Louis-based Centene voted to approve the proposed merger between the two organizations.
Medicare Advantage members are on average more satisfied with their health plans than commercial plan members, according to a survey from J.D. Power.
South Carolina-based Consumers' Choice Health Insurance, a nonprofit cooperative, has agreed to a voluntary "run-off" and will not sell policies for 2016, according to The Post and Courier.
Cheyenne, Wyo.-based WINhealth, the second-largest health insurer in Wyoming, is shutting down, according to the Casper Star Tribune.
