Colorado residents will vote on whether to establish a tax-funded, universal health system this November amid mounting challenges to the measure, The Gazette reports.
Payer
Two of the three insurers in North Carolina's Affordable Care Act marketplace will pull its plans from the exchange in 2017, reports The Washington Post.
Policyholders of Cigna health plans claimed the payer charged more than 10 times the actual price of some prescription medications, Bloomberg BNA reports.
Some small business executives in Michigan are looking to decrease administrative costs and premium prices for employees by asking state regulators for help, Crain's Detroit Business reports.
Today, many small employers that dropped group coverage for employees are reversing that decision — as The Wall Street Journal noted — and again shopping for small group health plans as individual plan premiums increase and provider networks narrow.
Spartanburg (S.C.) Regional Healthcare System and Minnetonka, Minn.-based UnitedHealthcare have agreed to a two-year contract to keep all SRHS hospitals and physicians in UnitedHealthcare's network, effective Oct. 15.
As open enrollment season kicks off, here are six insurance industry trends for healthcare consumers and professionals to know, according to Denver Business Journal.
A significant number of Americans who purchased coverage through the Affordable Care Act exchanges last year have learned their policy will cease to exist in 2017, forcing them to find new coverage as options dwindle.
Dallas-based Tenet Healthcare began mailing patients notices about its failed contract negotiations with payer Humana, The Palm Beach Post reports.
CMS is telling individuals with subsidized marketplace health plans who are nearing Medicare eligibility age and individuals simultaneously enrolled in Medicare and marketplace coverage that they should abandon their marketplace plans, Kaiser Health News reports.
