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Healthcare Policies

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    May 16, 2013 |Story| Reuters
  1. REFILE-Retirement healthcare costs decline: Fidelity

    Reuters
    By Mark Miller CHICAGO, May 15 (Reuters) - Healthcare costs put a big squeeze on retiree pocketbooks, but the grip may be relaxing a bit. A 65-year-old couple retiring this year will need $220,000 to pay for healthcare for the rest of their lives, an...

    Tags: Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Medicare, Government Health Care, Drugs and Medicines, Prices

  2. May 16, 2013 |Story| AP Indiana
  3. American Legion plans meeting on Fort Wayne VA

    FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) — The American Legion is planning a town hall meeting next week on the quality of health care that veterans receive at the Department of Veterans Affairs Northern Indiana Health Care System in Fort Wayne. Legion officials...

    Tags: American Legion, U.S. Congress, Veterans Affairs

  4. May 16, 2013 |Story| AP Indiana
  5. Here is the latest Indiana news from The Associated Press

    INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The Indiana Department of Agriculture has named a northern Indiana development veteran to lead the agency's economic development and trade initiatives. The department announced the appointment of Connie Neininger this week....

    Tags: American Legion, Prisons

  6. May 13, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. Rabinowitz named new vice president at Upper Chesapeake Health

    Aaron Rabinowitz has joined the two hospital health system in Harford County as Vice President, General Counsel, Upper Chesapeake Health announced. Prior to joining UCH, Rabinowitz practiced as a health attorney at the Baltimore law firm of Ober Kaler,...

    Tags: Health Insurance, Washington, DC, Colleges and Universities, Healthcare Laws, Crime, Law and Justice

  8. May 15, 2013 |Story| AP Broadcast
  9. Health care workers sickened by SARS-like virus

    NEW YORK (AP) — Global health officials say a deadly new respiratory virus related to SARS has apparently spread from patients to two health care workers in eastern Saudi Arabia. They say the virus has likely already spread person-to-person in...

    Tags: Pneumonia, Health and Safety at Work, Saudi Arabia, France, Viral Diseases and Infections

  10. May 8, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Medicare charges vary widely at California hospitals, new data show

    Federal officials are shedding new light on how much hospital bills vary across Southern California and the rest of the country.
    Federal officials are shedding new light on how much hospital bills vary across Southern California and the rest of the country. Medicare released pricing information Wednesday for more than 3,300 U.S. hospitals on the top 100 procedures and...

    Tags: Hospitals and Clinics, Medicare, Government Health Care, Pneumonia, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

  12. May 11, 2013 |Story| Glendale News Press
  13. GCC budget still tight

    This post has been corrected. See below for details.  Glendale Community College officials on Friday announced that roughly 100 empty positions that have remained unfilled now for three years will remain so for another. Officials at the meeting on...

    Tags: Colleges and Universities

  14. May 12, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. L.A. worries about immigration reform's cost to taxpayers

    As Congress takes up immigration reform, Los Angeles County officials are voicing concerns that local taxpayers <a href=&quot;http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-county-immigration-20130512,0,4085231.story">will be "left holding the bag" to </a>pay for the brunt of healthcare and other services for the multitudes of immigrants who apply for citizenship.
    As Congress takes up immigration reform, Los Angeles County officials are voicing concerns that local taxpayers will be "left holding the bag" to pay for the brunt of healthcare and other services for the multitudes of immigrants who apply for...

    Tags: Immigration, Jeff Sessions, Dianne Feinstein, Local Government, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program

  16. May 11, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. L.A. County officials worried about costs of immigration overhaul

    WASHINGTON &mdash; Few regions will absorb the impact of future immigration reforms more than Los Angeles County, home to an estimated 1.1 million people in the country illegally, one-tenth of the nation's total.
    WASHINGTON — Few regions will absorb the impact of future immigration reforms more than Los Angeles County, home to an estimated 1.1 million people in the country illegally, one-tenth of the nation's total. As the Senate Judiciary Committee...

    Tags: Health Insurance, Jeff Sessions, Dianne Feinstein, Don Knabe, National Government

  18. May 5, 2013 |Story| AP Broadcast
  19. 'Safety net' hospitals watching health law impact

    FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) — Indiana hospitals that serve as safety nets for the poor and uninsured say they're waiting to see what impact the federal health care overhaul has on their bottom lines. The law will give more people access to insurance...

    Tags: Hospitals and Clinics, Medicaid, Health Insurance, U.S. Supreme Court, Government Health Care

  20. May 10, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. Healthcare puts Jerry Brown, Capitol Democrats on different sides

    SACRAMENTO — With California's deficit wiped out and its economy starting to hum, this was to be a year when Gov. Jerry Brown was free of the budget logjams that have paralyzed the Capitol. But instead, the governor has a fight on his hands...

    Tags: Holly J. Mitchell, Regional Authority, Executive Branch, Jerry Brown, Barack Obama

  22. May 9, 2013 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  23. Overselling Obamacare

    WASHINGTON -- It's the great moral imperative behind the Affordable Care Act (&quot;Obamacare"): People should not be denied health care because they can't afford insurance. Health status and insurance are assumed to be connected, and opponents have often been cast as moral midgets, willing to condemn the uninsured to unnecessary illness or death. The trouble is that health status and insurance are only loosely connected. This suggests that Obamacare may result in more spending and health services but few gains in the public's health.
    WASHINGTON -- It's the great moral imperative behind the Affordable Care Act ("Obamacare"): People should not be denied health care because they can't afford insurance. Health status and insurance are assumed to be connected, and opponents have often been...

    Tags: Diabetes, Heart Attack, Health Insurance, Health Insurance Cost, Prescription Drugs

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Healthcare Policies Photos
Sylvia Bernal (middle) discusses plans with Alliance He...
(April 5, 2013)
Sylvia Bernal (middle) discusses plans with Alliance Health Care Foundation representatives.
Steven R. Olson, a senior partner in the Health Care Pr...
(January 14, 2013)
Steven R. Olson, president and CEO, Delta Dental Plans Association
Information received by the federal agency shows that H...
(November 16, 2012)
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