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Home » CONSUMER ISSUES » Health Care Reform
Health Care Reform
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CFC Supports AB 714 ( Atkins) - Pre-Enrollment in Exchange and Medi-Cal
by Consumer Federation of California
This measure implements and improves on the provisions of federal health reform by maximizing the uninsured and underinsured enrolled in the Exchange and Medi-Cal on January 1, 2014 when the Exchange opens and Medi-Cal Eligibility expands to cover adults without children under 18 at home.
Stop Health Insurance Industry Profiteering
by Zack Kaldveer, Consumer Federation of California
July 28th, 2007
Health insurance premiums rose 87 percent from 2000 to 2005, nearly five times the rate of inflation and four times the rate of wages. Many employers pass these premium increases onto workers. Workers are now paying $1,094 more in premiums annually for family coverage than they did in 2000.
America's Health Care System: The Facts
Consumer Federation of California
July 19th, 2007
Read our detailed "health of nations" fact sheet to get a comprehensive analysis of the shortcomings of our health care system and specific ways it can be improved.
Ignoring the Elephant in the Room
by Richard Holober, Executive Director, Consumer Federation of California
July 16th, 2007
U.S. health care costs over two trillion dollars a year. That's sixteen percent of our gross domestic product and rapidly rising.
Health Insurance Industry Sinks Rate Regulation
by Zack Kaldveer, Consumer Federation of California
July 13th, 2007
Strenuous opposition from health insurance industry goliaths like Blue Cross, Blue Shield, Kaiser, Health Net, and PacifiCare, sunk legislation to create oversight of insurance rate increases.
CFC Opposition Letter to Governor's Health Plan
by Consumer Federation of California
June 30th, 2007
While the governor's proposal contains some good provisions, it is, on balance, unacceptable. Ten months after it was first put forth as a concept, the governor has made almost no movement to address its many shortcomings.
Health reforms should serve consumers, not insurance industry
by Richard Holober, Executive Director, Consumer Federation of California
February 7th, 2007
Our system of private for-profit health insurance is a disaster for the uninsured and insured alike. Nearly seven million Californians lack health insurance. Insurance co-payments for workers are skyrocketing, and the responsible businesses that do cover their employees are being crushed under the rapid escalation in insurance premium rates.
The Schwarzenegger Files: Power Grab
by Richard Holober, Executive Director, Consumer Federation of California
May 27th, 2004
On November 24, 2003, Governor Schwarzenegger released a state spending cap that has alarmed health care advocates. Californians that obtain health care through MediCAL or Healthy Families would face immediate benefit cuts. Perhaps more troubling is the unprecedented power that the proposal places in the governorýs hands.
Health insurers warn on premiums
by Anna Wilde Mathews and Louise Radnofsky, Wall Street Journal
March 22nd, 2013
Health insurers are privately warning brokers that premiums for many individuals and small businesses could increase sharply next year because of the health-care overhaul law.
Obamacare loophole threatens UC students
by Nanette Asimov and Victoria Colliver, San Francisco Chronicle
January 30th, 2013
Health care limits like the one imposed by UC are already illegal under the sweeping federal health-care law - dubbed Obamacare - but the health care act does not apply to "self-funded" college plans like UC's.
Feds approve California health care changes - with conditions
by Linda Leu, California Progress Report
January 7th, 2013
In a major step forward for health reform implementation, last week the federal government gave the go-ahead for eight more states to start their insurance exchanges. Along with California, the states of Hawaii, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Vermont and Utah received conditional approval to move forward with state based exchanges, while Arkansas received approval for a federal partnership exchange.
Primary care doctors growing scarce
by Drew Johnson, San Francisco Chronicle
January 1st, 2013
Roughly 4 million additional Californians are expected to obtain health insurance by 2014 through the federal health law, an expansion that will likely exacerbate the state's doctor shortage and could squeeze primary care access in the Bay Area, experts say.
Health insurance rates could shoot up
by Victoria Colliver, San Francisco Chronicle
November 30th, 2012
California health insurers are proposing double-digit rate increases for hundreds of thousands of policyholders, drawing criticism that health insurers are padding their profits as the nation prepares to carry out the federal health care law.
Health insurance rebates due next week across California
by Claudia Buck, Sacramento Bee
July 25th, 2012
Consumers across California will be getting rebate checks from their health insurers next week - one of the first tangible results of the federal health care overhaul. About 1.8 million Californians will be getting money back, either directly or through a reduction in their monthly premium.
Blue Shield sued over insurance policy shifts
by Victoria Colliver, San Francisco Chronicle
June 12th, 2012
When Blue Shield of California raised the rates for Robert Jeffrey Martin's family insurance policy by 23 percent, the health insurer offered him two options: Stay in his expensive old plan or switch to a policy that offered his family skimpier benefits with a higher deductible.
A law that scraps junk insurance
by Timm Herdt, Ventura County Star
March 21st, 2012
In California today, nearly 90 percent of health insurance policies sold on the individual market do not cover prenatal care or labor and delivery costs. That will change on July 1, when a new statewide maternity-care mandate kicks in, and nationwide in 2014, when the federal Affordable Care Act goes into full force.
Her case shows why healthcare privacy laws exist
by Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times
January 4th, 2012
Of all the personal information that you might want to keep private, your medical records are the most important. That's why federal and state laws carry stiff penalties, up to and including jail time, for healthcare providers who let such data loose into the wild.
Anthem pulls switch on Medicare Advantage subscribers
by David Lazarus, Los Angeles Times
October 21st, 2011
A pair of letters to the health insurer's California customers sparks confusion. Anthem, it turns out, is replacing its California Medicare Advantage plan with 13 regional variations that allow it to set premiums and benefits according to local conditions.
Health Insurers Sacrifice Americans for Profit
by Wendell Potter, Common Dreams
August 1st, 2011
The three companies that have already spoken - UnitedHealth, WellPoint and Aetna - earned a combined $2.51 billion from April through the end of June, more than analysts expected. On a per share basis, their earnings were up more than 17 percent on average compared with the second quarter of 2010.
A lid on health insurance rate increases
by Editorial, Los Angeles Times
May 31st, 2011
Giving consumers the opportunity to participate in rate reviews is a valuable counterweight to the shifting policies in Sacramento, where regulators' zeal often depends on who won the last election.
Health care on California agenda
by YESENIA AMARO, Merced Sun Star
May 19th, 2011
The California Universal Healthcare Act was introduced by Sen. Mark Leno, D-San Francisco. The bill would initiate single-payer universal health care for the state of California, Leno said. "What that means in short is Medicare for all," he said.
Health insurers’ rates targeted in the Capitol
by John Howard, Capitol Weekly
May 5th, 2011
The proposal is contained in AB 52 by Assemblyman Mike Feuer...described by Heller as the "consumer bill of the year" - requires insurers to get prior approval from the state, bars any rates that are excessive or discriminatory and gives regulators the power to approve, deny or rewrite a rate application.
Committee OKs bill giving state say in insurance rate hikes
by Christina Jewett, California Watch
April 27th, 2011
A controversial bill that would allow state regulators to prohibit "excessive" health insurance rate increases was passed by a key legislative committee yesterday. The bill would allow health insurance regulators to approve, deny or modify proposed hikes in health insurance premiums, co-pays or deductibles.
Watching the health insurer
by Editorial, Los Angeles Times
April 26th, 2011
Now lawmakers are considering a proposal to let state regulators block rate hikes they consider unreasonable, just as they can do for most other types of insurance.
Sutter Health accused of fraud by state
by Erin Allday, San Francisco Chronicle
April 14th, 2011
Sutter Health, one of California's largest health care givers, fraudulently charged insurers up to hundreds of millions of dollars over the past decade for anesthesia services that in some cases weren't even provided, the state's insurance commissioner said Wednesday.
California must regulate health care premiums
by Editorial, San Jose Mercury News
April 5th, 2011
Health insurance companies know all there is to know about maximizing profits. Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield of California both tried to impose rate increases of over 35 percent in the past year, when medical costs rose by just 10 percent.
Insurance commissioner can't stop premium increases
by LORA HINES, The Press Enterprise
February 3rd, 2011
Clamor over an insurance company's decision to increase premiums by as much as 59 percent could lead California lawmakers to consider pre-approving such increases. Last session, a bill that would have authorized the state insurance commissioner to approve rate hikes failed by four votes in the state Senate.
Menus list calories, but Californians may not be counting
by Joanna Linn, California Watch
February 1st, 2011
Calories and other nutrition information have been available in some form - in brochures, posters or online - at many restaurants for some time. But until Jan. 1 this year, none in California had been required to display calorie counts alongside menu offerings.
Review Blue Shield's unhealthy rate increases
by Editorial, San Francisco Chronicle
January 18th, 2011
The insurance industry claims that rate regulation won't solve the underlying problem of increasing medical care costs...but they need to make their case instead of simply hiking rates year after year. Consumers deserve explanations. The California Legislature should pass AB52.
Rising health insurance premiums prompt new rules
by Noam N. Levey, Los Angeles Times
December 22nd, 2010
Insurers that seek rate increases of more than 10% next year must post justifications on a federal website. The Obama administration also outlines efforts to increase federal review of premiums if states have limited power to halt questionable rate hikes.
Six Months In: The "Patient Protection and Affordability Act"
by Anthony Wright, Health Access, California Progress Report
September 23rd, 2010
Californians are already beginning to feel the effects of reform, including getting additional consumer protections from the most abusive insurance company practices; feeling more secure about their current coverage; and receiving financial assistance to afford coverage for early retirees, seniors, and small businesses.
Healthcare reforms don't go far enough
by David Lazarus, Los Angeles Times
September 7th, 2010
Some sort of Medicare-for-all program remains the only equitable way that every American can be provided with adequate and affordable coverage. This wouldn't be socialized medicine and it wouldn't be state-run healthcare.
Big-money lobbyists ruled at legislative session's end
by Jim Sanders, Sacramento Bee
September 2nd, 2010
Senate Bill 797, a proposal to ban BPA - bisphenol A - in baby bottles and sippy cups that was supported by labor and environmental groups but opposed by the American Chemistry Council and a coalition of business groups. The bill died by two votes in the Senate.
California should regulate health care premiums
by Editorial, San Francisco Chronicle
August 11th, 2010
...Sacramento has little control over health care rates, largely because industry lobbyists have killed efforts to change a rules-free marketplace....health insurance interests have given $800,218 over the last three years to members of the state Senate, where showdown votes on insurance controls are due this month.
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