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PA Gets Navigation Money

Pennsylvania has received $2.7 million in Affordable Care Act money to help individuals and families navigate the health insurance exchange that the federal government will operate for the state beginning on January 1, 2014.
The money will be divided among five groups that will help individuals figure out how to take advantage of the new health insurance exchange and obtain any insurance premium subsidies for which they may be eligible.
The five groups receiving the federal money are Resources for Human Development, the Pennsylvania Association of Community Health Centers, Mental Health America, the Pennsylvania Mental Health Consumers’ Association, and the Cardon Healthcare Network.
Learn more about the federal money, why it is being spent, and how it will be used in this PA Independent article.

2013-08-23T06:00:12+00:00August 23rd, 2013|Affordable Care Act|Comments Off on PA Gets Navigation Money

Insurance Subsidies Will Be Common

Nearly half of all individuals and families expected to turn to health insurance exchanges for insurance policies under the Affordable Care Act will be entitled to federal subsidies to help pay their premiums.
Those subsidies will average more than $5500 per family and cover two-thirds of a premium’s overall cost.
These subsidies will be critical for Pennsylvania’s safety-net hospitals, which currently find themselves providing significant amounts of uncompensated care to low-income but working individuals and families that cannot afford health insurance today.
These were among the findings of a recent Kaiser Family Foundation analysis.  Read more about the analysis and the future that awaits individuals and families in the new individual health insurance market in this CQ HealthBeat article presented by the Commonwealth Fund.

2013-08-22T06:00:31+00:00August 22nd, 2013|Affordable Care Act|Comments Off on Insurance Subsidies Will Be Common
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