Charles Gaba's blog

Via the Connecticut Insurance Dept:

CONNECTICUT INSURANCE DEPARTMENT RELEASES HEALTH INSURANCE RATE REQUEST FILINGS FOR 2027

The Connecticut Insurance Department (CID) has received rate filings from four health insurers for plans to be offered in the individual and small group markets, both on and off the state-sponsored exchange, Access Health CT . As part of CID’s statutory responsibilities, the CID will conduct a thorough and careful review of each filing to ensure compliance with Connecticut insurance laws and regulations.

The CID’s review process will examine each submission in detail, requiring insurers to provide justifications and supporting evidence for their requested rates. All filings are available on the CID’s website .

The past couple of weeks have been pretty brutal for the Oregon health insurance market.

On May 21st, Providence Health Plan announced that they were shutting down pretty much their entire insurance division across Oregon (which also impacts some people in Washington and California):

Providence Health & Services plans to exit most of its Oregon health insurance business next year, citing rising costs, tougher regulation and intensifying competition from national insurers — a move that will force hundreds of thousands of Oregonians to find new coverage.

...Providence Health Plan, based in Portland, is Oregon’s third-largest health insurer, covering more than 421,000 Oregonians. It also covers over 13,000 members in Washington and 4,800 in California.

As I and many others have been warning about for the past year or so, the upcoming so-called "work requirements" (aka "paperwork hell" requirements) of last year's Big Ugly Bill are ramping up in January...and in fact have already begun in Nebraska. A few days ago the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) published their "final rule" with the reporting and exemption regulations which every state which has expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act will be required to follow...and, as expected, it's likely to be a disaster.

Via Selena Simmons-Duffin of NPR:

Advocates for people with serious illnesses, like cancer and HIV, say the strict Medicaid work rules that the Trump administration released this week are likely to put ongoing treatments in jeopardy.

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