In 2021, enrollment in employment-based group coverage declined while enrollment in individual-market (non-group) coverage and Medicaid increased. Those coverage gains were primarily driven by ...
A new analysis from the Office of the Actuary at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), published online today by Health Affairs, estimates that in 2021 health care spending in the ...
The CEOs of Americaโ€™s seven largest publicly traded health insurance and services companies cumulatively earned more than $283 million in 2021 โ€” by far the most of any year in the past decade. Soaring ...
Employer health insurance costs spiked in 2021, and it remains unclear if this is a one-off course correction or the beginning of a new trend, according to a new Mercer survey. The average cost for ...
The Census Bureau released some heartening news Tuesday. Child poverty is at a historic low, according to the bureau's annual report on income, poverty and health insurance. And the rate of Americans ...
As premiums rise faster than wages, workers face greater cost sharing, leaving some underinsured. This report discusses the trends in the availability and affordability of ESI over the past decade and ...
In addition to the 10 million who could be eligible financial help with coverage through the public health exchange, 7 million more may qualify for Medicaid or the Children's Health Insurance Program.
While average premiums are up 4% from 2020, they're 47% more than they were in 2011. Deductibles have surged 68.4% over the last decade to an average $1,669 from $991. Roughly 155 million people rely ...
With the spike in Affordable Care Act health insurance costs, around 4·8 million people could lose coverage. Susan Jaffe reports from Washington, DC.