Health Care Roundup: Health Care Proposals Compared; ‘Surprise Billing’ Under Scrutiny; How Cancer Disrupts Young Adults’ Lives; Medicare Part D; More
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HEALTH CARE HIGHLIGHTS
Comparing Health Care Proposals
As Medicare-for-all and other public health care proposals continue to be released by Members of Congress, Kaiser Family Foundation created a great interactive summary which they update regularly to compare these plans. Most recently, Senator and presidential candidate Bernie Sanders introduced his Medicare-for-all bill in the Senate. Check out the comparison analysis »
House Holds ‘Surprise Billing’ Hearing
Surprise medical billing has been getting a lot of attention in the media and on Capitol Hill – on both sides of the aisle. Just last week, the House held a hearing on the topic to explore the scope of the problem and discuss solutions to address the issue. The hearing did have a clear agreement: that patients should not be responsible for being great negotiators when it comes to their health care and any solution must protect patients.
Read more about the hearing »
CHART OF THE WEEK
Uninsured Adults in States that Did Not Expand Who Would Become Eligible for Medicaid under Expansion
Kaiser Family Foundation
This graph links to a helpful interactive fact-sheet by Kaiser Family Foundation showing how many adults would be covered by Medicaid if the last states would expand coverage. If these 14 states expanded coverage, 4.4 million more Americans would be eligible for health care coverage.
IMPORTANT READS
‘It’s like pausing your life’: How cancer can put young adults years behind in finances and family
Philadelphia Inquirer
It is an understatement to say that cancer disrupts a person’s life, regardless of age at diagnosis. This article looks particularly at the lasting impact of a cancer diagnosis for young adults who are trying to establish their careers, become financially independent, and rely less on their parents. Young adults of course face large medical bills, in some cases on top of student loans, etc., and for many the costs of fertility treatment not covered by insurance.
Unraveling why some people get not one, not two, but many cancers
Washington Post
This interesting article by Marlene Cimons provides an in-depth look at what the latest science says about why some people develop multiple cancers over their lifetimes.
Medicare Part D must evolve to help people fight cancer
STAT News
In recent years, there have been incredible advancements in cancer treatments. But these innovations are only valuable if patients have access to them and Medicare Part D has remained relatively unchanged in the last 13 years.
This article explores what the gaps are and what can be done to fix them.
Related Posts
https://canceradvocacy.org/blog/health-care-roundup-april-5-2019/
https://canceradvocacy.org/blog/health-care-roundup-mar-29-2019/