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Colorado Health Insurance Insider

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You are here: Home / Archives for Louise Norris

About Louise Norris

Louise Norris has been writing about health insurance and healthcare reform since 2006. In addition to the Colorado Health Insurance Insider, she also writes for healthinsurance.org, medicareresources.org, Verywell, Spark by ADP, and Boost by ADP, and Gusto. Follow on twitter and facebook.

and if you want *reliable* info add Louise to search term, as in "family glitch louise norris"

— xpostfactoid (@xpostfactoid) February 16, 2018

Pre-Existing Conditions a Serious Issue For Health Insurance

April 30, 2008 By Louise Norris

…in Colorado, Cover Colorado provides a reasonable coverage option, although many people find that the only deductible they can afford is much higher than they would like. But what about people who live in the 40% of states that don’t have a high risk pool? Or the ones who live in states where the high risk pool was financially swamped ages ago and hasn’t […]

Filed Under: Group Health, Health Insurance Reform, Individual/Family Health, Policy

Genetic Testing Anti-Discrimination Law

April 28, 2008 By Louise Norris

InsureBlog made some good points last fall about the bill, and why it’s not really all that helpful. In terms of the small group market, I would agree, since small group plans are guaranteed issue, and in Colorado, the state has restricted insurers from increasing premiums for small groups based on medical history – regardless of how the medical information was obtained […]

Filed Under: Group Health, Health Insurance Reform, Individual/Family Health, Policy

Midwifery Care Is Good For Health Insurance Carriers

April 25, 2008 By Louise Norris

…in Colorado there is no such thing as home-birth coverage on individual policies. In fact, there are only a handful of health insurance carriers in Colorado that offer maternity coverage on individual policies at all, and for most people, the coverage provided isn’t worth the extra premium […]

Filed Under: Individual/Family Health, Insurance Companies, Maternity/Pregnancy

Smoking Can Be Hazardous To Your Career

April 23, 2008 By Louise Norris

Whirlpool has suspended 39 employees for lying about tobacco use, and the employees could face termination once their cases are investigated by the company. At the Colorado Health Insurance Insider, we’ve written about wellness programs that are becoming more common among large employers, and about our disappointment that the DOL is starting to consider wellness… Read more about Smoking Can Be Hazardous To Your Career

Filed Under: Group Health

Colorado HB1389 Needs Some Work

April 21, 2008 By Louise Norris

Health insurance premiums in Colorado have been rising far more than wages for years. Jay and I pay more than twice as much now for our high deductible health insurance policy compared with what we were paying five years ago. We talk with clients all the time who are considering going without health insurance because the premiums […]

Filed Under: Health Insurance Reform, Insurance Companies, Policy, Providers

More Care Does Not Mean Better Care

April 18, 2008 By Louise Norris

None of the hospitals in the Dartmouth study are in Colorado, but I’m curious now to see how the major Colorado hospitals pay their doctors. Given a choice, I would be more inclined to use a hospital that pays physicians a salary, rather than using a per-procedure compensation structure.

Filed Under: Providers

HR5719 Could Get The Presidential Axe

April 17, 2008 By Louise Norris

HR5719 is facing a potential veto from the White House because of the HSA limitations proposed in the bill. At the Colorado Health Insurance Insider, we feel that the proposal in HR5719 to require that HSA participants provide proof of medical expenses would bog down the relative simplicity that HSAs currently provide. Evolution Benefits, the… Read more about HR5719 Could Get The Presidential Axe

Filed Under: HSA

Government Health Care Is Better Than None At All

April 16, 2008 By Louise Norris

I found this article at the Health Care Blog and wanted to share it with our readers. Obviously this doesn’t only apply to McCain. All big-time politicians get government-funded health care. It’s a sweet benefit of working for the government. And there’s no way around the fact that it makes it difficult for a politician… Read more about Government Health Care Is Better Than None At All

Filed Under: Policy

A Bad Trend in Rx Coverage

April 15, 2008 By Louise Norris

We have health insurance to guard against financial devastation in the face of serious health problems. But when we separate out the prescription coverage from the rest of the policy, we’re leaving seriously ill patients to fall between the cracks.

Filed Under: Insurance Companies

Surprise Medical Bill from Out-of-Network DME Provider

April 14, 2008 By Louise Norris

We got a bill last week for $397 from the company that provided Jay’s crutches, knee brace, and ice machine when he had knee surgery in January. The surgery was done at the Vail Valley Medical Center in Vail, Colorado, by Dr. Steadman; both the hospital and the doctor are on our Humana PPO network…. Read more about Surprise Medical Bill from Out-of-Network DME Provider

Filed Under: HSA, Humana, Providers

Dying For Health Insurance

April 11, 2008 By Louise Norris

We’ve all read the articles about how much more likely an uninsured person is to die from a treatable illness, compared with their insured neighbors. Now we have some concrete numbers. Families USA is a national organization for health care consumers, and today they released a very comprehensive state-by-state report showing how many people die… Read more about Dying For Health Insurance

Filed Under: Health Insurance Reform

Recycling Drugs To Fill Prescriptions for The Uninsured

April 10, 2008 By Louise Norris

I’ve seen several articles recently about prescription drug donation/recycling programs, which I think is a great idea. True, it may be like trying to move a mountain with a spoon, but doesn’t that beat not trying at all? The articles I found didn’t mention anything about Rx donation and recycling programs here in Colorado, and… Read more about Recycling Drugs To Fill Prescriptions for The Uninsured

Filed Under: Individual/Family Health

Bureaucracy Wielding Its Sword Over The HSA

April 9, 2008 By Louise Norris

The House Ways and Means Committee met today to discuss HR 5719 – the “Taxpayer Assistance and Simplification Act of 2008” (I love when they come up with names like that – it sounds like the whole thing will be warm and fuzzy and make life easier for all of us). One of the many… Read more about Bureaucracy Wielding Its Sword Over The HSA

Filed Under: Dental, HSA, Individual/Family Health

Health Care For All Pregnant Women

April 8, 2008 By Louise Norris

I just came across a great article from Midwife With A Knife (The RHI Health Blog of the Week on Regulating Health Insurance). It’s about the frustration felt by a doctor dealing with non-compliant patients – in this case, pregnant diabetics who don’t manage their blood sugar and insulin during pregnancy, and end up with… Read more about Health Care For All Pregnant Women

Filed Under: Health Insurance Reform, Individual/Family Health, Maternity/Pregnancy

It Pays To Be A Non-Profit Hospital

April 7, 2008 By Louise Norris

At least two of the blogs we read have posted articles relating to a Wall Street Journal feature about how non-profit hospitals in America are doing pretty darn well on the money front. Schwitzer Health News Blog and GoozNews have both written about this eye-opening story, and I had to go read it for myself…. Read more about It Pays To Be A Non-Profit Hospital

Filed Under: Individual/Family Health, Providers

Why Is There A Balance To Bill In The First Place?

April 4, 2008 By Louise Norris

In CA, regulators are working to impose a ban on “balance billing” – the practice of billing patients for amounts over what their health insurance companies will pay for a given procedure. While most health insurance networks prohibit balance billing, there are only eight states that regulate the practice, and a good number of patients… Read more about Why Is There A Balance To Bill In The First Place?

Filed Under: Health Insurance Reform, Individual/Family Health, Medicare, Policy, Providers

Colorado Lawmakers Addressing Health Insurance Premium Increases

April 2, 2008 By Louise Norris

Colorado lawmakers have proposed legislation that would tighten restrictions on health insurance carriers regarding premium increases and the timeliness of claims payment. The bill to limit premium increases was sponsored by state representative Morgan Carroll (D), who cited a 60% increase in health insurance premiums in Colorado between 2001 and 2005. During the same time,… Read more about Colorado Lawmakers Addressing Health Insurance Premium Increases

Filed Under: Health Insurance Reform, Individual/Family Health, Insurance Companies

What The Doctor Ordered

April 1, 2008 By Louise Norris

At the Colorado Health Insurance Insider, we’re big fans of a single-payer national health care system. We know that it would have quite an impact on our careers, but we believe it would be the best way to provide health care for everyone who needs it, without bankrupting people in the process. Turns out that… Read more about What The Doctor Ordered

Filed Under: Health Insurance Reform, Providers

Capping Health Insurance Premiums

March 31, 2008 By Louise Norris

David Williams at the Health Business Blog has written a post about Clinton’s plan to cap health insurance premiums at 5% – 10% of a family’s income. With a US median income of nearly $50,000/year, health insurance premiums would be somewhere in the range of $2500 – $5000/year, which as Mr. Williams points out, doesn’t… Read more about Capping Health Insurance Premiums

Filed Under: Group Health, Health Insurance Reform, HSA, Individual/Family Health

Just About Everyone Agrees That Something Needs To Be Done

March 28, 2008 By Louise Norris

How often do you see a poll where 95% of the respondents agree on an issue? That’s the percentage of the more than 26,000 people recruited to take an online survey about health care in America, who believe that our health care system needs fundamental and major changes. Most of the respondents have jobs, a… Read more about Just About Everyone Agrees That Something Needs To Be Done

Filed Under: Health Insurance Reform

Is Mandatory Health Insurance Unconstitutional?

March 27, 2008 By Louise Norris

I just came across an excellent article by Karl Manheim and Jamie Court. It presents some compelling explanations of how the idea of making private health insurance mandatory for American citizens may not be constitutional. At the Colorado Health Insurance Insider, I’ve come out in support of mandatory health insurance, and also very much in… Read more about Is Mandatory Health Insurance Unconstitutional?

Filed Under: Health Insurance Reform, Medicare, Policy

If The Cancer Doesn’t Kill You, The Price Tag Might

March 25, 2008 By Louise Norris

What do you do when you’re 71 years old, battling blood cancer, and find out that your cost for the medication that is treating your cancer has gone from $60/month to $1051/month? Helen Geiger had to stop taking the cancer medication Thalomid for several months last year while her family and doctors appealed the insurance… Read more about If The Cancer Doesn’t Kill You, The Price Tag Might

Filed Under: Health Insurance Reform, Insurance Companies

Credit Checks On Uninsured Patients

March 21, 2008 By Louise Norris

At Colorado Health Insurance Insider we have written before about predatory collection practices at hospitals around the country. And now hospitals can be added to the long list of organizations that will access your credit report at some point during your transaction. Hospitals say that they pull credit reports on patients who do not have… Read more about Credit Checks On Uninsured Patients

Filed Under: Medicare, Providers

Sunscreen, A Swimsuit, and Your Health Insurance Card

March 19, 2008 By Louise Norris

According to a Business Week article, most of the major US health insurance carriers are moving towards including overseas hospitals in their provider networks, in an effort to encourage policy holders to utilize the much less expensive services that can be found in many of Asia’s top-notch private hospitals. Most of the hospitals are accredited… Read more about Sunscreen, A Swimsuit, and Your Health Insurance Card

Filed Under: Anthem Blue Cross, Individual/Family Health, Insurance Companies, Providers, Travel

Daily Dialysis Dramatically Better

March 18, 2008 By Louise Norris

I came across this article today about the benefits of home hemodialysis. My father has been on dialysis for nearly 7 years, since a rare autoimmune disease destroyed his kidneys in the summer of 2001. He was on hemodialysis for a while, and then switched to peritoneal dialysis. That worked for a couple years until… Read more about Daily Dialysis Dramatically Better

Filed Under: Advice, CU-Boulder, Medicare

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