List Of Medicaid Health PlansNews for: List Of Medicaid Health Plans
Presidential candidates' health care plans Key points: Candidates' health care pl
Plans To Cut Health Costs May Not Pay Off The United States spends $2 trillion on health care every year. If costs continue to rise, health economists say the U.S. could see a significant drain on spending in areas such as the military or education. McCain and Obama both promise to cut costs, but their plans may not be aggressive enou
EPA Issues List of Midwest Counties It Plans to Name as Not Meeting New, Health-Based Soot Standard U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region 5 today issued a list of 76 counties that it plans to name as not meeting the new, health-based 24-hour outdoor air quality standard for fine particles soot. Counties that do not meet national outdoor air quality standards are called nonattainment are
SC Medicaid to stop paying hospitals for mistakes GREENVILLE, S.C. - South Carolina's Medicaid program plans to stop paying hospitals for medical errors they make. Health and Human Services Department spokesman Jeff Stensland told the Greenville News the state should not be encouraging sloppy practices by reimbursing hospita
Managed care urged for city's Medicaid HIV/AIDS cases ALBANY, N.Y. -- The New York state Medicaid director is recommending that New York City residents with HIV/AIDS and receiving Medicaid benefits should be required to use health maintenance organizations.
List of US News' top 10 national universities Top-ranked national universities in 2009 edition of "America's Best Colleges" from U.S. News & World Report last year's ranking in parentheses
Goal: Keep mentally ill out of prison Eyes peered through the narrow window in the cell door. "I'm getting out tomorrow," said the man, little more than a disembodied voice shouting over the screams of neighboring inmates at the Larned Correctional Mental Health Facility. He didn't mean out of prison -- just out of the cell where he spends 23 hours a day. Officially known as "administrative segregation," inmates call isolation
Health Care Group Calls W.V. Medicaid Unfair A national health care advocacy group is criticizing West Virginia's redesigned Medicaid plan, saying it's inadequate for addressing the state's health problems and unfair to recipien
Tips for high-deductible plans As health care costs get higher and workers are asked to carry more of the costs, high-deductible insurance plans are getting more popular. But many people are finding an unexpected cost: Doctors expect their full payment upfront. Here are some tips: Find out what your deductible is and keep track of your medical payments so you will know when it has been m
USA Track and Field Olympic struggles list List of setbacks and key defeats suffered by members of the United States athletics team at the Beijing Olympi
Health fair opens residents' eyes SPRINGFIELD - When Tammy Golphin needed health insurance, a women's group through her church was there to lend a hand - and information. So she and members of the Heart2Heart Women's Fellowship decided to offer the same to Indian Orchard residents through a health fair at Hubbard Park on Saturd
Health boards 'could lose £85m' Health boards could lose £85 million because of rising inflation, Labour has warned. The party made the claim on the assumption that inflation would outstrip the SNP government's budget increases at 4.
Court fines District over missed health care deadlines A federal court has ordered the D.C. government to pay more than $900,000 in fines for failing to provide adequate Medicaid service to the District's children from low-income families, in a ruling some lawyers say shows a fundamental problem with the health insurance program.
One lane of eastbound Bay Bridge to close The Maryland Transportation Authority plans to close one lane of the eastbound span of the Bay Bridge tomorrow through Wednesday for continued inspections in the aftermath of a fatal crash in which a tractor-trailer plunged into the Chesapeake Bay. The other lane of the two-lane span will remain open during the closure, which will be in effect from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. if weather permits. During the
SC Medicaid to stop paying hospitals for mistakes Friday, August 22, 2008 at 10:31 a.m. -- GREENVILLE, S.C. - South Carolina's Medicaid program plans to stop paying hospitals for medical errors they ma
Sullivan plans to quell traffic on first day of school In an attempt to ease the traffic headaches along Kingwood Drive on the first day of school, City Councilman Mike Sullivan has called on some he
2 doctors, nurse charged with health care fraud ST. LOUIS - Two St. Louis-area doctors and a nurse have been indicted on multiple charges of conspiracy to commit health care fraud. They are accused of working together to defraud Medicare and Medica
State agency fails to list employers with workers on Medicaid Jefferson City -- Missouri's social services agency has failed to publish a list of employers who have significant numbers of workers on Medicaid -- a violation of both a state law and a gubernatorial ord
Study says Measure 59 would hurt education, health SALEM — A new study suggests that a proposed tax measure on the November ballot would take a smaller bite out of state revenue than expected but could damage education, health or public safety progra
Can either candidate's plan fix health care woes? DAYTON — Neither plan proposed by Barack Obama or John McCain will fix this nation's health care system woes, local doctors s
State's outlay on health soars Money spent for employers that had 50 or more workers use publicly supported health insurance programs increased by more than $75 million for fiscal 2007, according to the most recent available da
TUSD scraps West Side cell-phone tower plans The Tucson Unified School District has called off plans to install a new cell-phone tower at a West Side elementary school after parents complained about possible health and safety ris
Texas' first-time delegates part of Democratic revival If there ever was a sign of how Sens. Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton have revived the Democratic grass roots, it's the fact that nearly 60 percent of the Texas delegation to the DNC have never been to one before.
A Look at the Plans for Main Street The Main Street reconstruction effort entered its fifth week on Monday as crews continued the process of replacing old sewer and water lines and inched their way ever closer to the village's western boundary. In the excitement brought on by a flurry of new activity and the commencement of a project so long in development, it can be easy to lose sight of the more general goals that the project
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