Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH

  

share
email
print
reprint
font size
options
 
Letty Thall, public policy director, Maternity Care Coalition MERGER OK? Maybe, with conditions. WORRY: The two companies, whether they merge or not, may not work hard enough to cover health services that lead to healthy babies for all women. WHY: Who pays determines what services women get. Already there's a hurdle because women of childbearing age are more expensive to insure.
1 of 4


Blues hearings: A chance to weigh in on a complex merger

Health-care experts point to a looming crisis: 47 million uninsured; family premiums up 78 percent in six years - enough to price individuals and employers out of insurance - and medical care consuming an ever-larger slice of the U.S. economy.

There's more.

Doctors, employers and insurers increasingly chart the link between rising health-care costs and common conditions such as diabetes and obesity. That is opening the way for electronic medical records and other systems that can keep track of patient health along with complex paperwork.

Meanwhile, insurance companies, hospitals and doctors' practices all are consolidating to achieve greater clout even as many call for a single-payer system.

It's a big issue, but this week in Philadelphia, there's an opportunity to look at it through a very local lens as speakers line up to testify at the Pennsylvania Insurance Department's hearings on the proposed merger of Independence Blue Cross and Highmark Inc.

The merger, an example of consolidation, would create the state's largest insurer. One reason the two Blues want to merge? To save money on advanced technology.

But hospitals and doctors worry about the potential clout of a merged organization as they bargain over reimbursements. Businesses want stabilized premiums. Advocates seek help for the uninsured and better care for all.

The drill: Public hearings on the proposed merger are scheduled at the Sheraton Center City, 201 N. 17th St., on Tuesday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., and on Wednesday from 9 a.m. to conclusion.


Watch the hearings at http://go.philly.com/insurance. The link will be live only during the hearings on Tuesday and Wednesday.


Contact staff writer Jane M. Von Bergen at 215-854-2769 or jvonbergen@phillynews.com.

  • Jobs
  • Cars
  • Real Estate
  • Rentals
 
SEARCH JOBS
Spotlight Deal
Torresdale 19114
Spotlight Deal
Graduate Hospital/Ave. of the Arts 19146
SEARCH REAL ESTATE
Spotlight Deal
Manayunk 19127
Spotlight Deal
Conshohocken 19428
SEARCH RENTALS
PHILLY.COM INDICES WATCH
Business newsletter
Sign up for a free e-mail business update from the Inquirer straight to your inbox every weekday afternoon.

Question: I've started trading futures and currencies. It's a small account, but I'm worried about the effect on my taxes because there is so much trading. Is there anything I can do about that?
New rules for Individual Retirement Accounts should induce you to see if 2010 is the year to convert any traditional IRA into a Roth IRA. It depends on when you'd rather pay the taxes.