- Body armor for women: Pentagon is pushed to find something that fits
- Appeals court strikes down DOMA: Tradition doesn't justify unequal treatment (+video)
- Satellite images suggest Iran cleaning up past nuclear weapons-related work
- What do women voters want? In a word: jobs.
- Spelling bee: Intensity makes it the experience of a lifetime (+quiz)
Topic: Health and Medical Insurance Carriers
Top galleries, list articles, quizzes
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Beyond Obamacare: 5 opinions on health care reform
Health care reform remains a contentious issue in the United States. The Supreme Court will decide this year on President Obama's health care law, known as Obamacare. Meanwhile, Americans spend a higher percentage of GDP on health care than other advanced nations, for care that many argue isn't as good. Here writers explore five key aspects of US health care reform.
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Bullish on jobs? These 10 cities are.
Our list of the 10 metro areas that saw the most job growth in 2011 might surprise you.
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In Pictures: Top ten highest paid American CEOs
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Top 5 business deals of 2010 that hit your pocketbook
The past year has produced some of the most intriguing business deals of the decade, which boosted (or sunk) the fortunes of CEOs and shareholders alike. Perhaps the most relevant question, however, is what impact these transactions will have on consumers? Here are the Top 5 deals of 2010 that, for better or worse, will change the way you spend your money.
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Meg Whitman and the perils of employing illegal help: six memorable cases
Meg Whitman, California GOP gubernatorial candidate, is alleged to have employed a housekeeper from 2000 to 2009 even though she knew the woman was in the US illegally. It's a political bombshell for Ms. Whitman. The politics of household employment and immigration have proved tricky before. Here are six prominent cases, plus the allegations against Whitman.
All Content
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Spain enters recession; Dow and S&P 500 fall
Spain reentered a recession Monday, renewing fears about Europe's economic stability and sending stocks lower. The Dow fell 14 points to close at 13213; the Standard and Poor 500 index had its first monthly loss since November.
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Wall Street closes out best first quarter in 14 years
Wall Street sees dramatic gains for indexes in first quarter of 2012: Dow climbs 8 percent; S&P rises 12 percent; Nasdaq is up 19 percent.
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Stocks mixed; Dow rallies late
After dropping as much as 94 points earlier Thursday, the Dow rallied late in the day to close up 19 points, at 13145.
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Falling commodity prices lower stocks
Falling commodity prices pushed stocks lower Wednesday. The Dow fell 71 points to close at 13126, and all three major indexes lost at least a half percent.
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Beyond Obamacare: 5 opinions on health care reform
Health care reform remains a contentious issue in the United States. The Supreme Court will decide this year on President Obama's health care law, known as Obamacare. Meanwhile, Americans spend a higher percentage of GDP on health care than other advanced nations, for care that many argue isn't as good. Here writers explore five key aspects of US health care reform.
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Bernanke comments send stocks soaring
Stocks recorded one of their biggest gains of the year Monday after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke suggested that the U.S. economy still needs help to produce faster job growth. The Dow jumped 160 points to close at 13241, its third-best showing of the year.
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Bullish on jobs? These 10 cities are.
Our list of the 10 metro areas that saw the most job growth in 2011 might surprise you.
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Stocks fall as Greek debt talks drag
The Dow fell 17 points to close at 12845 as talks dragged on between Greek political leaders over a fresh cost-cutting package required for the country to get more bailout loans.
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Pet insurance: Company offering pet health coverage
Pet insurance is now being offered by a Pennsylvania-based Capital Blue Cross. An estimated 1 million people have pet insurance, the company estimates.
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Stocks reach highest level since August
The Dow gained 104 points to close at 11913. The Nasdaq turned positive for the year, gaining 61 points to end at 2699.
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In Pictures: Top ten highest paid American CEOs
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Donald Marron
High-deductible health plans growing
The employer market is moving toward more consumer-driven plans. Will that translate into lower health spending?
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Medicare could save $125 billion
Medicare and Medicaid could save the money through coordinating care, a study says. Some 9 million elderly are eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid.
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Health insurers owe Fla. $3 million
Health insurers that overstated how much money they spent on patients owe the state millions. Florida relies on private health insurers for some state-run programs.
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Uncle Sam's meddling in health insurance rates is wrong and will hurt consumers
The US Department of Health and Human Services is trying to bully or shame health insurers into reducing their rate increases. The problem is that the federal government has no legal authority to regulate health insurance rates and doing say may actually drive prices up.
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Health insurance waiver: bipartisan proposal attempts to move up date
Health insurance waiver may be moved up to 2014, if Sen. Scott Brown and Sen. Ron Wyden get their way. The proposal would allow states a health insurance waiver if they developed their own healthcare solution.
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Medicare, Obamacare future? Snip, snip, snip.
Medicare and the new federal health-insurance program will boost costs that Congress will have to rein in.
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Top 5 business deals of 2010 that hit your pocketbook
The past year has produced some of the most intriguing business deals of the decade, which boosted (or sunk) the fortunes of CEOs and shareholders alike. Perhaps the most relevant question, however, is what impact these transactions will have on consumers? Here are the Top 5 deals of 2010 that, for better or worse, will change the way you spend your money.
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Health plans: California fines insurers
Health plans did not meet requirement to pay 95 percent of claims correctly, regulator says.
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Medicare: Walmart drug plan is low cost. Is it best?
Medicare open enrollment has started with the Walmart-Humana drug plan the lowest in the nation.
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Humana profit tops expectations, sees growth ahead
Humana earned $2.32 per share in its latest quarter, far above the $1.66 analysts had expected.
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Meg Whitman and the perils of employing illegal help: six memorable cases
Meg Whitman, California GOP gubernatorial candidate, is alleged to have employed a housekeeper from 2000 to 2009 even though she knew the woman was in the US illegally. It's a political bombshell for Ms. Whitman. The politics of household employment and immigration have proved tricky before. Here are six prominent cases, plus the allegations against Whitman.
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Robert Reich
Gulf spill: Where's the outrage, Mr. Obama?
In the Gulf spill and other recent scandals, President Obama has shown corporate America too much deference.
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Massachusetts court rejects health insurers' bid to raise premiums
Six health insurers in Massachusetts, which has universal healthcare, wanted to raise premiums. But the state's insurance commissioner said no. A judge ruled in the state's favor.








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