Health insurance is becoming a must across college campuses for international and domestic students. international student insurance provides coverage during study abroad programs, offering coverage against accidental injury or illness. International student insurance that includes medical coverage is an important way to protect students from high healthcare expenses faced when studying abroad. [...]
Once a person has skin tags the first help is always sought in a dermatologist’s office. But again since skin tags are placed under cosmetic defects as opposed to a health risk, health insurance companies don’t touch such a case even with a long pole. This results in a very expensive hospital bill that does more harm than good to the victim. What this folks need to understand is that the dermatologist is not the sole help and remedy to skin tag problems; that other help is out there to alleviate
this end up? (photo by peppergrass) Health insurance companies are raising rates to small businesses at a staggering rate: one consultant tells the New York Times he expects small business rates to rise an average of 15-23%, which is well ahead of the rate of increase of medical costs. Why? The Times quotes several people saying that insurers are worried about the wizards of Wall Street: “There’s no one out there who hasn’t had to do a mea culpa to Wall Street,” said Shery
The Education of Congressman Hoyer Dr. Paul Moreno| BIG GOVERNMENT Congress is moving closer to enacting a law requiring all Americans to purchase health insurance. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer says that this is “like paying taxes.” He’s right about that. But Hoyer made this statement as part of an effort to justify the health-care mandate on constitutional grounds. Here he indicates that he doesn’t understand the Constitution that he took an oath to support. When asked what po
Recent debates over Democratic health care proposals have tended to focus on whether or not an eventual bill would include a “public option,” i.e. a government run health insurance plan. Many conservatives see a public option as a back door to single payer, and many progressives agree. Yet the experience of Maine’s public option (as well as reflections on the relative efficiencies of government-run businesses in general ) lead me to believe that this isn’t at all likely. Don’t get me wrong, I