• Medicaid Work Requirements: A New Trend for 2018?

    The week before last, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a State Medicaid Director letter providing new guidance for Section 1115 waiver proposals that would impose work requirements (referred to as “community engagement”) in Medicaid as a condition of eligibility. This is a significant policy shift for Medicaid – but was not […]

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  • NoHLA Participates in Womxn Act on Seattle

    On the second anniversary of the Women’s March, we participated in Womxn Act on Seattle, a series of trainings, lectures, panels, film screenings and food drives, combined with one of the state’s largest single-day regional voter registration and mobilization efforts in history. NoHLA was pleased to be hosted by Gethsemane Lutheran Church in downtown Seattle […]

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  • Weekend Government Shutdown Ends: Kids Health Renewed and Immigration Promised

    The federal government was shut down last weekend. On Friday, most Senate Democrats and five Senate Republicans opposed another short-term spending bill. The House-passed bill would have extended the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) for six years, but failed to address the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program or other immigration issues. The President […]

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  • Three Cheers for New Birth Control Requirements in WA State

    Beginning this month, insurers must cover a 12-month supply of birth control pills at a time. This change came due to legislation passed last year to remove barriers for women.

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  • Open Enrollment – Still Enrolling for February 1 Coverage!

    Washington State continues its Open Enrollment period until next Monday, January 15, so there is still time for individuals and families to get coverage for the remainder of 2018. Over 230,000 individuals have already selected plans for January 1 coverage via Washington HealthPlanFinder – a 35% increase over January 2017. Open enrollment in the 39 states served by HealthCare.gov ended on […]

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  • Welcome 2018!

    As the new year begins, we expect continued threats to the Affordable Care Act (ACA), Medicaid, Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) and other public health insurance programs, but there will also be action at the state level, including efforts to mitigate setbacks and move forward. We hope you will join us to protect health care […]

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  • What May Happen in the Year Ahead?

    Some of our favorite health policy journalists and experts are speculating about next steps in health policy (including Vox, Axios, The Hill, and Politico). Here are some key issues we will track closely: Additional threats to the ACA? Congressional Republicans have an unclear strategy about the ACA. As noted in Politico, “GOP leaders don’t have a solution, but they don’t have […]

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  • You Win Some, You Lose Some in Tax “Reform”

    The tax bill was moving full-speed ahead in mid-December. That trajectory moved it right to the President’s desk on December 20. Check out this excellent summary of how the final bill might affect you. We tracked two health care provisions in the bill – the individual mandate repeal and the elimination of the high-cost medical deduction. The […]

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  • Washington Legislature: On Your Mark, Get Set, Go!

    The state’s 60-day legislative session starts on Monday, January 8. This year brings a change as Senate Democrats re-take control after the Majority Coalition Caucus seized it in late 2012. Among the many bills under consideration are ones that: create a state reinsurance program intended to mitigate expected health insurance premium increases due to the […]

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  • Temporary Relief for CHIP

    Just before the holidays, Congress passed a “stopgap” spending bill, averting a government shutdown and funding the government through January 19. They included a six-month extension of the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) and community health centers, backdated to October 1. Unfortunately, $750 million was cut from the Prevention and Public Health Trust Fund to […]

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