Budgets are being reworked as treatment costs rise and medical records go digital. Choosing protection has become ...
Lyn Rosten can’t stop worrying about what her family’s health insurance will cost next year. That worry deepened this month when the 47-year-old Portland resident opened a letter from her insurer.
This year, health insurance costs grew faster than inflation and wages, with many insurers attempting to cover the rising costs of specialty drugs, such as GLP-1s. Many employers have indicated they ...
The government shutdown has focused debate on the vast sum ($136 billion in 2025, as projected by the Congressional Budget Office) that the federal government spends to annually subsize continually ...
Lehigh County residents who receive their health insurance through Pennsylvania’s online marketplace, Pennie, can expect their monthly premiums to more than double if Congress doesn’t extend tax ...
SNAP benefits at risk due to the government shutdown, the AG putting Big Tech on trial, and more Length: Long Speed: 1.0x Jacob McDonald knows he’s lucky to have a good health insurance plan through ...
The main difference is that most Americans don’t confront the full cost of their coverage. By Reed Abelson and Margot Sanger-Katz The authors have been covering the high cost of American health care ...
A new employer survey shows premiums for a family climbed in 2025 as companies and their workers pay more for coverage. By Reed Abelson Family health insurance coverage for the vast majority of ...
Millions of Americans are already seeing their health insurance costs soar for 2026 as Congress remains deadlocked over extending covid-era subsidies for premiums. The bitter fight sparked a ...
ACA enhanced premium tax credits are set to expire at the end of the year. As the federal government shutdown enters its third week, some Americans are worried about the future of the Affordable Care ...
Editor's Note: The following column is coauthored by Stephen Moore and David M. Simon. The government shutdown has focused debate on the vast sum ($136 billion in 2025, as projected by the ...
Open enrollment — the annual window when employees can adjust their benefits — may deliver sticker shock this year. Workers are likely to pay between 6% to 7% more for their 2026 employer-sponsored ...