Article

Small Businesses Pursue Health Law 'Loophole'

NorthBay Adventure is the kind of small business that could be expected to buy medical insurance for workers under sweeping health-act rules taking effect in 2014. But executive director George Comfort says that’s not likely to happen.

Instead, NorthBay became self-insured last year, paying most of its workers’ health costs directly, a practice more typical of large employers. The decision to self-insure was about free choice, savings and what’s best for his company, Comfort says. But others see it as a threat to the Affordable Care Act. As more small employers like NorthBay avoid the health act’s requirements through self-coverage, small-business marketplaces intended to cover millions of Americans could break down and become unaffordable, they say.

Read the full story: http://bit.ly/YfxAie

Source: Kaiser Health News (in collaboration with USA Today)

Related Videos
JC Scott, CEO and president of The Pharmaceutical Care Management Association (PCMA)
Neha Kashalikar, PharmD, director of strategic pharmacy consulting, MassHealth
Laura Bobolts, PharmD, BCOP, senior vice president of clinical strategy and growth at OncoHealth
Adam Colburn, JD, associate vice president for congressional affairs, AMCP
Leigh Maria Ramos-Platt, MD
Molly Dean, MSW, Siftwell
Molly Dean, MSW, Siftwell
Jorge García, PharmD, MS, MBA, MHA, FACHE, FACCC
Dr Andrew S. Oseran
o Richard Hughes IV, JD, MPH, Epstein Becker Green
Related Content
AJMC Managed Markets Network Logo
CH LogoCenter for Biosimilars Logo