The Department of Homeland Security Nov. 17 published a proposed rule regarding “Public Charge Ground of Inadmissibility.” DHS proposed to rescind the public charge ground of inadmissibility regulations put forward in 2022. The department also stated that it intends to develop future policy and interpretive tools to help guide DHS officers in making inadmissibility determinations. DHS will accept comments on the proposed rule for 30 days after it is published in the Federal Register.

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A blog by Noah Isserman, AHA director of health insurance and coverage policy, explains why Anthem’s nonparticipating provider policy limits patients’ …
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Patients are best served when insurers act as transparent and reasonable partners, not when they invoke patient protection laws to justify payment strategies…
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The Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Community Living has launched the first phase of its Health at Home Challenge, a competition to…
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The Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission approved recommendations it will issue to Congress in its June report on oversight and increased…
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The AHA shared the following statement with the media in response to a report released May 7 by Families USA.   “This report is long on rhetoric and…
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For families living in poverty, accessing health care can feel out of reach — buried beneath challenges like transportation, childcare and job insecurity…