California passes vital laws to stave off attacks on health coverage.
California is the first state in the country to prohibit work requirement as a condition of Medi-Cal eligibility.
California is the first state in the country to prohibit work requirement as a condition of Medi-Cal eligibility.
A California Healthline featured article looks at how the wildfires, environmental factors and lived-conditions compound access to care issues for Medi-Cal recipients.
A variety of factors create social and structural barriers for women and Black and Latinx communities in accessing mental health care.
Medi-Cal beneficiaries in LA County lost their benefits even though they turned in their Medi-Cal annual renewal packets on time.
Highlighting the KQED story: “Where Do You Go When You Leave the Hospital But Are Homeless?”
Charity care laws are vital protect consumers from hospital bills, even when the consumers have insurance.
Millions of dollars not being used to provide services to those in need.
If you still need coverage and are confused about the ACA, don’t be! The HCA has lots of information to help you out.
The practice of hospitals dumping patience is occurring with increasing frequency as the homelessness crisis deepens.
Learn what benefits are restored and how to access dental care.
Health care for people in low-income communities is a challenge exacerbated by a lack of reliable transportation, especially in rural areas.
An infant’s race and ethnicity affect the quality of care they receive in California neonatal intensive care units, according to a Stanford study.
If the federal government carries out its threats to cut co-pay subsidies, insurers will increase premiums more than 20% and the federal deficit will increase $20 billion every year for the next 10 years.
The director of Medi-Cal says, “The long-term impact of this bill cannot be understated: It is simply devastating.”
Californians who rely on Medi-Cal are anxious, if not panicked, about health care legislation on Capitol Hill that would drastically change Medi-Cal and the health insurance industry.
Not only will millions lose coverage, the coverage available would be prohibitively expensive.
The AHCA would cut Medicaid funding to those groups that Medicaid was designed to cover and protect since its beginning.
CSRs are vital to help with co-pays, reduce deductibles, and lower co-insurance for qualified members of Covered California’s health plans.
The GOP proposes an AHCA plan that has already failed in California.