Elisabeth Rosenthal, KFF Health News
A cancer patient might live in a town with four oncology groups, but only one accepts his insurance — the one owned by his insurer. A young couple could see huge bills after their child is born, because their insurer agreed to the health system’s rates in exchange for a contract with obstetricians across the country. A woman might have to pay a big sum she can’t afford for basic lab tests at a hospital — inflated rates her insurer accepted so its customers have access to the system’s children’s hospital elsewhere in the state.
And even well-insured patients receive unaffordable bills in this era of high-deductible health plans, narrow insurance networks, and 20% cost sharing.
Health systems, doctor groups, and insurers are merging and coalescing into

Delaware County Daily Times

Raw Story
Reuters US Top
Associated Press US and World News Video
NBC10 Boston
The Conversation
WAND TV
Vogue Shopping
Fosters Daily Democrat
The Cut
RadarOnline