Help

BI’s Article search uses Boolean search capabilities. If you are not familiar with these principles, here are some quick tips.

To search specifically for more than one word, put the search term in quotation marks. For example, “workers compensation”. This will limit your search to that combination of words.

To search for a combination of terms, use quotations and the & symbol. For example, “hurricane” & “loss”.

Login Register Subscribe

HHS gives tentative approval to 6 state health insurance exchanges

Reprints
HHS gives tentative approval to 6 state health insurance exchanges

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services on Monday said it has given tentative approval to applications filed by six states to launch health insurance exchanges in 2014 in which the uninsured, among others, can obtain coverage.

Those six states are Colorado, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, Oregon and Washington.

More state approvals will be announced in the weeks and months ahead, said HHS officials.

The HHS announcement coincided with Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam informing federal health care reform regulators on Monday that Tennessee will not set up a health care exchange.

“In weighing all of the information we currently have, I informed the federal government today that Tennessee will not run a state-based exchange. If conditions warrant in the future and it makes sense at a later date for Tennessee to run the exchange, we would consider that as an option at the appropriate time,” Gov. Haslam said in a statement.

Other states that also have said they will not set up exchanges include Arizona, Florida, South Dakota and Texas.

Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which authorized the exchanges, the federal government can set up exchanges in states that decline to do so.

States have until Thursday to notify the federal government of whether they will set up exchanges.

A lawsuit filed this year in federal court by Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt contends that premium subsidies authorized by the reform law and available, starting in 2014, to the uninsured can only be used to buy coverage through state exchanges.

Read Next