Why is a standard employer identifier needed for electronic health transactions?Employers, as sponsors of health insurance for their employees, often need to be identified in health care transactions, and a standard identifier for employers would be beneficial for transactions exchanged electronically.
Employer-Sponsored & Private Health Insurance
Reports
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Advanced SearchNonresident Fathers: To What Extent Do They Have Access to Employment-Based Health Care Coverage?
As part of the Child Support Performance and Incentive Act of 1998, Congress established a medical child support working group to identify barriers to medical support enforcement and to recommend ways to address them. This report is an effort to provide greater background on one such barrier the lack of access by many nonresident parents to employment-based health care coverage.
A Survey of Employers Offering Group Long-Term Care Insurance to Their Employees
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services A Survey of Employers Offering Group Long-Term Care Insurance to Their Employees Final Report
A Survey of Employers Offering Group Long-Term Care Insurance to Their Employees - Executive Summary
Steven Lutzky, John Corea, and Lisa Alecxih
Employer Decision Making Regarding Health Insurance
Summaries of Meetings Held with Senior Corporate Managers on Private Employer Strategies and Issues Affecting Health Care Coverage
Hospice Benefits and Utilization in the Large Employer Market
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
NRPM: Standard Employer Identifier
[Federal Register: June 16, 1998 (Volume 63, Number 115)] [Proposed Rules] [Page 32784-32798] [DOCID:fr16jn98-39] DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Office of the Secretary 45 CFR Part 142 [HCFA-0047-P] RIN 0938-AI59 Health Insurance Reform: National Standard Employer Identifier
Number of Medicaid Recipients Up: CPS Shows the Number of Uninsured Also Rises
The number of persons with no health insurance coverage rose by 4% between 1989 and 1990, while the number with insurance rose less than 1%. The increase in insurance coverage was due primarily to increases in Medicaid coverage for children under 15.