One of the goals of the Affordable Care Act – the new federal health reform law – is to help consumers purchase health insurance coverage that meets their health care needs. The law attempts to do that by requiring insurance companies to offer a standardized set of essential benefits and by prohibiting them from continuing certain practices that limit coverage. These changes are expected to make the coverage that Kansans purchase more robust. But they also are expected to increase the cost of some policies.
This brief — the second in a series on how health reform affects Kansans — examines the new benefit requirements in the law and those that impose new regulations on insurance companies.
KHI Health Reform Briefs
→ Brief 1: The Impact of Health Reform on Health Insurance Coverage in Kansas
→ Brief 2: The Impact of Health Reform on Insurance Benefits and Mandates in Kansas
→ Brief 3: A Health Insurance Exchange in Kansas? Decisions and Deadlines Ahead for State Leaders
→ Brief 4: Affordable Care Act's Expansion of Medicaid Expected to Boost Kansas Enrollment
→ Brief 5: Medicare Changes Include Care Coordination and Prescription Drug Costs
→ Brief 6: What the Affordable Care Act Could Mean for Kansas Employers and Health Insurance
→ Resource document: Terms and definitions
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