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Arson attacks paralyze French high-speed rail network hours before start of Olympics, the Obamas endorse Harris for President; A NY county creates facial recognition, privacy protections; Art breathes new life into pollution-ravaged MI community; 34 Years of the ADA.

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Harris meets with Israeli PM Netanyahu and calls for a ceasefire. MI Rep. Rashida Tlaib faces backlash for a protest during Netanyahu's speech. And VA Sen. Mark Warner advocates for student debt relief.

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There's a gap between how rural and urban folks feel about the economy, Colorado's 'Rural is Rad' aims to connect outdoor businesses, more than a dozen of Maine's infrastructure sites face repeated flooding, and chocolate chip cookies rock August.

Clearing Up Confusion on Health Care Reform

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Monday, March 5, 2012   

DENVER - This month marks the start of the third year of the Affordable Care Act. But there is still much confusion as to what the health-care reform law does and doesn't provide for consumers. A recent Kaiser Family Foundation study found that consumers don't really understand many of the Act's key provisions.

Adela Flores-Brennan, health policy attorney with the Colorado Center on Law and Policy, says more than half of consumers incorrectly think it's a new government-run insurance plan, and more than a third don't know that the act offers subsidies to people who can't afford insurance premiums.

"One of the promises that health reform offers is coverage and the other promise is affordability."

The Colorado Health Access Survey found that 85 percent of uninsured Coloradans say they haven't bought insurance because they can't afford it.

Flores-Brennan says the Kaiser Foundation study also found most people don't know that the act already requires insurers to provide preventive services such as annual checkups free of charge.

"And that's yet another thing that health reform has provided, more of a focus on preventive care with the thought that if we're all taking better care of ourselves we can help drive down costs in the system."

Flores-Brennan thinks that one reason for the confusion is that the Act's many provisions were gradually phased in. Some parts won't take effect until 2014.

The Colorado Health Access Survey is at www.cohealthaccesssurvey.org.




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