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Hong Kong CNN —Hospitals in Beijing and northern China are grappling with a surge of children with respiratory illnesses as the country enters its first winter since relaxing stringent Covid-19 controls nearly one year ago. Wait times to see doctors stretch for hours, with hundreds of patients queuing at some children’s hospitals in major cities across northern China, according to CNN reporting and Chinese state and social media. The surge in cases across northern China comes amid a rise in seasonal respiratory infections around the northern hemisphere, including in the United States, where RSV is spreading at “unprecedented” levels among children. Children receive intravenous drips at a children's hospital in Beijing on November 23, 2023. It’s unclear if there’s been an increase in respiratory illnesses or severe cases among children relative to pre-pandemic years because of limited public data released by China.
Persons: , Jin Dongyan, ” Catherine Bennett, ” Bennett, Jade Gao, drips, , there’s, Jin, that’s, Christine Jenkins Organizations: Hong Kong CNN — Hospitals, CNN, Beijing Children’s Hospital, Beijing Friendship Hospital, Health, World Health Organization, WHO, Wednesday, , University of Hong Kong’s, of Biomedical Sciences, Deakin University, Getty, Weibo, Capital Institute of Pediatrics, National Health Commission, NHC, , China’s, Hong Kong University, UNSW Sydney Locations: China, Hong Kong, Beijing, Tianjin, United States, Australia, AFP, Beijing’s
Children and their parents wait at an outpatient area at a hospital in Beijing on Thursday. Photo: Jade Gao/Agence France-Presse/Getty ImagesChina provided the World Health Organization with data on a pneumonia outbreak among children in the country after the agency made an unusual public request for the information—a gesture that renewed questions about Beijing’s transparency on public health. In a statement issued Wednesday, the WHO cited reports about “clusters of undiagnosed pneumonia in children in northern China,” which prompted the United Nations agency to ask Beijing for “additional epidemiologic and clinical information, as well as laboratory results” related to the infections.
Persons: Jade Gao Organizations: Agence France, Getty, World Health Organization, United Nations, Beijing Locations: Beijing, China
Children and their parents wait at an outpatient area at a hospital in Beijing on Thursday. Photo: jade gao/Agence France-Presse/Getty ImagesThe World Health Organization said it has asked China to provide more information on an outbreak of pneumonia among children in northern parts of the country, an unusual public disclosure that revives questions about Beijing’s transparency on the spread of infectious diseases. In a statement issued Wednesday, the WHO cited reports about “clusters of undiagnosed pneumonia in children in northern China,” which prompted the United Nations agency to ask Beijing for “additional epidemiologic and clinical information, as well as laboratory results” related to the infections.
Organizations: Agence France, Health Organization, United Nations, Beijing Locations: Beijing, China
The World Health Organization said that China had shared data about a recent surge in respiratory illnesses in children, one day after the agency said it was seeking information about the possibility of undiagnosed pneumonia cases there. The Chinese data indicated “no detection of any unusual or novel pathogens,” according to a W.H.O. statement on Thursday. The data, which included laboratory results from infected children, indicated that the rise in cases was a result of known viruses and bacteria, such as influenza and mycoplasma pneumoniae, a bacterium that causes usually mild illness. Hospital admissions of children had increased since May, as had outpatient visits, but hospitals were able to handle the increase, China told the global health agency.
Organizations: World Health Organization Locations: China
For years, the New York State Office of Mental Health has maintained a detailed database for sharing the psychiatric histories of people who rely on the social safety net — a tool that, when used correctly, can ensure the state’s most vulnerable people receive adequate care. But the database, known as PSYCKES, was not consistently used by one of the most crucial pieces of that safety net: hospitals, which have sometimes discharged homeless mentally ill people without using the tool to communicate with shelters and care teams that provide outpatient treatment. In some cases, those discharges preceded subway shovings and other random acts of violence by the homeless people after their illnesses went untreated. The state issued the guidance late last month after receiving questions from The New York Times, which was preparing to publish an investigation that revealed preventable institutional breakdowns of homeless shelters, hospitals, specialized treatment teams and other organizations. The breakdowns preceded more than 90 acts of violence in the past decade, The Times found.
Organizations: New York State, of Mental Health, The New York Times, Times
Times reporters spent more than a year examining how often homeless mentally ill people under the care of the city have committed acts of violence. The lack of public information about the incidents made it difficult to evaluate about a quarter of the cases. Still, the examination identified 94 instances in the past decade in which breakdowns of the city’s social safety net preceded the violence, sometimes by just days or hours. A 23-year-old whose outpatient treatment team stood by as he became increasingly violent, doing little to intervene. Taken together, the 94 cases offer the fullest picture yet of how, where and why the safety net has broken down.
Persons: Michelle Go Organizations: Times, The Times
Israeli soldiers from the 7th Brigade escorted journalists to see a stone-and concrete-shaft on the grounds of Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on Thursday. But Col. Elad Tsury, commander of Israel’s Seventh Brigade, said Israeli forces, fearing booby traps, had not ventured down the shaft at the hospital, Al-Shifa. The controlled visit will not settle the question of whether Hamas, the armed Palestinian group that rules Gaza, has been using Al-Shifa Hospital to hide weapons and command centers, as Israel has said. Image A stone and concrete shaft on the grounds of the Al-Shifa Hospital, on Thursday. The Times did not allow the Israeli military to screen its coverage before publication.
Persons: Elad Tsury, Israel’s, Daniel Berehulak, Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, , , Tsury Organizations: 7th Brigade, Shifa, The New York Times, Israel’s Seventh Brigade, ., New York, Hamas, Al, National Public, Outpatient, The Times, Times, World Health Organization Locations: Al, Gaza City, Gaza, Israel
DUBAI, Nov 15 (Reuters) - A doctor in Gaza's Al Shifa hospital said staff, patients and displaced Palestinians sheltering there were terrified as Israeli forces moved to raid the complex to root out Hamas militants they said were hiding underneath. "Everyone got really, really terrified." Medics look at the damages in the wards inside Al Shifa hospital following an Israeli raid, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas, in Gaza City, Gaza November 15, 2023. Israel has denied targeting the hospital and said its soldiers had entered one specific location within the Shifa complex, with no fighting inside the facility and no friction with staff. The fate of Al Shifa, Gaza's biggest hospital, has become a focus of international alarm because of worsening conditions with fuel, medicine, food and water in ever shorter supply.
Persons: Gaza's Al Shifa, Dr Ahmed El Mokhallalati, Israel, Mokhallalati, Al Shifa, Abir Al Ahmar, Nadine Awadalla, Michael Georgy, Crispian Balmer, Philippa Fletcher Organizations: Hamas, Palestinian, Health, REUTERS Acquire, Thomson Locations: DUBAI, Gaza's Al, Ireland, Cairo, London, Al, Israel, Gaza City, Gaza, Gaza's
US producer prices unexpectedly fall in October
  + stars: | 2023-11-15 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Goods prices dropped 1.4% in October, with a 15.3 plunge in gasoline prices accounting for more than 80% of the decline. Goods prices rose 0.8% in September. Food prices fell 0.2%. Excluding the volatile energy and energy components, goods prices edged up 0.1% last month. These so-called core goods prices rose 0.2% in September.
Persons: Lucia Mutikani Organizations: Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics, PPI, Reuters, Fed, Thomson Locations: U.S
A satellite image of the Al Shifa hospital complex is annotated to show parts of the hospital, including a maternity department, a dialysis unit, a surgery and a morgue. Al Shifa hospital in Gaza City has become the main target of the Israeli ground operation in northern Gaza. Israeli forces say the hospital sits atop tunnels housing a headquarters for the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas whose fighters are using patients as shields, a claim which Hamas denies. A map shows the location of the Al Shifa Hospital complex in Gaza. The IDF said its operation in Al Shifa was “precise and targeted” in a “specified area” of the hospital.
Persons: Al, Al Shifa, , , Crescent Organizations: Technologies, Israel Defense Forces, Hamas, IDF, Institute for, AEI, Al, handout, Palestinian, Israeli Defence Forces Locations: Gaza’s, Al, Gaza City, Gaza, Palestinian, Israel, Al Shifa, Rantisi, al, Quds
Israel said its troops uncovered unspecified weapons and "terror infrastructure" inside the hospital compound after killing fighters in a clash outside. Once inside, they said there had been no fighting and no friction with civilians, patients or staff. Other photos showed Israeli troops in tactical formation walking past makeshift tents and mattresses. "We can confirm that incubators, baby food and medical supplies brought by IDF tanks from Israel have successfully reached the Shifa hospital. The Israeli troops dismounted and spread out in the yard, and began searching the basement and entering buildings.
Persons: Al Shifa, Israel, Dr Ahmed El Mohallalati, Martin Griffiths, Peter Lerner, Joe Biden, Thomas White, Nidal al, Maayan Lubell, James Mackenzie, Crispian Balmer, Abir Al Ahmar, Claudia Tanos, Peter Graff, Philippa Fletcher Organizations: Al, Palestinian, Hamas, Military, UN, Reuters, Troops, Israel Defence Forces, United, Medical, Fourth Geneva Convention, United Nations, Thomson Locations: Gaza City, Israel, GAZA, Gaza's, Al, Gaza, United States, Rafah, Jerusalem, Dubai
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast retail sales would fall 0.3%. Excluding automobiles, gasoline, building materials and food services, retail sales rose 0.2% in October. Data for September was revised up to show these so-called core retail sales rising 0.7% instead of the previously reported 0.6%. Core retail sales correspond most closely with the consumer spending component of GDP. Goods prices rose 0.8% in September.
Persons: Bill Adams, Lucia Mutikani, Chizu Nomiyama, Paul Simao Organizations: Saks Fifth, REUTERS, WASHINGTON, Federal, Comerica Bank, Commerce, Data, Reuters, United Auto Workers, Treasury, Consumer, Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics, Wednesday, PPI, Reuters Graphics, Fed, Thomson Locations: New York City, U.S, Dallas, Commerce Department's
That’s why we’re slowly closing in on them,” the Israeli military spokesman, Richard Hecht, told reporters on Friday night. The situation could not be immediately confirmed, though the Israeli military has made clear that its troops are fighting in the heart of Gaza City. “If conditions were better than this, we could have saved their lives,” Dr. Abu Salmiya said. “At this point, there’s just so little we can do for the wounded we receive, only the bare minimum,” said Dr. Abu Salmiya. Dr. Abu Salmiya said international organizations were welcome to investigate the site and see if they could find any evidence of Hamas’s presence there.
Persons: , we’re, Richard Hecht, Ashraf al, Mohammed Abu Salmiya, Israel, Abu Salmiya, ” Dr, Bashar Taleb, Al Shifa, there’s, , Daniel Hagari, Shifa, Mohammed Al, Masri, Al Organizations: The Times, Shifa, Hamas, Palestinian, The New York Times, Al, ., Agence France, Getty, Reuters Locations: Al, Gaza City, , Gaza, Israel, Palestinian
Mustafa al-Kahlout, who heads the Al Nasr hospital and Al Rantisi Pediatric hospital in northern Gaza, told CNN that they were surrounded and asked for the Red Cross to assist with an evacuation. “We do not know our fate.”His call comes after strikes were reported near at least two other hospitals in northern Gaza. This included “two ambulances that were completely damaged,” the hospital statement said. It was not immediately clear if PRCS was referring to the same ambulances mentioned in the hospital’s statement. But the impact on healthcare facilities has raised concerns about the dire humanitarian situation for those remaining in northern Gaza.
Persons: heightening, Mustafa al, Al Nasr, , Kahlout, Al Shati, , Al Awda, Khan, Ahmad Hasaballah, Shifa, Margaret Harris, haven’t, ” Israel, Volker Türk, Antony Blinken Organizations: CNN, Al, Pediatric, Israel Defense Forces, Indonesian, Nasser, Palestine Red Crescent Society, IDF, Health Organization, WHO, Palestinian Ministry of Health, United Nations Locations: Gaza, Sheikh Radwan, Al, Al Awda, Khan Younis, Palestine, Wadi Gaza, Gaza City, Israel, Ramallah
Masri had taken refuge at Al Shifa hospital in Gaza City, in the north of the enclave, with his mother and sister 10 days ago after receiving treatment in another hospital for a leg wound. He said he and his family walked three kilometres (two miles) before passing Israeli tanks that have advanced to the city, and walked a few more kilometres beyond the tanks before getting a lift. It says Hamas militants have hidden command centres and tunnels beneath Shifa, allegations which Hamas denies. CHAOTIC SCENESA woman who fled Al Shifa on Friday said she had been receiving treatment for a wound in the maternity department. The appearance of the hospital entrance also matched file imagery and the source has uploaded several videos from the hospital previously and was known to be there.
Persons: Al, Ayman Al, Masri, Al Shifa, Israel, Nidal Al, Timothy Heritage, Mark Heinrich Our Organizations: Hamas, REUTERS, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Al Shifa, Gaza, Israel, GAZA, Israeli, Gaza City, Al, Shifa, Al Shifa's
Social Security beneficiaries will soon get notices showing exactly how much money to expect in their monthly checks for 2024. Those recipients are slated to get a 3.2% boost to their benefits starting in January with the 2024 annual cost-of-living adjustment. One factor that will affect exactly how much beneficiaries receive is their Medicare Part B premium, which is typically deducted directly from Social Security checks. More from Personal Finance:Will Social Security be there for me when I retire? Standard monthly premiums are slated to rise by $9.80 per month to $174.70 in 2024, from $164.90 per month this year.
Organizations: Social Security, Finance, Will
By then, county officials were seeing the area’s fatal opioid overdose toll tick up. “We were grossly underprepared, like I think many places across the country were, for the opioid epidemic,” Stuby said. Like hundreds of U.S. communities, it's launched a drug court where people can avoid jail if they work on recovery. They can lead to an entry-level certificate for work in the field — a partial answer to a recovery workforce crunch. His research has shown that recovery support services — such as housing, community centers and peer coaching — can help.
Persons: , Precia Stuby, , Stuby, Jesse Johnson, Johnson, Anonymous, ” Stuby, didn’t, , ” Johnson, it's, Kerri Kostic, Kostic, God, Meelee Kim, “ It’s, John F, Kelly, ____, haven't, Misty Weaver, Weaver, ___ Christina McCarver, ‘ Let’s, who's, McCarver, William Mull, Cory Kinn, “ That’s, they’ve, ___, she’s, I’ve, ” ___ Johnson, Patrick Orsagos Organizations: , Findlay, Technology, University of Findlay, Brandeis University, Harvard Medical School, Family Resource, AP, Associated Press Health, Science Department, Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science, Educational Media Group Locations: FINDLAY , Ohio, Findlay, Hancock, drugmakers, Hancock County, U.S, Toledo, Mull, COVID, Washington
Why it can be so hard to stay sober
  + stars: | 2023-11-02 | by ( Madeline Holcombe | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +8 min
To understand why the problem is so widespread, people must recognize the complexities around not just getting sober — but staying sober, Kelly said. Those predispositions can combine with a history of trauma or developmental experiences to make someone much more likely to develop an addiction, Kelly added. For some people, mental illnesses such as depression or anxiety occur alongside but independent of their addiction, Kelly said. “It does not mean that this individual is never going to be able to achieve recovery,” Dick said. “The devious nature of drugs means that when an individual has been using heavily, it also changes their brain and that makes it harder to maintain recovery,” Dick said.
Persons: Matthew Perry, , “ I’ve, ” Perry, ‘ Will, ’ ”, Danielle Dick, Dr, John F, Kelly, , , , ” Dick, Dick, ” Kelly, , they’ve, Dick said, you’ve, Don’t, Nancy Diazgranados, relapses, ” Diazgranados, Matt Organizations: CNN, Hollywood, Rutgers Addiction Research, Harvard Medical, Hospital Recovery Research, US Centers for Disease Control, Addiction, CDC, National Institute on Drug, National Institute, Alcohol Locations: Piscataway , New Jersey, Massachusetts, United States
Advanced Micro Devices — The chipmaker dipped more than 1% after issuing softer-than-expected revenue guidance for the fourth quarter. Match Group — The dating service platforms owner shed 8.3% on weaker-than-estimated revenue guidance for the fourth quarter. Wayfair — The online furniture retailer tumbled 12% after third quarter revenue missed analyst expectations. Yum reported $2.91 billion in revenue, while analysts had expected $3.06 billion in revenue, according to estimates from LSEG. Caesars Entertainment – The gaming stock rose 5% before the bell after topping Wall Street's third-quarter earnings expectations.
Persons: General Motors, Wayfair, Goldman Sachs, ZoomInfo, FactSet, Estee Lauder, , Kraft Heinz, Paycom, Fred Imbert, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin, Sarah Min Organizations: Street Journal, Ford, General, Barclays, CVS, Technologies, Humana, Kraft Heinz, FactSet, Yum China, , Caesars Entertainment, LSEG Locations: Aetna, China, LSEG
When surveyed by the department, 45% of Ohio’s financial advisers said they were aware of a client of theirs, or a client’s family member, that was struggling with addiction. In the program, financial advisers are taught to look for certain signs. Those seeking help can input their insurance status and treatment needs to be connected programs they can more easily afford or receive financial help with. Financial advisers have had to come up with ways to combat a multitude of financial crises, like increasing cybersecurity breaches or investment fraud targeting the elderly. Lori Eisel, a financial adviser and owner of Arcadia Financial Partners, knows both sides of the struggle.
Persons: — Joe Smith, that’s, Smith, Smith’s, Olivia, don’t, , Andrea Seidt, ” Seidt, Carl Hollister, L.M, Kohn, Hollister, Lori Eisel, ” Eisel, , Joe Smith, ” Smith, He’s, __ Samantha Hendrickson Organizations: Society of Actuaries, state’s Department of Commerce, Ohio, Arcadia Financial Partners, Associated Press, America Statehouse News Initiative, America Locations: COLUMBUS , Ohio, Columbus , Ohio, Ohio, Cincinnati, stow
As Abortion Access Shrinks, Hospitals Fill in the Gaps
  + stars: | 2023-10-23 | by ( Allison Mccann | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +16 min
As Abortion Access Shrinks, Hospitals Fill in the Gaps For this article, Allison McCann and Jamie Kelter Davis spent time with a patient from Indiana as she underwent an abortion at a Chicago hospital. Alaska Fla. Hawaii 16% 18% 20%+ Total or six-week abortion ban Wash. Maine Mont. Dr. Jonah Fleisher is a co-director of the Complex Abortion Regional Line for Access, or CARLA, which helps abortion patients find appointments at four Chicago-area hospitals. Chronic Conditions and Abortion Bans These health conditions, especially when left untreated, can add risks for abortion patients. Alaska Fla. Hawaii Diabetes among women High blood pressure among women Cardiovascular disease among women 9% 11% 13%+ 28% 30% 32%+ 5% 6% 7%+ Total or 6-week abortion ban Total or 6-week abortion ban Total or 6-week abortion ban Wash. Wash. Wash. Maine Mont.
Persons: Allison McCann, Jamie Kelter Davis, , , Roe, Wade, Conn ., Dobbs, Jenni Villavicencio, Jonah Fleisher, CARLA, Laura Laursen, Laursen, Dr, Conn . Conn ., Kan ., Nev, PolicyMap, “ It’s, Allison Cowett, Erica Hinz, couldn’t, Caroline Nyheim, Qudsiyyah Shariyf, Megan Jeyifo, J.B . Pritzker, CARLA —, — you’re, Mr, Pritzker Organizations: ” RUSH University Medical Center, Health, Ore, Conn . Pa . Iowa Neb, N.J . Ohio Nev, Ill . Utah Md, ., . Ill . Utah Md, OB, Society for Family Planning, Midwest, RUSH University Medical Center, Diabetes, Conn . Pa . Iowa Neb . Ohio Nev, N.J ., N.M, Hawaii Diabetes, N.D ., Vt, Wis ., Pa . Conn . Iowa Neb, Pa . Iowa Iowa Nev, Nev . N.J ., Ariz . D.C, Black, S.C . Iowa Miss, Nev . D.C, White, Family Planning, Chicago Abortion Fund, South, Nurses, Chicago Abortion, Illinois, Gov Locations: Indiana, Chicago, Indianapolis, . Maine, N.D, Vt, Minn, N.H . Wis, Idaho, S.D, Mich, Conn, Conn . Pa . Iowa, N.J . Ohio, Ind, Ill . Utah, W.Va, Colo . Va, Kan, Calif, Mo, Ky, R.I, N.C, Tenn, Del, ., S.C ., Ga, Ala . Miss . Texas La, Alaska Fla, Hawaii, N.J, Nev . Ohio, . Ill . Utah, R.I . Tenn, Okla, Illinois, N.H . Wis . Idaho, Wyo, Conn . Pa . Iowa Neb . Ohio, N.J . Ind, Ariz ., Pa . Conn . Iowa, . Ind, . Ark, N.H, Wis . Idaho S.D, N.Y, Wash . Maine, N.D . Maine Maine Mont, Mont, Minn . Vt, Ore, Mass, Wis, Wis . Idaho Idaho, Conn . Conn, Conn . Conn . Pa, Pa . Iowa, Pa . Iowa Iowa Nev . Ohio, Neb . Ohio, Nev . N.J, Nev . N.J . Ohio, W.Va . Ind, Ill, Colo . Utah Utah Md, Md, W.Va . Va . Colo, Colo, Ky . Va . Va, Kan . Kan, R.I . Ky, Okla . Tenn, Ariz . Ark, Ala . Miss ., Ala . Ala . Miss, . Texas La . Texas Texas, La . Alaska Alaska Alaska Fla, Fla, Hawaii Hawaii Hawaii, Ohio, Pa . Minn, Neb, Mo . Md, Ala, Wash, Ky . N.J, Conn . Va . Ind, S.C . Iowa, Ariz, Tex, Nev ., Fla ., Massachusetts
Andreswd | E+ | Getty ImagesMedicare beneficiaries have until Dec. 7 to change their Medicare health and prescription drug coverage for the coming year through open annual enrollment. Starting in 2024, people who face high prescription drug costs will not have to pay anything out of pocket once they hit the catastrophic phase of their benefits, she noted, thanks to new prescription drug legislation. Notably, Medicare beneficiaries who take insulin currently do not have to pay more than $35 per month for covered prescriptions. There are other reasons why Medicare beneficiaries should pay attention to the annual enrollment period this year. Medicare open enrollment is when beneficiaries can shop around for health plans or prescription drug coverage that better meet their needs.
Persons: Meena Seshamani, Seshamani, Darren Hotton, Hotton, that's, Catherine, There's Organizations: Getty, Center, Medicare, Centers, Services, National Council, Aging, Insurance, State Health Insurance Locations: Catherine Falls, Medicare.gov, ShipHelp.org, Utah
[1/2] A UnitedHealth Group health insurance card is seen in a wallet in this picture illustration October 14, 2019. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/Illustration/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsOct 13 (Reuters) - UnitedHealth (UNH.N) reported a third-quarter profit on Friday ahead of analysts' estimates, helped by a lower-than-feared rise in medical costs at the company's health insurance unit. UnitedHealth's profit beat and slight raise in annual forecast set the stage for other insurers in the industry that suffered a nearly $60-billion wipeout in market value in June, on fears of a spike in medical costs. UnitedHealth said in July it expects quarterly medical costs to be "a little bit lower" sequentially. In the third quarter, the company's medical loss ratio, the percentage of spend on claims compared to premiums collected, was 82.3%, versus 83.2% in the second quarter.
Persons: Lucy Nicholson, Stephens, Scott Fidel, UnitedHealth, Mariam Sunny, Bhanvi, Shounak Dasgupta Organizations: REUTERS, Humana, Thomson Locations: COVID, Bengaluru
The standard monthly premium for Medicare Part B will increase by $9.80 per month in 2024, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. That means the standard monthly premium will go up to $174.70 in 2024, an increase from $164.90 in 2023. The new rate is in line with previous projections by Medicare trustees, which had estimated a $174.80 standard monthly premium for next year. The annual deductible for Medicare Part B will be $240 in 2024, a $14 increase from the $226 annual deductible in 2023. Medicare Part B covers physician services, outpatient hospital services, some home health care services, durable medical equipment and certain other services not covered by Medicare Part A.
Organizations: Medicare, Centers, Services
During the enrollment period, which ends Dec. 7, people will have the opportunity to choose between traditional Medicare and privately run Medicare Advantage plans in their area, as well as prescription drug plans. Medicare Advantage plans provided by insurers frequently offer prescription drug coverage , as well as extra benefits like dental or vision coverage not provided by traditional Medicare. The federal government also said Thursday that millions of Social Security recipients will get a 3.2% increase in their benefits next year. The average Medicare beneficiary could choose from 43 Medicare Advantage plans for this year, or more than double the choices available in 2018, according to KFF. After this year’s open enrollment window ends in December, people will be able to switch to another Medicare Advantage plan or opt for traditional Medicare during another enrollment period from Jan. 1 to March 31.
Persons: Tricia Neuman, KFF, Neuman Organizations: Medicare, Medicare’s, Social Security, Services, Social
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