- Albany Med Health System eyes affiliation with Ellis Medicine
- 1.4 million patients, 7 health systems caught in AI company data breach
- Banner Health clinicians file to unionize
- New Hampshire system names new chief strategy officer
- AI in diagnosis and clinical reasoning: 8 recent studies
- HHS launches Operation TrailBlazer to speed clinical trials: 5 notes
- Iowa 1st to fully allocate year 1 rural health funds
- ‘I would love to tell Mark Cuban to get involved’: What physician consolidation is costing patients
- Illinois passes bill regulating dental reimbursement practices
- The shifting dental care landscape
- Duke Health names ophthalmology chair
- Health insurer CEOs could face criminal liability for denials that lead to injury, death under Pennsylvania bill
- Texas hospital taps new COO
- Harvard to end faculty dental practice, transfer clinic to private owner due to financial constraints
- A physician’s plan to bring back practice autonomy to South Carolina
- Cardiologists push back on expansion of WISeR model
- Are ASCs ready for CMS’ new oversight rules?
- MCNA Dental agrees to multimillion-dollar settlement over 2023 ransomware attack
- Former Iowa dental office employee accused of using patient financial information for personal purchases
- Optum Behavioral Health names chief medical officer
- Stark law’s $632 million reckoning: The 5 biggest cases in 5 years
- ASCs’ robot evidence problem
- United Concordia expands dental coverage for patients with chronic conditions
- Who’s winning, losing the physician practice acquisition race?
- OIG flags Pennsylvania behavioral insurer for faulty prior auth denials
- Independence Health to open 28-bed behavioral health unit
- ICON Dental Partners appoints VP of dental partnerships
- Heartland Dental adds Missouri practice
- 4 dentists making headlines
- Growing ketamine use raises safety concerns
- AI’s growing role in mental healthcare: 5 notes
- Does ASC consolidation have a ceiling?
- Washington lawmakers eye corporate medicine ban after Oregon’s PeaceHealth test
- Pennsylvania cardiology group opens new $8.2M ASC
- Patient portal messages doubled since 2020, study finds, underscoring challenges to physician workloads
- Clover Hill Dairy Recalls All Cheese in Deadly Listeria Outbreak
- Ensemble Health Partners secures strategic growth investment from Thoreau
- Hospital margins inched higher in April, but still remain below 2025
- Middle-Aged Women Drink More, Know Less About Breast Cancer Risk
- CMS Proposes TAVR Medicare Coverage is Potential Boost for Edwards Lifesciences
- CMS Proposes TAVR Medicare Coverage is Potential Boost for Edwards Lifesciences
- CARsgen makes history as China approves world's first CAR-T therapy for solid tumors
- High Hurdles Thwart Kidney Patients' Pursuit Of Life-Saving Transplants
- Rising Healthcare Costs Leave Many Americans Less Secure
- Short Videos Help First-Time Dads Learn Newborn Safety Basics
- Federal Push To Increase U.S. Primary Care Docs Has Fizzled, Study Says
- US to investigate Germany's proposed drug spending reforms
- Alnylam scolded over promotional activity after Pfizer complaint
- They're Uninsured After Obamacare Became Too Costly. And They're Far From Alone.
- Indiana Takes On Powerful Hospitals by Capping Prices They Charge Employers
- Prosper AI lands $30M backed by Andreessen Horowitz to build AI workforce for healthcare operations
- Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk top AI citation share as new report questions DTC spend culture
- Fish Oil Supplements May Be A Bust For Alzheimer's Prevention
- Prehab Can Boost Seniors' Recuperation From Spinal Fusion Surgery, Trial Finds
- Ozempic Might Cut Risk Of Broken Bones, Study Says
- Dog Owners Feel Similar Grief Whether Pets Euthanized, Die Naturally
- Massage Guns Can Cause Eye Damage, Vision Loss, Case Report Warns
- A 5-month sprint: Behind Pfizer’s $10B deal and Innovent’s global pharma ambition
- 1st free dental clinic opens in New Jersey
- 8 new behavioral health projects to know
- Oregon prosecutors urge state to fix mental health system
- The case for layering behavioral healthcare models
- Rural, independent Kansas hospitals launch clinically integrated network
- 12 behavioral health services, facility closures | 2026
- Higher, short-acting opioid doses linked to 8% lower discharge risk: 4 notes
- FTC orders Aurobindo to divest 4 drugs to complete $250M Lannett acquisition
- Congressional Budget Office calls for more research on No Surprises Act unintended impacts
- HHS opens applications for $700M in mental health, addiction funding, with $96M for new STREETS program
- Ebola Infections Climb, Could Take Year To Contain, Health Officials Say
- Why a deviation investigation still takes two weeks in the age of AI
- Feeling Sleepy During the Day? It Could Be a Warning Sign for High Blood Pressure
- FTC, states sue transgender health association over 'misleading' gender care guidance
- Healthcare organizations still struggle to operationalize AI at scale: Arcadia survey
- Pfizer hunts for new CFO as Denton prepares to hang up gloves, wave goodbye to pharma
- Major League Pitchers Might Avoid Elbow Injuries By Altering Their Approach, Simulation Suggests
- Birth Control Pills Might Increase Binge Eating Risk, Study Finds
- Women Might Lower Their Heart Risk By Lifting Weights, Study Says
- Personalized Brain Implant Provides Step-By-Step Walking Boost For Parkinson's Patients
- Amid industry’s cell therapy automation push, Cellares and Ori dominate the field: report
- Most Americans Are Surviving Cancer. But The Mental Health Challenges Can Persist.
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- Arrests of Immigrant Parents Create Mental Health Crisis for Children
- Sandwiched Between Caring for Kids and Aging Parents? Reach Out for Resources
- Readers Curse Medical Debt and Defend Spelling Therapy
- Novo's success with oral Wegovy has been fueled by 'familiarity': Spherix
- Preparing for LEAD: Why post-acute visibility is the key to long-term value-based success
- One Medical Seniors reports data breach of third-party vendor impacting 'limited' number of patients
- A look at Epic's long-term play to build tech for operations, starting with scheduling
- U.K. Moves To Ban Social Media For Children
- Pregnant Woman Exposed to 45 Common Chemicals, Study Finds
- OhioHealth reaches settlement with DOJ, Ohio AG on antitrust lawsuit
- 4 years after snub, GSK partnership helps Spero get Utebzi across FDA finish line
- Despite 'decent' data, Verastem rethinks options for approved oncology combo in pancreatic cancer
- OIG report raises red flags about maternal health 'ghost networks' in Medicaid managed care
- Why It’s Time to Sunset AI Point Solutions and Consolidate Platforms
- Lantern, Marathon Health team up to launch integrated care management model
- The New Frontier of Care Management: Bridging the Empathy Gap with Intelligence
- Novo Nordisk opens Czech plant and unveils $29M upgrade to China facility
- Whoop, HealthEx partner to connect members’ medical records and biometric data
- GSK runs first DTC ad for would-be asthma blockbuster Exdensur
- Novo security breach claimed by hacking groups seeking multi-million-dollar ransoms: reports
- After FDA sign-off, Colorado's drug import plan faces tough road ahead
- Lower Risk Of Death, Clots Among Autoimmune Patients Taking GLP-1 Drugs
- Surgical Menopause Tied To Worse Sexual And Urinary Symptoms
- Post-Op Delirium Common In Seniors, But Not All Hospitals Screen For It
- Nortiva purrs into action with long-acting Lynx platform salvaged from Langer startup
- Why one life insurer is going big on health incentives
- Weekly Rundown: Lumeris adds symptom-checking tool to AI platform; DeepIntent rolls out agentic AI tool for healthcare marketers
- Before you build or buy care navigation AI, answer this
- Early-Onset Cancers Are On The Rise. Knowing Your Family History Is Crucial.
- Minimally Invasive Procedure Eases Arthritis Knee Pain, Study Finds
- Democrats Seek To Spotlight Rising Health Costs by Forcing Vote on Trump Regulation
- More Americans Are Surviving Cancer. But the Mental Health Challenges Can Persist.
- Tennessee Pharmacies Sell Potent Ivermectin, Led by Anti-Vaccine Doctor Who’s Taken ‘Bucketloads’
- Health services deal value holds steady in 2026 with higher bar for investment: PwC
- Big Pharma’s Big Brand: Inside Eli Lilly’s marketing culture
- MedPAC offers a look at enrollment hiccups for Medicare beneficiaries
- CDC, FDA Tackle New World Screwworm, Including Drug Authorization
- 'Biopharma ecosystem is back to full health,' fueled by M&A: PwC
- Lifestyle Changes Can Reduce Your Risk For Multiple Chronic Diseases
- FDA, UK drug regulator deepen transatlantic ties with new liaison program
- People Walk, Exercise Less After Starting Ozempic, Zepbound
- Family Finances Shape Children’s Brain Development, Study Finds
- At-Home Blood Pressure Monitoring Reduces Risk of Heart Attack, Stroke
- Moderna hires Novartis vet to lead commercial, upsizes role for Hoge as potential launches loom
- Long-Awaited Rule Aims To Boost ACA Choices While Embracing Higher Deductibles
- Many Men Are Prescribed Testosterone Without Proper Testing
- Early-Onset Cancers Are on the Rise. Knowing Your Family History Is Crucial.
- Backed by Threat of Clawbacks, Feds Wield Tight Grip on $50B Rural Health Fund
- Recipharm channels ‘multi-million-dollar' US manufacturing upgrade, targeting domestic biologics demand
- Organic Baby Formula Recalled Following Botulism Cases
- FDA Approves First Over-the-Counter Glucose Monitor for Children, The Stelo Glucose Biosensor System
- You've Won The Game
- Many Patients Stop And Restart GLP-1 Meds, Study Finds
- Half Of U.S. Parents Track Their Adult Children’s Location
- Taking GLP-1s While On BP Meds May Up Your Risk Of Dizzy Spells, Fainting
- Trust In CDC Plummets Under Trump Administration, New Poll Shows
- Remarks to the US-CEE Connection: Transatlantic Challenges in Law, Business & Policy
- Statement Regarding Minimum Pricing Increments and Access Fee Caps
- Statement at the SEC Open Meeting on the Trade-Through Rule and Locked and Crossed Markets Provisions of Regulation NMS
- Disorder Protection Rule: Statement on the Proposed Amendments to Rule 611 and Other Provisions of Regulation NMS
- Statement on the Proposed Amendments to Regulation NMS
- Beyond China and Japan: How biopharma is expanding rare disease access across Asia-Pacific
- This Old House: Improving and Remodeling Our Registered Offering and Filer Status Regimes
- Peirce Out: Remarks at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Capital Markets Summit
- Medtronic Advances Hugo Robotic Surgery Platform with Key FDA Filings and Product Approvals
- Medtronic Advances Hugo Robotic Surgery Platform with Key FDA Filings and Product Approvals
- Medtronic Posts Strongest Revenue Growth in a Decade, Driven by Cardiovascular and Surgical Businesses
- Medtronic Posts Strongest Revenue Growth in a Decade, Driven by Cardiovascular and Surgical Businesses
- Boston Scientific Plans Indiana Distribution Center, 300 New Jobs
Michigan healthcare freedom community forum
This antagonistic report shows a steep increase in sharing membership, even though prices and complexity have gone up in sync with government subsidies for their insurance counterparts. At this point, it's impossible to say where it will all end.
Still, health sharing holds a clear lead in emphasizing relationship and individual decisions. Even with subsidies, insurance has a long way to go to catch up with that.
BY MARKIAN HAWRYLUK JUNE 13, 2023 / 5:00 AMA new report has provided the first national count of Americans who rely on health care sharing plans — arrangements through which people agree to pay one another's medical bills — and the number is higher than previously realized.
The report from the Colorado Division of Insurance found that more than 1.7 million Americans rely on sharing plans and that many of the plans require members to ask for charity care before submitting their bills.
The total membership numbers are likely even higher. The state agency collected data from 16 sharing plans across the U.S. but identified five other plans that did not report their data.
"These plans cover more people than we had previously known," said JoAnn Volk, co-director of the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University.
Under the arrangements, members, who usually share some religious beliefs, agree to send money each month to cover other members' health care bills. At least 11 of the sharing plans that reported data operated in or advertised plans in all 50 states in 2021.
Sharing plans do not guarantee payment for health services and are not held to the same standards and consumer protections as health insurance plans. Sharing plans are not required to cover preexisting conditions or provide the minimum health benefits mandated by the Affordable Care Act. And unlike health insurance, sharing plans can place annual or lifetime caps on payments. A single catastrophic health event can easily exceed a sharing plan's limits.
In Colorado, at least 67,000 people were members of sharing plans in 2021, representing about 1 in 4 Coloradans purchasing health care coverage on their own. That rate concerns Kate Harris, a chief deputy commissioner of the Colorado Division of Insurance, which she said regularly receives complaints from sharing plan enrollees.
"What we hear from consumers is that when they purchase one of these, they do think there is some guarantee of coverage, for the most part, despite the disclaimers on many of the organizations' websites," Harris said.
The Colorado report found that health sharing arrangements often require their members to seek charity care or assistance from providers, governments, or consumer support organizations before submitting sharing requests. Those costs are then shifted to other public or private health plans.
Katy Talento, executive director of the Alliance of Health Care Sharing Ministries, which represents five of the largest and longest-operating sharing plans in the country, said sharing ministries encourage members to act like the uninsured people they are. Such requirements to seek charity care reflect a desire to be good stewards of their members' money, Talento said.
"Think about it like a soup kitchen," she said.
Fourteen sharing plans reported that Colorado members submitted a cumulative $362 million in health bills in 2021, and nearly $132 million of those requests were approved. The remainder, sharing plan executives told the division, reflected duplicative bills, ineligible charges, negotiated discounts, and the members' agreed-upon portion of medical bills.
"It's not like every claim line on a health care sharing request is going to be eligible for sharing," Talento said. "They have to submit the whole bill. They can't just pull out a piece of it."
But consumer complaints to the Division of Insurance and to consumer assistance programs, such as the Colorado Consumer Health Initiative, show that members do not always realize what sharing plans will cover.
"We have seen firsthand the risks that people face when they sign up for these arrangements without recognizing the magnitude of the risk that they're assuming for their health care costs," said Isabel Cruz, the initiative's policy director.
Talento disputed the notion that members don't know the parameters of their sharing plans.
"That's just suggesting that our members are dumb," she said. "Is it likely that somehow our people are going to be willy-nilly jumping blindly into something?"
Theresa Brilli, a small business owner in Longmont, Colorado, said she and her partner signed up for a direct primary care plan in 2017 that covered primary care visits for $179 a month. Direct primary care plans are payment arrangements between patients and providers for receiving health services without billing insurance. The plan had an arrangement with Liberty HealthShare, a Canton, Ohio-based sharing plan with more than 131,000 members nationwide, to cover additional services like preventive screenings, emergency room care, and hospitalizations for $349 a month with a $1,000 deductible. The rates increased to $499 a month, with a $1,750 deductible, in 2020, Brilli said.
But Brilli said getting payments was a major hassle.
"It took about four to eight months to get reimbursed," she said. "It was a fight, every bill."
When she heard about enhanced subsidies for ACA marketplace plans in 2022, she decided the hassle was no longer worth it and switched to a Kaiser Permanente plan for $397 a month.
"I will never go back to Liberty Health or a health care sharing plan," she said. "I didn't agree with the whole ministry thing. They made you sign off saying you believed in God, which was like, 'Whoa, I guess that's what I have to do to get my health insurance.'"
Laura Murray, 49, of Aurora, Colorado, said she signed up for a Liberty HealthShare plan in 2017 as a more affordable alternative to her husband's employer-based plan.
"We kind of felt we were cutting out the middleman in a way, and it was a helping-out-your-neighbor sort of deal," she said.
But when she became pregnant unexpectedly, she had trouble getting her health bills paid. Initially, Liberty paid only a portion of the tab, and her bills got sent to a collection agency. It was only through multiple calls that she learned she needed to send the bills to a third party that would negotiate with the providers.
"It took years to get it cleared up," she said.
Timothy Bryan, Liberty's vice president of marketing and communication, disputed many of the details of Brilli's account and attributed some of the delay in payment to her "failure to submit the required supporting documentation." Murray's payments, he said, were delayed more than 10 months because she had failed to provide the required pre-notification.
Mike Quinlan, 42, of Denver, turned to a health sharing ministry in 2014 after the birth of his first child cost him more than $17,000 out-of-pocket, on top of nearly $24,000 in premiums that year, under an employer-sponsored health plan. He said the births of his three youngest children were covered in full by Samaritan Ministries International, a Peoria, Illinois-based sharing plan with 359,000 members, to which he contributes $600 a month. When he incurs large health expenses, he receives a slew of $600 checks from other members, he said.
Every year, Quinlan attests that he is a Christian and identifies the church he attends.
"This is a group of like-minded people who have said voluntarily we're going to trust each other to cover each other's health costs," he said.
The rules differ from plan to plan. Some sharing plans require members to pledge to abide by Christian principles, and some exclude payment for out-of-wedlock births or health issues that arise from drug use. Many sharing plans exclude coverage of contraception, mental health services, and abortion, often with no exceptions for rape or safety of the mother.
Regulators in Colorado and other states have also expressed concerns that health sharing arrangements are paying brokers much higher commissions for signing up new members than health plans do. That could create financial incentives to push sharing plans over health insurance without adequately educating consumers about the differences.
In 2019, Covered California, the Golden State's ACA marketplace, instituted a requirement that its certified agents who sell both sharing plans and health insurance provide consumers with a list of disclosures about sharing plans and show them the subsidies they could receive for buying traditional health insurance coverage.
"It's really important that consumers understand what these arrangements are, and what they are not," said Jessica Altman, executive director of Covered California.
Harris said the Colorado Division of Insurance is investigating multiple health sharing arrangements based on consumer complaints but declined to name them.
Colorado officials are also concerned that health sharing arrangements might appeal primarily to people who don't expect to use many health services. That could increase the proportion of sicker and more expensive patients among enrollees in traditional health insurance plans, driving up premiums.
Harris said many consumers can get a health plan for less than the cost of a sharing plan, particularly with increased federal and state subsidies put in place in recent years. State officials are also working to inform consumers of the financial risks associated with health sharing arrangements, some of which have gone bankrupt in recent years.
"It might look cheaper on its face, month to month," Harris said, "But if they do really actually need their costs covered, there's a real risk that they may not be."
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/health-care-sharing-plans-lack-of-protections/
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.





















