News

Consumers, the ads claim, can qualify for $1,400 or even $6,400 a month to use on groceries, rent, medical expenses, and other bills. Some mention no-cost health insurance coverage. But that’s ...
Hundreds of thousands of low-income Americans were unknowingly signed up for government-subsidized health insurance, often lured by social-media ads falsely promising cash for daily expenses ...
many of the ads would disappear. The FDA email informed me that it is working with the Duke-Margolis Institute for Health Policy and others to help “further develop” its policy and guidance ...
“Lower-income people seem to be the target of these ads,” Lauren Phillips ... and they are fighting every day to keep the health insurance that they need.” The Center for Medicare and ...
Health insurers focused on running ads that promoted their own health insurance policies. The federal government's general awareness-building ads increased overall ACA exchange plan enrollment ...
US health insurance giant Blue Shield of California handed sensitive health information belonging to as many as 4.7 million members to Google's advertising empire, likely without these individuals ...
These ads falsely claimed that the Government would provide free medical insurance for individuals aged 55 and above, featuring the department's logo. The department clarified that it has not ...
A conservative group is launching new ads targeting GOP senators, urging them to extend ObamaCare subsidies that help people afford health insurance. Plymouth Union Public Advocacy (PUP Advocacy ...
Nearly half of Americans with health insurance said they received a recent medical bill or a charge that "should have been free or covered by their insurance," according to a survey released Thursday.