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  • Watch the show and join the conversation on the Intersection website.As Missouri’s legislature prepares to take on the issue of Medicaid expansion, we…
  • The Missouri Department of Insurance has issued its largest penalty to date, to health insurance company, Aetna. The state’s insurance director, John…
  • A new report by the Missouri Foundation for Health estimates that about two-thirds of Missouri's more than 800,000 uninsured could get health insurance under the federal health care law - and the county-level data suggest that rural counties will benefit the most. The analysis uses census data to project how the number of uninsured could change in every county in Missouri under the Affordable Care Act. The Missouri Foundation for Health's Ryan Barker says most of Missouri's newly-insured will be from urban counties. "For example in Jackson County, which is the Kansas City area, 70,000 people will gain coverage," Barker said. " [In] St. Louis County, about 60,000. [In] St. Louis City about 40,000." Barker says in rural areas, which are less densely populated, the numbers will be much lower. But he says percentage-wise, rural counties stand to benefit the most from the health care law: Knox, Hickory, and Ozark counties, for example, could see close to 15 percent of their residents gain coverage. Barker also says that even with the increased access to health insurance afforded by the law's health insurance exchanges and Medicaid expansion, about 255,000 Missourians will remain uninsured, including those who choose to pay a penalty rather than buy insurance. "Some of those uninsured will be legal immigrants who are not eligible for Medicaid for five years and are not eligible for subsidies in the exchange, and some of those remaining uninsured will be undocumented workers that live in Missouri," Barker said. Barker says how many people actually are left without insurance will depend in part on whether or not Missouri goes forward with Medicaid expansion. Follow Véronique LaCapra on Twitter: @KWMUScience
  • Recent natural disasters will affect more than just those Missourians living in disaster areas.The Missouri Insurance Coalition says all Missourians can…
  • A report by the Missouri auditor says a state-created workers' compensation company has enjoyed a competitive advantage while functioning in a…
  • Legislation that would allow employers to block insurance coverage for birth control, abortions and sterilizations, all for religious reasons, has passed…
  • Regional news from the KBIA newsroom, including:Missouri tries to refinance more than a half billion dollars of debt as part of Gov. Jay Nixon's plan to…