Biden signs executive action to reopen Obamacare enrollment amid COVID-19, end gag rule Courtney Subramanian and Maureen Groppe, USA TODAY
Biden signs executive order to reopen Obamacare enrollment amid COVID-19
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WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden on Thursday took initial steps to expand health care coverage and reverse some of the policies of former President Donald Trump, including directing that people be given a new chance to sign up for government-subsidized care and lifting restrictions on abortion and family planning services.
Biden signed an executive order for the Department of Health and Human Services to reopen insurance enrollment on HealthCare.gov from Feb. 15 through May 15, giving a new coverage opportunity to Americans who lost their jobs and employer-based insurance during the pandemic. The annual open enrollment for the plans ended in December in most states.
Biden signs executive action to reopen Obamacare enrollment amid COVID-19, end gag rule Courtney Subramanian and Maureen Groppe, USA TODAY
Biden signs executive order to reopen Obamacare enrollment amid COVID-19
Replay Video UP NEXT
WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden on Thursday took initial steps to expand health care coverage and reverse some of the policies of former President Donald Trump, including directing that people be given a new chance to sign up for government-subsidized care and lifting restrictions on abortion and family planning services.
Biden signed an executive order for the Department of Health and Human Services to reopen insurance enrollment on HealthCare.gov from Feb. 15 through May 15, giving a new coverage opportunity to Americans who lost their jobs and employer-based insurance during the pandemic. The annual open enrollment for the plans ended in December in most states.
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11 reasons why it feels like the coronavirus pandemic will never end (opinion)
Updated Jan 27, 2021;
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Will the pandemic ever end? Sometimes it feels not.
Here are some of the reasons why.
Catherine O Hare, an assistant nurse manager in Staten Island University Hospital s critical care unit, prepares one of Staten Island s first COVID-19 vaccines at the hospital s Ocean Breeze campus on Monday, Dec. 14, 2020. (Staten Island Advance/Paul Liotta)
The vaccine supply mess
We were told for months that we would turn pandemic around once a vaccine was available. Turns out it wasn’t that simple. There are vaccine shortages all over the world. Did Pfizer and Moderna over-promise what they could deliver? The Biden administration has ordered another 200 million doses, but it will be six months until that supply is fully available. Meanwhile, approval of the much-anticipated one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine remains weeks away.