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Maryland Lawmakers Should Seize the Opportunity to Protect Health Care Choice

Maryland Lawmakers Should Seize the Opportunity to Protect Health Care Choice As we embark on the second year of the COVID-19 pandemic albeit with vaccine distribution underway demand for health care and the financial support many need to help pay for treatment has become a hot topic. Fortunately, this month the Maryland Senate will consider a positive piece of legislation that would protect the right for Marylanders to choose a Health Care Sharing Ministry to manage their health care expenses. Health Care Sharing Ministries have been serving Marylanders for the past 30 years and should remain an option for the thousands of members who currently belong and those who may decide that faith-based cost-sharing fits their needs.

OneShare Health Joins the Alliance of Health Care Sharing Ministries

OneShare Health Joins the Alliance of Health Care Sharing Ministries News provided by Share this article Share this article IRVING, Texas, Feb. 11, 2021 /PRNewswire/  OneShare Health, a Christian Health Care Sharing Ministry (HCSM) in Texas, has recently accepted an invitation to become a member of the Alliance of Health Care Sharing Ministries (AHCSM).  Founded in July 2007, the Alliance is currently headquartered in Washington, D.C. The organization s website states it was created for the purpose of protecting and preserving the rights of their members. AHCSM Extends Invitation to OneShare Health to Become Newest Member of Health Care Sharing Ministry Alliance

It Appears This Is A Scam: Complaints Accelerate Against Health Care Sharing Ministries In Conn

Jenna Carlesso discusses this story with Connecticut Public Radio s Lori Mack. Last March, days after returning home from a family trip to Spain, Paloma Munoz’s 4-year-old son started to cough. He spiked a fever overnight and began feeling short of breath. Alarmed, Munoz found a hospital with drive-up COVID testing and took her son to get swabbed. When the results came back negative, she was relieved. Then a bill for $270 arrived in the mail. “I was just speechless,” she recalled. Her husband had changed jobs a few months earlier, forcing her family to shop for new health insurance. Unable to afford a policy through their employers or elsewhere, Munoz found an advertisement online for a cheaper, non-traditional type of coverage. For $500 a month, she joined Alliance for Shared Health, a religious health care sharing ministry that pools its members’ premiums to pay out some of their medical bills.

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