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NASROis a cost effective third party administrator of affordable group health insurance plans in California. NASRO
is lead by its founder, health care consultant Robert Gaw, who has a 35 year record of working
in California and other states to see that the promises
of a world class health care system that allows U.S. companies to be competitive are kept.
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Please call us at 800-638-8113 with any questions you have.
Section 125 Premium Only Plan (POP)
An IRS section 125 premium only plan allows employees to use pre-tax dollars to pay their share of benefit premiums. This is not a health plan, but an administrative feature that when implemented by the employer results in an increase employee take home pay and a reduction in the total taxable payroll, saving the employer on FICA and other taxes.
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NASRO Is Working For More Affordable California Health Insurance
NASRO of California
609 Deep Valley Drive, Suite 200
Los Angles , CA 90274
424-237-9647/800-638-8113
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Specializing in Affordable California
Health Insurance Plans and Employee Benefits for
Employers who want to explore all the options to find the best value
Businesses considering the cost advantages of becoming self insured
Call
NASRO of California
424-237-9647/800-638-8113
609 Deep Valley Drive
Suite 200
Los Angeles , California
90274
Tuesday, March 02, 2010
FCC: Health Data Exchanges To Need More Broadband Support
At the Health Information and Management Systems Society annual conference on Tuesday, the Federal Communications Commission announced multiple recommendations involving new funding and regulations for broadband Internet connections that support health IT exchange, Government Health IT reports.
The recommendations stem from an FCC survey that found the U.S. lacks sufficient broadband connections to meet criteria for "meaningful use" of electronic health records that will determine whether health care providers are eligible for incentive payments under the 2009 federal economic stimulus package.
The survey found that as many as 3,600 small practices do not have even basic broadband services, while thousands of other locations face price disparities of as much as $45,000 each year for the same services available in better connected areas.
Recommendations
To address such access problems, FCC proposes:
- Changing its Rural Health Care Program to use the initiative's annual $400 million budget to establish a health care broadband access fund to assist health care providers and other institutions in purchasing broadband services;
- Establishing a health care broadband infrastructure fund to aid providers in expanding broadband networks where the existing infrastructure is lacking; and
- Changing the way providers are reimbursed for handling "e-care" distributed over broadband links, which providers have said is one of the biggest barriers to health IT adoption.
FCC wants to link funding as closely as possible to meaningful use to ensure that the money goes to locations following the guidance of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT.
The recommendations are part of FCC's upcoming National Broadband Plan that it is expected to deliver to Congress by March 17 (Robinson, Government Health IT, 3/2).
 

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