State government-controlled health insurance means one-size-fits-all coverage that fits nobody. Connecticut families deserve options that work for their unique needs, not bureaucratic mandates. Explore better solutions: https://t.co/FwE9KNtBOv
When Nevada’s state government-controlled health insurance system fails, it will leave taxpayers to foot the bill. Instead, let's work towards proven solutions instead of risky experiments: https://t.co/2sHCyBOhMN
Colorado and Washington tried a state government-controlled health insurance system.
The result? Market disruption and broken promises. Connecticut needs to learn from their failures, and not repeat them. Get the details → https://t.co/V9SSjLcfyV
State government-controlled health insurance threatens Connecticut's health care workforce and economic stability, and the consequences could be devastating. Learn what's really at stake: https://t.co/YDdGJ9iDfn
When politicians control insurance providers, wait times grow and costs skyrocket. Connecticut can avoid this. Learn why now is the time to act → https://t.co/MFVSMWca6f
Your health care shouldn't be decided by politicians. Connecticut families need real choice, not government-mandated coverage. Let's protect Connecticut families: https://t.co/a7wqrkhnce
Your health care shouldn't be decided by politicians. Connecticut families need real choice, not government-mandated coverage. Let's protect Connecticut families: https://t.co/M0kPFJaZr1
A state government-controlled health insurance could mean higher tax bills for Connecticut families. Before we go down this road, understand the real cost → https://t.co/BkRrHft6u9
Around the country, state government-controlled health insurance is shrinking provider networks, increasing premiums and leaving families stuck with one option. Connecticut deserves better solutions → https://t.co/YV4MJeZdK9
Before Connecticut follows other states down this path, look at what happened: higher costs, frustrated providers and fewer options. Let’s learn from their experience. See the evidence: https://t.co/9jocY5JRI8
Before Connecticut follows other states down this path, look at what happened: higher costs, frustrated providers and fewer options. Let’s learn from their experience. See the evidence: https://t.co/4xLzp9f4Sn
Connecticut families shouldn't have their health care decided by politicians. Your doctor, your coverage, your choice. That's how it should work. Discover why → https://t.co/Pmx5zhq0EL
When the government runs health insurance, Connecticut's economy pays the price. Thousands of jobs and billions in revenue could be at risk. That's not health care reform – that's reckless. Get the facts → https://t.co/XC8Gvc7EHP
Connecticut families deserve real choice in health care – politics shouldn’t determine your doctor or coverage options. Let's protect your choice to decide. Learn more: https://t.co/tpaSA3owjp
State government-controlled health insurance systems rarely work. Before Connecticut repeats this mistake, let’s understand the costs: https://t.co/14eEbcGZfc
Instead of risky experiments, let's fix what isn't working while strengthening what does. That's the right path forward for Connecticut families. Learn about real solutions: https://t.co/BkCJ1DzK5l
Other states have tried state government-controlled health insurance. However, the result left families with higher premiums, fewer care options & frustrated providers. Connecticut should learn from others’ mistakes. Here's the evidence:
https://t.co/P43i3UiZQA
.@HartfordBiz highlights: SB 3 may look affordable, but a recent analysis offers a cautionary tale. SB 3 would give the government more control of health care – lessening choice for consumers and shifting costs onto families and small businesses. More:
https://t.co/Wy337onyTU
The latest from Jeffrey Hogan, president of Upside Health Advisors, in @HartfordBiz: Despite promises to improve affordability on the front end, SB 3 would lead to shifting costs to taxpayers and employers.
The full piece here ↓
https://t.co/Wy337onyTU
SB 3 claims its goal is improving affordability but sidesteps the critical question: who pays when premiums don't cover costs? A new study shows what happens when that gap widens – taxpayers & employers end up footing the bill. Learn more in @HartfordBiz:
https://t.co/Wy337on14m