Medicare & Demographics: Flat average government spending per beneficiary does not mean healthcare costs aren’t rising
A recent The New York Times article shows the average annual cost to the government per Medicare beneficiary has not significantly increased since 2010. While this is a notable trend, advisors and clients should not assume this means that healthcare costs incurred by individual retirees have not been rising. [...]
Retirement Healthcare Planning: Putting Drug Price Caps in Context
As part of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, [...]
The Role of Healthcare Cost Planning in Financial Wellness
Preparing for the unknown is one of the biggest challenges [...]
Medicare and Social Security COLAs: Putting the 2023 Numbers into Context
Retirees have received two pieces of good news in recent [...]
Healthcare Costs Can Extinguish FIRE Movement
A recent New York Times article explored the generational shift [...]
Healthcare Costs & The Inflation Reduction Act
HealthView Services constantly monitors legislative changes that may impact [...]
PlanCompare Insights
An Innovative App, Defining How Healthcare Plans Should Be Selected [...]
2022 Medicare Part B Announcement
On November 12th, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services [...]
2021 Social Security COLA Announcement
On Wednesday, the Social Security Administration (SSA) confirmed widespread projections [...]
2021 Data Insight Report
Key Takeaways Healthcare expenses will continue their historical trend [...]
Notice of 2021 Changes to Medicare and Social Security
Around October and November of each year, The Centers for [...]