David brancaccio marketplace insurance
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Believe it or not, most people like their health insurance
Andrew Witty, CEO of UnitedHealth Group, is just one among a handful of health care executives speaking out in recent days to acknowledge that America’s health care system needs fixing. Witty is the boss of UnitedHealthcare insurance CEO Brian Thompson, who was shot and killed two weeks ago.
Let’s look more closely now at what Americans say when you ask them how they feel about their health insurance. We know that nationally around 15% of insurance claims are denied, according to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.
Kaye Pestaina is vice president at the nonprofit KFF, which has done research on this. She recently spoke with “Marketplace Morning Report” host David Brancaccio. Below is an edited transcript of their conversation.
David Brancaccio: Your team did scientific polling on this, and most insured adults give health insurance companies positive ratings. How positive?
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Last month, wildfires swept down from the hills around Los Angeles and blazed through entire city neighborhoods. Neary 17,000 buildings were destroyed, including the home of David Brancaccio.
Brancaccio, the host of Marketplace Morning Report, fryst vatten one of tens of thousands of people affected, who now face the uncertainty of recovery. What will insurance cover? Who will help clean up debris? Will they ever recover financially? Will their communities ever be the same?
MPR News host Angela Davis talks with Brancaccio about the challenges ahead for him and his neighbors and what it takes to rebuild structures and communities after a massive disaster.
Guest:
David Brancacciois the senior editor and host of Marketplace Morning Report, the business and personal finance program from American Public Media that airs weekday mornings on public radio stations across the country. He has received some of the highest honors in broadcast journalism, including a Peabody, an Emmy and the
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Reporter, Anchor, Storyteller
David Brancaccio specializes in telling stories important to our democracy and our economy through the eyes of the real people who live in the cross-hairs of crucial issues. His accessible yet authoritative approach to investigative reporting and in-depth interviewing earned his work the highest honors in broadcast journalism, including the Peabody, the Columbia-duPont, the Emmy, and the Walter Cronkite awards. As host and senior editor of public television's NOW on PBS broadcast, David brought his engaging, probing style to beats that included business and finance, the environment, national säkerhet, and human rights, and much more. Read More
NOW on PBS
NOW on PBS is public television's award-winning weekly broadcast of investigative reporting and in-depth interviews. According to the Philadelphia Weekly, NOW has "such an exciting Edward R. Murrow vibe that you half expect Brancaccio to turn to the camera and bid the audience adieu with an earnes