Health & Human Services
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Public agencies use software from Libera for vocational rehabilitation. CiviCore, once part of Neon One, has government clients that include courts, schools and health and human services departments.
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The state Department of Commerce’s Office of Artificial Intelligence Policy is working with an AI-powered health platform to support faster prescription renewals for state residents with chronic conditions.
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Overall, the state exchange said about 85 percent of enrollees have paid their health premium thus far, so the enrollment tally may drop.
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While much of the country faced a March 31 deadline to enroll, Oregon secured a one-month extension due to technical problems with the Cover Oregon website.
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With a $5 million contract announced Wednesday, Minnesota is turning to Deloitte to help fix the troubled website.
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Fixing Cover Oregon has been as hexed as the topsy-turvy year that preceded its spectacular non-start last fall.
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Despite a disastrous rollout, with malfunctioning websites and active resistance from governors in many red states, the enrollment numbers are quite promising.
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It's critical to give caseworkers and everybody else involved in protecting kids a complete, shared picture of every vulnerable child's life.
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Nonprofit networks will compete for the business of hospitals, doctors’ offices, pharmacies and health-care providers statewide.
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Coming to a smartphone or computer near you: timely, important, maybe even fun messages from your favorite local health agency.
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The history of health care in robotics is aimed to influence future practice.
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Whatever officials choose, getting the exchange running smoothly in time for this fall’s open enrollment will be difficult — and is far from a sure thing.
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University of Minnesota researchers were asked to provide a preliminary estimate for the impact of the federal Affordable Care Act on the uninsured rate in Minnesota.
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The proposed data link between hospitals and the VA, are both part of a sweeping federal initiative to connect hospitals, clinicians, insurers, pharmacies and government health plans
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A letter sent Monday to the DFL chairs of the committee stated Gov. Mark Dayton and his top advisers were warned about health exchange defect well in advance.
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The bottleneck, officials say, has been traced to a new state computer system that for months didn't communicate properly with county computers trying to confirm the eligibility of new applicants.
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State legislators from both parties said building a successful site will take more than plugging in new software — a view echoed by technology experts.
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