The worst of the online glitches, crashes and delays may be over for the problem-plagued government health care website, the Department of Health and Human Services said Sunday
New Jersey's largest insurance company says it will move ahead with the cancellation of its bare-bones health coverage, pushing subscribers toward new plans offered on an insurance exchange.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who's considered a Republican frontrunner for President in 2016, is blasting the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare.
The average cost per employee for health benefits rose just two percent nationally and seven percent in New Jersey this year, according to Mercer's 2013 National Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Plans, but next year is likely to be a different story.
An employee benefits consultant from New Jersey is hoping to clear up some of the common misconceptions about Obamacare, and he has even written a book about the topic.
President Barack Obama on Thursday announced changes to his health care law to give insurance companies the option to keep offering consumers plans that would otherwise be canceled.
On the same day the Obama administration announced that just 106,000 people signed up for health care coverage during the first month of Obamacare, lawmakers in Washington grilled those connected with the dysfunctional web site that left millions of people with frozen browsers on the day of its launch.
Former President Bill Clinton says President Barack Obama should find a way to let people keep their health coverage, even if it means changing the new insurance law.
President Barack Obama says he's sorry Americans are losing health insurance plans he repeatedly said they could keep under his signature health care law. But the president on Thursday stopped short of apologizing for making those promises in the first place.