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Full-Text Articles in Insurance Law

Reforming State Mental Health Parity Law, Stacey A. Tovino Jan 2011

Reforming State Mental Health Parity Law, Stacey A. Tovino

Scholarly Works

This Article is the final installment in a three-part project that presents a comprehensive challenge to lingering legal distinctions between physical and mental illness in the context of health insurance. The first installment in this series narrowly inquired as to whether the postpartum mood disorders should be classified as physical or mental illnesses in a range of health law contexts, including the context of health insurance. The second installment was broader in scope and challenged a number of federal provisions that allow publicly- and privately-funded health care programs and plans to provide mental health insurance benefits that are less comprehensive …


Using Payroll Deduction To Shelter Individual Health Insurance From Income Tax, David Orentlicher Jan 2011

Using Payroll Deduction To Shelter Individual Health Insurance From Income Tax, David Orentlicher

Scholarly Works

In this article, Professor Orentlicher and his colleagues assess the impact of state laws requiring or encouraging employers to establish ‘‘section 125’’ cafeteria plans that shelter employees’ premium contributions from tax.


It’S An Art Not A Science: State-Mandated Insurance Coverage Of Assisted Reproductive Technologies And Legal Implications For Gay And Unmarried Persons, Valarie K. Blake Jan 2011

It’S An Art Not A Science: State-Mandated Insurance Coverage Of Assisted Reproductive Technologies And Legal Implications For Gay And Unmarried Persons, Valarie K. Blake

Scholarly Works

Assisted reproductive technology (ART) has made it possible for a wealth of individuals, who would otherwise be unable, to create families and become parents. Traditionally, most people think of infertile couples as the beneficiaries of such technology, but ART has special and important implications for gay and/or unmarried persons as well. Dubbed the “structurally infertile,” this latter group is highly dependent on ART for their family planning needs. Despite the growth in popularity of ART for both the medically and structurally infertile, ART continues to be a mainly private-payer enterprise, reserved for those individuals who have the expendable income to …