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Alaska Journal | Cook Inlet salmon catches lagging, limited by Kenai king run
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Alaska Journal | Bristol Bay blows past harvest records
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10 Chilling Murder Mysteries From Around The World
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Wed, 04/28/2021 - 8:48am
Despite the economic upheaval of the last year, Alaskans on individual health insurance plan premiums got a little break this year.
The state’s two remaining individual health insurance plan providers on the marketplace, Premera Blue Cross Blue Shield and Moda Health, declined to significantly raise rates for 2021. While Moda’s stayed close to flat, Premera filed for a slight decrease: about 4.5 percent less on average. For a consumer on the average Bronze plan through the health insurance marketplace, that’s about $435 a month compared to $448 last year, and down about $100 a month since 2018, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Wed, 04/28/2021 - 8:48am
UAA School of Nursing students review treatment plans with a patient about to be discharged during a simulated patient care scenario in UAA’s Health Sciences Building Simulation Center in this 2019 courtesy photo. The school is continuing to graduate students after accelerating their entrance to the workforce last year to aid in meeting the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo/Courtesy/University of Alaska Anchorage)
Last spring, the University of Alaska’s School of Nursing moved quickly to get its 2020 graduates out the door and working on the frontlines as the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated.
This year, it took equally quick steps to make sure its continuing students got their chance at clinicals and other hallmarks of nursing school, even in the middle of a pandemic, so the pipeline of new nurses wouldn’t be cut off. That proved extra challenging as the health care industry buckled in for one of its toughest years in recent memory.