HITshow Daily: November 18, 2025 (Tuesday)

Today on HITshow:

Today’s theme is meeting consumers where they are—with simpler benefits, less paperwork, more integrated research, and care that comes to the home. Cigna launches Clearity, a new copay-only plan designed to make out-of-pocket costs more predictable. Humana and Epic turn on digital insurance cards and automated coverage checks, aiming to retire a little more paperwork at check-in. Advocate Health makes clinical trials part of standard care across its 69 hospitals and 1,000+ care sites. myLaurel reports breakout growth in acute-care-at-home with a 575% increase in patients served. And we close with a Bright Spot about TenDollarTelehealth, a new $10 virtual front door for families staring down premium hikes and coverage loss.

HOST: RHONDA BROOKS

📍 Transparent Benefit Design — Xavier Banks

Cigna Healthcare is rolling out Clearity, a new copay-only plan that ditches deductibles and coinsurance. Patients see fixed copays instead of guessing at what they’ll owe—and health systems need to understand where they land in the tier structure.

📍 Insurance Verification Automation — Peter Betterworth

Humana and Epic are automating the coverage verification process for Medicare Advantage members across roughly 120 health systems. The goal: shorter check-ins, fewer coverage errors, and less staff time chasing paperwork before patients even see a clinician.

📍 Clinical Trials as Standard Care — Nate Collier

Advocate Health is launching a new national center that integrates clinical trials into routine care across 69 hospitals and 1,000+ locations. The shift could change how patients access research and how health systems think about innovation.

📍 Hospital-at-Home Growth — Logan Stokes

myLaurel reports explosive 2025 growth in acute-care-at-home services—575% more patients served than last year. The numbers signal that home-based high-acuity care is moving from pilot to core capacity strategy.

Bright Spot:

TenDollarTelehealth, led by Dr. Renee Dua, promises $10 primary and urgent-care visits—no insurance, no copays, no deductibles—for residents in several large states, with broader expansion planned. As 24 million people face coverage loss and 70 million carry high-deductible plans, the service aims to make care more accessible by removing the friction of traditional insurance. Jalen Cross reports.

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