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Tag: Florida Blue

  • Do you have Florida Blue and need care? Here are some Broward options

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    Where can Florida Blue members get care in South Florida?

    While there are a lot of providers that accept the health insurance in Miami-Dade County and the rest of the state, it’s not as easy to get care anymore in Broward County. Broward Health and Memorial Healthcare System, the county’s two public hospital systems, are currently out-of-network with Florida Blue due to ongoing contract disputes.

    And Cleveland Clinic Weston and its facilities could be out-of-network soon, too, if a deal isn’t finalized.

    Florida Blue, which insurers about a third of the state, says there are still plenty of providers in Broward and neighboring counties to care for members.

    READ MORE: Patients feel strain of Florida Blue fallout with Broward hospitals: ‘Just lunacy’

    Where to go depends on what you need.

    HCA Florida, for example, told the Miami Herald it accepts Florida Blue at its 14 hospitals across South Florida and its over 65 MD Now Urgent Care locations. All 12 of its freestanding ERs, including the one in Plantation, and its over 100 HCA Florida physician offices also accept the insurance, including Medicare Advantage, HMO and ACA plans associated with Florida Blue.

    Baptist Health South Florida, the region’s largest not-for-profit healthcare system, also has physician practices, urgent care centers and outpatient centers across South Florida, including in Broward County. It has 12 hospitals across South Florida, though none are in Broward County. Its first Broward hospital is set to open in Sunrise in 2029.

    The fastest way to find a doctor near you is to use Florida Blue’s online doctor search. Patients should always call to double-check that the provider will accept your insurance.

    The following list is based on information provided by Florida Blue. Patients should always check with their provider to make sure their insurance is accepted before booking an appointment.

    Broward hospitals that accept Florida Blue

    HCA Florida’s standalone ER in Plantation also accepts Florida Blue.

    Primary care providers

    • Sanitas Medical Centers, which has a partnership with Florida Blue’s parent company, primarily provides primary and specialty care services to members of Florida Blue and other Blue Cross Blue Shield plans. Providers are not in the BlueMedicare PPO network or in the BlueMedicare HMO network. To find a location near you, visit mysanitas.com/en/fl#state-locations.
    • NSU Health provides a variety of medical services. For more information and to find a location, visit nsuhealth.nova.edu.
    • Holy Cross Medical Group includes more than 160 board-certified physicians across Broward County. Providers are affiliated with Holy Cross Health. To learn more about offered services and to find a doctor, visit holy-cross.com/services/holy-cross-medical-group.
    • Cleveland Clinic, which has a hospital and other centers in Broward, remains in-network, though that could change pending contract negotiations. If a deal isn’t made, Cleveland Clinic could go out-of-network as early as March 1.
    • Primary Medical Physicians has Broward offices in Hollywood, Pembroke Pines, Davie and Plantation. The group also has a Miami-Dade office in Aventura. To learn more, visit primarymedicalphysicians.com.

    Pediatric care

    Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital in Hollywood, part of Memorial Healthcare System, and the Salah Foundation Children’s Hospital in Fort Lauderdale, part of Broward Health, are out-of-network.

    So what choices do Florida Blue members currently have for pediatric hospitals?

    In Broward, parents can take their children to HCA Florida’s Northwest Hospital in Margate and University Hospital in Davie.

    The other choices include Holtz Children’s Hospital, located on the main Miami campus of Jackson Memorial Hospital, part of Miami-Dade’s public hospital system, or Nicklaus Children’s Hospital near South Miami. Nicklaus Children’s doesn’t have a dedicated hospital in Broward County, but it does have primary care and urgent care centers.

    Nicklaus Children’s physicians working at Broward Health facilities also remain in-network, according to Broward Health. Still, you should check with your provider beforehand to ensure that the services needed are covered.

    For general pediatric care, parents can also turn to NSU Health Pediatric Associates, which has offices across South Florida, and the Children’s Medical Association, which has offices in Plantation, Tamarac, Coral Springs and Miramar.

    Cancer, orthopedic, maternity care and OB/GYN services

    Here are some of the places where Florida Blue says its members can seek care:

    It’s worth noting that other hospitals in Miami-Dade, including the Women’s Hospital at the main Miami campus of Jackson Memorial Hospital, also have labor and delivery units.

    Michelle Marchante

    Miami Herald

    Michelle Marchante covers the pulse of healthcare in South Florida and also the City of Coral Gables. Before that, she covered the COVID-19 pandemic, hurricanes, crime, education, entertainment and other topics in South Florida for the Herald as a breaking news reporter. She recently won first place in the health reporting category in the 2025 Sunshine State Awards for her coverage of Steward Health’s bankruptcy. An investigative series about the abrupt closure of a Miami heart transplant program led Michelle and her colleagues to be recognized as finalists in two 2024 Florida Sunshine State Award categories. She also won second place in the 73rd annual Green Eyeshade Awards for her consumer-focused healthcare stories and was part of the team of reporters who won a 2022 Pulitzer Prize for the Miami Herald’s breaking news coverage of the Surfside building collapse. Michelle graduated with honors from Florida International University and was a 2025 National Press Foundation Covering Workplace Mental Health fellow and a 2020-2021 Poynter-Koch Media & Journalism fellow. 
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    Michelle Marchante

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  • Floridians get a preview of skyrocketing healthcare premiums as Democrats hold the line

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    Nathan Boye, a father of three from Orlando, doesn’t usually like being in the spotlight. “But I’ve been told my story matters,” he told reporters at a press conference Monday. See, Boye is currently enrolled in a health insurance plan he bought through the Affordable Care Act Marketplace, like roughly 4.7 million others in Florida and upward of 24 million Americans nationwide. 

    It’s more affordable for him than employer-provided insurance, currently costing just $28 a month. As someone living with diabetes, a chronic and potentially life-threatening illness, Boye relies on health insurance that’s affordable in order to maintain access to the medications he needs to stay alive. “To be blunt,” he explained, with a shrug.

    But that could change very soon, if the ACA tax credits that are currently at the center of a federal funding showdown expire at the end of the year. Boye showed reporters a letter he received from his insurance provider Florida Blue over the weekend, warning him of upcoming changes to his health plan.

    If he keeps the same health plan that he currently pays $28 per month for, in a couple of months’ time, his monthly premium could skyrocket to more than $700, according to the letter. “I’m going to be forced to make impossible choices that, I mean, essentially means that I could survive another day,” said Boye. “No family should have to face that.”

    Nathan Boye, a father of three with diabetes, speaks at a press conference organized by Congressman Maxwell Frost on expiring ACA tax credits and the government shutdown. (Nov. 3, 2025) Credit: McKenna Schueler

    Boye spoke at a press conference organized by U.S. Congressman Maxwell Frost, a Democrat from Orlando, who has for weeks called on U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson to summon House members back to Washington, D.C., so they can negotiate a funding agreement on healthcare like adults. 

    “We can even step away from the policy disagreement or agreement, just talk about the fact that Congress has been out of session for over 40 days. … We don’t even have to talk about blame,” said Frost, referring to the consistent finger-pointing that has taken place between Republicans and Democrats.

    Johnson, a Republican from Louisiana, has argued it’s in Senate Democrats’ hands to reach a deal on federal funding and allow the government to reopen. Frost believes that line of thinking “makes zero sense.”

    “Mike Johnson says the House of Representatives will not go to work until the government opens. The government will not open unless we go to work to open up the government,” Frost said. “I mean, it makes absolutely zero sense.” His far-right colleague, Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, has similarly called Johnson’s failure to bring them back to work “embarrassing.”

    “I have no problem pointing fingers at everyone. And the worst thing that I, that I just can’t get over, is we’re not working right now. And I put that criticism directly on the speaker of the House,” Greene said during an appearance on ABC News program The View.

    According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a nonpartisan think tank, an estimated 93 percent of Americans who buy insurance through the ACA marketplace — roughly 22 million — currently benefit from these enhanced tax credits that are set to expire at the end of 2025. 

    Without those tax credits, health insurance costs for ACA plans (also known as Obamacare) are expected to go up hundreds or even thousands of dollars for low- and middle-income earners per year, just in premiums alone. The Orlando Sentinel reported over the weekend that locals like Boye are already getting “sticker shock” from health insurance renewal letters they’re receiving in the mail.

    Eric Rollings, another Orlando local who’s self-employed (and the former chair of the Orange County Soil and Water Conservation District board), told reporters Monday that he faces a roughly 113 percent healthcare premium hike to his Florida Blue health plan — from $581.25 per month to $1,238.97 per month come Jan. 1. “Just six weeks ago, I joined 1.2 million people who have received a heart stent in the past year. I don’t have an option to go without insurance,” he said.

    The medication his doctor prescribes for him, a common medication for those who have gone through a heart stent procedure, is “essential,” but costs over $2,600 a month for a 180-day supply without insurance.

    “I think that this is a really insane and hurtful increase,” Rollings admitted. “And for me, for my friends that own businesses and restaurants, I want to apologize in advance, because I’m probably not going to be able to see you, at least for the time being, because I don’t know where this is going.”

    Eric Rollings, a constituent of Congressman Maxwell Frost, faces a 113% healthcare premium spike next year if ACA tax credits expire. Credit: McKenna Schueler

    The federal government shutdown that has highlighted this sharp rise in healthcare premiums began Oct. 1 and is on its way to becoming the longest shutdown in U.S. history. The ACA enhanced tax credits at stake were first established in 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic and reportedly spurred a significant increase in the number of people enrolled in health insurance.

    Healthcare advocates have warned that, if the tax credits do expire, an estimated 4 to 5 million Americans will lose coverage in 2026, due to unaffordability. Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill,” enacted in July, already started “the destruction of our healthcare system,” Frost shared, referring to the millions of Americans who are expected to lose their Medicaid coverage over the next decade, plus the legislation’s anticipated impacts on nursing homes, hospitals and community health centers.

    Rising health insurance costs also come amid an ongoing affordability crisis, said State Sen. Carlos Guillermo Smith, D-Orlando, who also joined Frost’s press conference. 

    Smith has filed legislation for consideration by Florida lawmakers in 2026 that would cap insulin costs at $35 per month — something a growing number of states have already done — and guarantee 12 weeks of paid parental leave for state employees, if passed. Rental costs in Orange County are also up at least 30 percent since 2020, and lawmakers have filed a slew of bills that aim to address homeowners’ property insurance woes this next year, too.

    “These [ACA] subsidies have been a lifeline to these families,” said Smith. He also renewed Florida Democrats’ call for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to tap into emergency state funding to provide food assistance for Florida’s nearly 3 million SNAP recipients. 

    Benefits for the federal Supplemental Nutrition and Assistance Program, sometimes called “food stamps,” have been frozen this month as the USDA claims that funding for the program has run out.

    And while the Trump administration has been ordered by a federal judge to tap into its own contingency funds to fund SNAP during the government shutdown, the administration has only agreed to pay up to 50 percent of benefits for households, and it’s still unclear when that will actually trickle down to Florida’s recipients.

    Local hunger relief organizations like Second Harvest Food Bank and United Against Poverty are currently scrambling to pick up the slack.

    “Under state law, [DeSantis] can declare a state of emergency on food insecurity, and he can tap into the nearly $5 billion of our state’s rainy day fund to temporarily cover the cost of SNAP benefits that are not currently available,” Smith said. DeSantis has renewed a state of emergency on immigration over a dozen times, and Smith said the governor should recognize the same urgency here, too.

    “When he renewed that state — so-called ‘state of emergency’ — he tapped into over $300 million in public money to build the Everglades detention camp that they called Alligator Alcatraz,” Smith pointed out. “Why can’t he declare a state of emergency on food insecurity to make sure that children across the state of Florida are fed?” He asked. “It is about priorities.”

    DeSantis has rejected Democrats’ calls to declare a state of emergency over the issue. However, on Monday, DeSantis did vaguely commit to mobilizing the state agriculture department to assist in food aid, without providing specifics on how that would work. 

    Florida Democrats on Tuesday, meanwhile, renewed their call for the Republican governor, pointing to the recent action taken by the Trump administration to commit half.

    “Now that the courts have ordered Washington to pay half of SNAP benefits, the governor has even less of an excuse to ignore our calls for a State of Emergency on food insecurity,” said Senate Democratic leader Lori Berman in a statement.

    “Ron DeSantis has always been more concerned with what’s going on in Washington than how he can help the people of Florida,” she added. “He should join us in being more worried about what he can actually control — keeping Florida’s families fed. Now he can do it at half the price.”


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    The debt relief initiative, made possible through funds from the Biden administration, has relieved medical debt for 302,000 people.

    Nearly 3 million people are expected to lose access to the federal food assistance program

    Florida has the fourth largest SNAP enrollment nationwide with 2.94 million relying on the assistance for food security



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    McKenna Schueler
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  • Orlando Magic Baskets for Books Program Presented by Florida Blue Celebrates 10th Year

    Orlando Magic Baskets for Books Program Presented by Florida Blue Celebrates 10th Year

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    The Baskets for Books program has donated more than 54,000 books to the Early Learning Coalition since program inception

    Press Release



    updated: Oct 2, 2020

     In an effort to develop lifelong learners through literacy and education, the Orlando Magic and Florida Blue celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Baskets for Books program presented by Florida Blue. For every point made by the Orlando Magic at every home game one book is donated to the Early Learning Coalition (ELC) of Orange County. Since program inception in 2010, more than 54,000 total books have been donated to the Early Learning Coalition. Nearly 4,000 books were donated last season (2019-20) with the help of Houghton Mifflin & Harcourt Publishing Company.

    In celebration of the 10th ​anniversary, the Magic and Florida Blue teamed up to create a children’s book, STUFF & SUNNY Take Flight, which was distributed virtually over the summer to Orange County Public Schools’ (OCPS) elementary school youth, Magic season ticket holders, premium partners and through the Magic’s eNews subscribers. The two also donated water bottles to the ELC book recipients.

    In addition, over the last three years, the Magic and Florida Blue have participated in Orange County Library System’s Summer Reading Program which offered youth ages 6-12 a chance to receive Magic tickets during the upcoming seasons for submitting five book reviews online through the library’s reading program. The two also took part in the Orlando Public Library’s Summer Reading Celebration, the culminating event, with Magic Community Ambassadors Nick Anderson and Bo Outlaw joining in the celebration.

    The Baskets for Books program provided a way to continue the team’s literacy efforts, one of the Magic’s three focus areas.  Based on the need in this area, literacy remains a point of emphasis for the Magic (research below provided by the U.S. Department of Education).

    ·         83 percent of the preschool and after-school programs serving at-risk children do not have access to books.

    ·         68 percent of low-income families have no children’s books in their homes.

    ·         By age four, children who live in low-income homes will have heard 32 million fewer words than children who read on a daily basis and have access to books in their home. 

    Orlando Magic Media Contact: Trish Wingerson | 407.538.0892 | twingerson@orlandomagic.com

    Source: Orlando Magic

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