Meeting the new federal health benefits package standards for habilitative services may be complicated and confusing, but a need to add children's dental and children's vision care standards has been more common.

Sabrina Corlette and other Georgetown University health policy researchers have published that finding in a report distributed by the Urban Institute.

The researchers wrote the report to show how five states – Alabama, Colorado, New Mexico, Oregon and Virginia – are responding to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act requiremens for "essential health benefits."

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Allison Bell

Allison Bell, ThinkAdvisor's insurance editor, previously was LifeHealthPro's health insurance editor. She has a bachelor's degree in economics from Washington University in St. Louis and a master's degree in journalism from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. She can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter at @Think_Allison.