Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Consumer Choices Have Limited Impact On U.S. Health Care Spending: Study

KFF Health News Original

An analysis from the Health Care Cost Institute finds that less than half of health care costs are for services considered “shoppable,” and consumers’ out-of-pocket spending on that is just 7 percent of all spending.

Iowa Senate Passes Bill To Tighten Oversight Of Private Plans Managing Medicaid

Morning Briefing

The bipartisan effort faces an uncertain future in the House. In Oklahoma, the House passes a cost-cutting bill that will take 111,000 people off Medicaid. News services also report on Medicaid developments in Georgia and Kansas.

Google Donating $1M, Engineering Resources To Combat Zika

Morning Briefing

“Unlike many other global pandemics, the spread of Zika has been harder to identify, map and contain,” said Jacquelline Fuller, director of Google’s nonprofit arm. In other outbreak news, Republican lawmakers continue to be skeptical of the president’s emergency funding request, saying there’s money left that was earmarked for Ebola. Health officials, however, warn that would cripple the efforts to develop an Ebola vaccine.

Insurer Restrictions On Hep C Drug Coverage Probed By New York Attorney General

Morning Briefing

Information has been subpoenaed from 16 insurance companies on their policies regarding hepatitis C drugs that can cost $1,000 a pill, before discounts. Consumers have filed lawsuits alleging rationed access to the medications and a similar investigation is taking place in Massachusetts.

Hospital Group Renews Arguments Against Anthem’s Purchase Of Cigna

Morning Briefing

In other related news, California’s Kaiser Foundation Health Plan has formally applied to acquire Seattle’s Group Health Cooperative. (Kaiser Health News and The Kaiser Family Foundation are not associated with the Kaiser Foundation Health Plan.)

GOP Senators Block Push To Add $600M In Emergency Funding To Bipartisan Opioid Bill

Morning Briefing

Though Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., said that passing the legislation without the extra money is like “offering a life preserver to people who are drowning and not putting air in that life preserver,” Republican lawmakers argued that there is already sufficient funding through the omnibus spending bill passed last year. Democrats signaled they will still support the bill without the $600 million addition.

Ark. Governor Says Legislative Primary Victories Boost His Plan For Medicaid Expansion

Morning Briefing

Gov. Asa Hutchinson says he views the victories of Medicaid expansion supporters as an endorsement of his efforts to get the legislature to accept his plan. Also, a key lawmaker in Alaska says legislative opponents of Medicaid expansion there will appeal a judge’s ruling for the governor.

Obama Goes To Wisconsin To Tout Its Health Law Successes

Morning Briefing

Wisconsin is the only state that used the Affordable Care Act to expand its Medicaid coverage even though state officials rejected hundreds of millions of federal dollars available for this purpose. Meanwhile, CQ Healthbeat reports that the Obama administration is contemplating changes to risk management programs for insurers that participate in the health law’s exchanges. Also, Bloomberg details how startup Oscar Health Insurance Corp. is struggling in these new markets.

Trump Unveils Seven-Point Health Care Plan, But Details Remain Vague

Morning Briefing

The GOP front-runner’s proposals mostly fall in line with what other Republicans have offered — including revamping Medicaid to be a block grant program and selling insurance across state lines. But his plan to allow prescription drug imports is more akin to what Democrats advocate.

Justices Could Send Abortion Case Back To Texas After Conservative Wing Questions Law’s Effect

Morning Briefing

During Wednesday’s oral arguments, some of the justices debated if there was enough evidence to prove the Texas law at the center of Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt was the reason the abortion clinics in the state closed. Meanwhile, the three female justices led the charge against the strict regulations, saying the state was targeting abortion and not other more dangerous medical practices.