Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

What You Need To Know On Election Day

Morning Briefing

Election issues include “personhood” amendments in North Dakota and Colorado, health care for the poor in Wisconsin, earned sick time in Massachusetts and food labeling in Oregon and Colorado.

Hospitals Boost Patient Care To Improve Their Bottom Lines

Morning Briefing

The long-neglected issue has become a top priority since Medicare began tracking patient satisfaction and shaving payments to hospitals that fell short. Meanwhile, The Fiscal Times looks at providers’ unhappiness with the administration’s $30 billion effort to encourage them to go digital.

Judge Blocks Government Effort To Bar Honeywell’s Wellness Program

Morning Briefing

A U.S. district judge in Minneapolis denied a request by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to prevent Honeywell from penalizing workers that opt out of the company’s corporate wellness program.

Officials Promise Colorado’s Health Exchange Will Be More User Friendly This Time

Morning Briefing

In other news, a “small subset” of Covered California enrollees has received multiple eligibility notices — some with conflicting information. And a health insurance recruiting project at California State University shows promising results.

Outcome Of Governors’ Races Key To Health Law’s Medicaid Expansion

Morning Briefing

Races in Maine, Georgia, Florida, Kansas and Wisconsin get close attention from expansion advocates. Meanwhile, safety net providers in Georgia are designing an experimental program to offer coverage to part of the expansion population without Obamacare funds.

Bad News, Voter Anger Hang Over Midterm Elections

Morning Briefing

On Election Day, news outlets report on how the health law’s botched rollout as well as the Ebola scare are playing a role in voters’ moods and how Obamacare and other issues fit into the upcoming Senate agenda.

More Scrutiny Coming For Medicare Advantage, Obamacare

KFF Health News Original

Federal officials are planning a wide range of audits into billing and government spending on managed health care in the new fiscal year, ranging from private Medicare Advantage groups that treat millions of elderly to health plans rapidly expanding under the Affordable Care Act.

Wrestling With Treatment Protocols, Estimating U.S. Ebola Cases

Morning Briefing

As American hospitals attempt to develop policies regarding the treatment of Ebola patients in an effort to avoid exposure of health care professionals, other medical experts are studying the spread of the illness to offer predictions about the number of U.S. cases that might occur. Meanwhile, news outlets also report on how the public is processing ongoing news about Ebola.