Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Health Law Implementation Issues Set Scene For State-Level Policy Action

Morning Briefing

Virginia’s attorney general outlines his take on the fiscal dangers that the health law’s Medicaid expansion will cause. Meanwhile, Michigan lawmakers will consider the creation of a state-based health exchange. Also, in Georgia, a year-long effort to revamp the state’s Medicaid program is on hold as one leader says it would be “imprudent” to move forward while so many uncertainties are in play.

Health Law Continues To Be Challenge For Romney Campaign

Morning Briefing

GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney continues to confront issues about the similarities between the health reform he signed while Massachusetts governor and the 2010 federal health law. Meanwhile, The Associated Press reports about some of Romney’s potential running mates and key issues in the campaign.

Health Benefits: Different Circumstances For Public- And Private-Sector Workers

Morning Briefing

The Wall Street Journal examines the benefits gap between state and local government employees and their counterparts in the private sector. Meanwhile, the Associated Press reports that Consolidated Edison has reinstated health insurance for New York workers locked out during contract negotiations.

First Edition: July 16, 2012

Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including a variety of reports from the past weekend’s meeting of the National Governors Association in Williamsburg, Va., and how the nation’s state executives continue to wrestle with what to do next after the Supreme Court’s decision on the health law’s Medicaid expansion.

Study: PTSD Treatment For Soldiers Improving, But There’s Still Work To Be Done

KFF Health News Original

When it comes to diagnosing and treating posttraumatic stress disorder among soldiers returning from service in Afghanistan, Iraq and other modern battle theaters, the Veterans Administration and the Department of Defense still have a long way to go to meet the needs of armed service members, according to a new Institute of Medicine study. In […]

Keeping Parkinson’s A Secret

KFF Health News Original

Every week, KHN reporter Shefali S. Kulkarni selects interesting reading from around the Web. The New York Times: Keeping Parkinson’s Disease A Secret When Nancy Mulhearn learned she had Parkinson’s disease seven years ago, she kept the diagnosis mostly to herself, hiding it from friends, colleagues — even, at first, her mother, sister and teenage children. […]

Today’s Headlines — July 13, 2012

KFF Health News Original

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including continuing coverage of how the nation’s governors are handling the high court’s decision allowing states to opt out of the health law’s Medicaid expansion. The New York Times: Lines Are Drawn Over Opting Out Of Medicaid Plan In the weeks since the Supreme Court ruled […]

Governors’ Concerns Continue To Surface About Health Law’s Medicaid Expansion

Morning Briefing

Though much of the dust-up following the Supreme Court’s Medicaid decision has come from Republican governors vowing to opt out of the expansion, news outlets report that some Democratic governors also have concerns. Meanwhile, Kentucky became the 13th state to say it would set up its own online insurance exchange where individuals and small businesses could shop for coverage beginning in 2014.

Polls: Public Views Health Law As A Tax, Opinions Divided Along Party Lines

Morning Briefing

A Quinnipiac poll finds that most people view the health law as a tax increase, while a survey by the Pew Research Center for People and the Press not only found that the public is sharply divided over the law, but in regard to the court, too.