Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Mass. Governor Proposes New Compounding Pharmacy Oversights

Morning Briefing

Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick is proposing the state exercise stricter control over compounding pharmacies by — in part — establishing new licensing requirements for the labs and letting the state assess fines against them if they break rules.

First Edition: January 7, 2013

Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including news about entitlement spending in the context of the debt debate, as well as reports regarding the health insurance industry.

HHS Gives 7 States The Go-Ahead To Create Health Exchanges

Morning Briefing

So far, the Obama administration has approved the health exchange blueprints submitted by 17 states and the District of Columbia. And, the most recent set includes both red states, including Utah, and blue states.

States Confront Myriad Of Health Law Implementation Issues

Morning Briefing

States face fallout from decisions on whether to implement key parts of the health law, including exchanges in California and Washington — where dental insurance will be mandated in plans offered in the marketplaces — and Florida, which missed out on co-ops and faces a decision on expanding Medicaid in 2013.

New Congress Brings Changes In Leadership, Expertise

Morning Briefing

Politico offers insights regarding the leadership style and health law attitude of Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga., who will chair the House Labor, HHS appropriations subcommittee. Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal reports that two physicians were sworn in yesterday — doubling the number of doctors in the Democratic caucus.

First Edition: January 4, 2013

Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including reports that the Department of Health and Human Services gave seven more states the thumbs up to run their own health exchanges.

Some Health Law Funding Becomes ‘Fiscal Cliff’ Casualty

Morning Briefing

The agreement approved by Congress and signed by President Barack Obama would kill new funding for health insurance co-operatives. The fiscal deal also officially repealed the health law’s CLASS Act, but establishes a new bipartisan commission to develop a plan for long-term care services for elderly and disabled people.

A Closer Look At Latest ‘Doc Fix’

Morning Briefing

As part of the fiscal deal, a scheduled cut in Medicare physician payment rates was postponed — but its 10-year price tag is being borne by other health care players, especially hospitals.