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Latest KFF Health News Stories

Business Is Booming For Big Drug Negotiators

KFF Health News Original

If your health insurance covers prescriptions, you are probably a customer of a pharmacy benefit management company. These third-party administrators for prescription drug programs make up one of the few industries growing during this recession, and are now poised for even more growth, as baby boomers age and Congress prepares to insure more Americans.

Individual Mandate Would Impose High Implicit Taxes on Low-Wage Workers

KFF Health News Original

A Cato Institute new study finds implicit marginal tax rates would hover near 70-80 percent over broad ranges of income. In many cases, they would exceed 100 percent, financially penalizing those who try to climb the economic ladder.

An Entitlement Certain to Grow In Spite Of ‘Firewalls’

KFF Health News Original

Even if all of the offsets work out as planned, which is not likely, the House and Senate bills would still create substantial budgetary risks because of the pressures for entitlement expansion they would unleash.

Congress and Medicare: Letting Go Is Hard to Do

KFF Health News Original

Democrats’ health plan would give agencies more power to test and expand promising approaches to holding down costs, but the question remains: Can lawmakers resist interfering in efforts that could hurt incomes of home-state providers?

10 Experts Weigh In On Plan To Replace Public Option In Health Bill

KFF Health News Original

Can a spinoff of the Federal Employee Health Benefits Program help some of the country’s uninsured? Experts evaluate a proposal that the Office of Personnel Management, which manages the FEHBP, oversee national health plans.

Frustrated Workers And Employers Anxious For COBRA Extension

KFF Health News Original

Some of the laid-off workers receiving government help to pay for their COBRA health coverage are seeing those subsidies run out. Congress has yet to vote on an extension and employers and workers are worried about the future.

For Black Women, Breast Cancer Strikes Younger

KFF Health News Original

Many African-American women don’t fit the profile of the average American woman who gets breast cancer. For them, putting off the first mammogram until 50 – as recommended by a government task force – could put their life in danger.

The True Costs Of Reform

KFF Health News Original

In the health reform debate, there is widespread confusion over the definition of cost–a confusion that has been hanging over this debate for the last few months and is continuing to distort it.

New Survey: ‘Cadillac Tax’ Would Force Employers To Trim Health Insurance Costs

KFF Health News Original

Two-thirds of employers would raise deductibles, change insurers or scale back coverage to avoid the so-called Cadillac tax on high-cost benefits proposed in the Senate Democrats’ health care bill, a survey to be released Thursday by consulting firm Mercer says.

Analysis Of Medicare Costs Knocks McAllen, Texas, Off Its Expensive Perch

KFF Health News Original

An independent advisory board has a new way to evaluate geographical differences in Medicare spending. Now, McAllen, Texas is no longer considered as one of the top two expensive areas in the country.

Recession-Driven Cuts Threaten Efforts To Expand Adult Day Care

KFF Health News Original

Facilities, which generally provide social and medical services, rely heavily on funding from state governments and charities, which have been hit hard by the recession. Advocates say the 4,000 state-licensed centers around the country provide a cost-effective alternative to nursing homes and allow caregivers to remain in the workforce.

Seniors Often Reluctant To Switch Medicare Drug Plans

KFF Health News Original

Comparing plans can save hundreds of dollars for some consumers but many people are overwhelmed at the prospect of making such a change. Seniors have until the end of the year to revise their coverage.

White House Defends Overhaul’s Cost-Cutting

KFF Health News Original

Tiring of gripes that overhaul proposals won’t slow health spending, the White House chose the afternoon before the long Thanksgiving weekend to tell reporters, essentially, “They will, so.”