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Latest KFF Health News Stories

Governor Seeks New Concessions From CMS To Maintain Arkansas’ Medicaid Expansion

KFF Health News Original

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson will meet with federal officials to negotiate the future of the state’s Medicaid expansion program, which leading Republicans say could be killed if it’s not changed.

Medicaid To Fund More Addiction Treatment

KFF Health News Original

Some Medicaid plans will now get federal funding for 15 days of inpatient treatment. But Pennsylvania fears the new rule will close a loophole the state has been using to pay for longer stints.

Gaps Remain Among States’ Medicaid Efforts To Help People Kick Smoking Habit

KFF Health News Original

Even though Medicaid enrollees are more likely to be smokers than the general public, a study published Tuesday in Health Affairs examined state data from 2010 to 2013 and found wide differences in funding of cessation efforts.

You Can Buy Insulin Without A Prescription, But Should You?

KFF Health News Original

Versions sold that way are based on older formulas and make tight control of blood sugar harder. But they are cheaper and might save the life of a diabetic patient whose alternative is to go without.

Texas’ Changing Relationship To Obamacare

KFF Health News Original

For the moment, Texas Republicans still consider the Affordable Care Act to be political kryptonite, but the story on the local level is different: many moderates want the money that would come with expanding Medicaid, the state-federal health care program for the poor.

Patients In Iowa Worry About Private Management Of Medicaid

KFF Health News Original

Many in Iowa get Medicaid — the state-federal health program for poorer Americans — especially after the state expanded the program under the federal health law. But a plan to switch administration of the program to private health care companies has patients worried that their care will suffer.

Obamacare’s Next 5 Hurdles to Clear

KFF Health News Original

In its first five years, the Affordable Care Act has survived technical meltdowns, a presidential election, two Supreme Court challenges — including one resolved Thursday — and dozens of repeal efforts in Congress. But its long-term future still isn’t ensured. Here are five of the biggest hurdles left for the law.

Not Expanding Medicaid Can Cost Local Taxpayers

KFF Health News Original

Property owners in Dallas County, Texas, paid more than $467 million in taxes last year to Parkland Health and Hospital System, the county’s only public hospital, to provide medical care to the poor and uninsured. If Texas had expanded Medicaid, that amount would have been lower.