Latest News On Hospitals

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Texas Strives To Lure Mental Health Providers To Rural Counties

KFF Health News Original

Over a hundred counties in Texas don’t have a mental health worker, affecting about 3 million Texans. A new loan repayment program may not be enough to recruit them to rural areas.

A Third Of Ga. Pediatricians Join Together To Form Network To Improve Care

KFF Health News Original

The new physician-led network will allow pediatricians to improve care for Georgia children by sharing best practice standards and expand their billing options for insurance, advocates say.

Heart-Attack Patients More Likely To Die After Ambulances Are Diverted

KFF Health News Original

A study finds patients who suffered heart attacks in California were more likely to die within a year if their ambulances were diverted from the closest emergency room.

Katrina Shut Down Charity Hospital But Led To More Primary Care

KFF Health News Original

When Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005, many health facilities were destroyed or shut down, including urgent care centers, nursing homes, pharmacies and hospitals. But a new network of renovated and newly built primary care health clinics has opened, which many hope will bring stability to the health care of the city’s low-income residents.

The Hospital Is In Network, But Not The Doctor: N.Y. Tries New Balance Billing Law

KFF Health News Original

Consumers in New York are getting new protections against “balance billing,” where insurers bill patients for the difference between what insurers pay and what providers want, and states considering similar laws are watching closely.

Study Casts Doubt On Assumptions About Hospital ‘Frequent Fliers’

KFF Health News Original

New research finds that patients who repeatedly use costly hospital and emergency room services, known often as super-utilizers or frequent fliers, generally don’t seek such intense care for a lifetime but instead for a short period of time.

Emergency Departments Are On The Frontline Of The Flu

KFF Health News Original

More patients with the flu are seeking care at the emergency room this year, and despite the 112 million Americans who have gotten a flu shot, it remains to be seen if this year’s version will be just bad or historically bad.

Seven Hospitals Share Distinction Of Highest Readmission Rates

KFF Health News Original

As Medicare prepares to start punishing hospitals with higher-than-average readmissions, seven hospitals have a particularly dubious distinction: higher-than-average rates for three kinds of patients. These hospitals all had worse readmission rates than the average hospital for heart attack, heart failure and pneumonia patients — the three categories Medicare tracks. The hospitals were: San Juan VA […]