Latest News On Insuring Your Health

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Expert Panel Recommends Expansion Of Services With No Cost Sharing For Women

KFF Health News Original

The list of preventive services that insurers must cover without a co-pay could grow to include mammograms for younger women, testing that follows an irregular screening and birth control for men.

More Small, Midsized Firms Choose To Pay Workers’ Medical Costs Directly

KFF Health News Original

Many expected that the federal health law would push these employers in this direction. An analysis by the Employee Benefit Research Institute finds evidence that these predictions are coming to fruition.

1965: The Year That Brought Civil Rights To The Nation’s Hospitals

KFF Health News Original

A conversation with author David Barton Smith examines how civil rights activists working at the Social Security Administration and the Public Health Service in the 1960s used the new Medicare law to end racial discrimination at hospitals.

Many Toddlers Fail To Get Necessary Medicaid Renewal At Their First Birthday

KFF Health News Original

Infants born to women covered by Medicaid or CHIP may be automatically eligible for that insurance during their first year, but advocates say confusing rules and bureaucratic problems too often prevent an easy extension of that coverage.

Study Finds Doctors Quick To Change Practice For Breast Cancer Patients

KFF Health News Original

Despite the usual view that physicians are slow to alter their routines based on new scientific evidence, researchers found that breast cancer surgeons quickly adopted advice to not remove lymph nodes after a landmark clinical trial in 2011.

Young Adults Can Face Challenges To Health Enrollment

KFF Health News Original

Even as the administration focuses on getting more young adults into marketplace coverage, many enrollment specialists say that this group has some difficulty transitioning from family plans or Medicaid.