Latest News On Legislation

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Proyecto republicano elimina el mandato individual y gran parte de la expansión del Medicaid

KFF Health News Original

Los republicanos dieron a conocer el plan de salud con el que buscan reemplazar gran parte del Obamacare. Qué disposiciones se conservarían y cuáles podrían desaparecer por completo.

Support For Health Law Grows, Leaving Republicans In A Bind

KFF Health News Original

As GOP lawmakers struggle to find a replacement for Obamacare, public support for the health law grows and a majority of Americans say they don’t want fundamental changes to Medicaid.

A Guide To Budget Reconciliation: The Byzantine Rules For Disassembling The Health Law

KFF Health News Original

Republicans, who don’t have the votes to repeal the ACA directly, are hoping to use this strict budget strategy that requires only a majority vote to strip the health law of provisions they oppose.

Preserving Fertility When It Is Threatened By Life-Saving Medicine

KFF Health News Original

A bill recently introduced in the California legislature would require insurance companies to cover fertility-preserving services for patients at risk of infertility because of necessary medical treatments.

One GOP Plan Says Calif. And Other States That Like Their Obamacare Can Keep It

KFF Health News Original

States could continue to cover people under the ACA or create new approaches, according to a bill introduced Monday. Many Democrats fear such state options won’t draw enough federal funding and will fragment coverage nationwide.

GOP’s Timetable For Getting Repeal To Trump May Be Ambitious

KFF Health News Original

Republicans say they plan to pass a bill to overhaul the federal health law in the 17 days between when Congress convenes and Inauguration Day. But past congressional budget veterans say that could prove to be very difficult.

Long-Stalled FDA Reform Sits On Senate’s Lame-Duck Calendar

KFF Health News Original

The legislation would give federal officials more flexibility in evaluating the effectiveness and safety of drugs and devices and add billions of dollars to NIH funding. But critics say it could endanger patients’ safety and doesn’t do enough to stop spiraling drug prices.

Did It Hurt Or Help? Researchers Analyze Ohio’s 2011 Abortion Law

KFF Health News Original

A new study finds that women may have suffered more complications and needed more follow-up care as a result of the law. The law’s advocates question the findings.