Latest News On Louisiana

Latest KFF Health News Stories

High Court Revisits Abortion Law Akin To One Struck Down In 2016

KFF Health News Original

The justices will hear a case Wednesday involving a Louisiana law requiring abortion providers to be able to admit patients to a nearby hospital. But four years ago, the court said a similar Texas law was unconstitutional.

With Fate Of Roe V. Wade Unsure, Abortion Fight Shifts To New Territory

KFF Health News Original

The Supreme Court in March will hear a Louisiana case that tests whether the new five-member conservative majority is willing to overturn the 1973 decision that made abortion legal nationwide. Even if the court does not go that far, it could hasten the procedure’s demise by saying abortion providers cannot sue on behalf of their patients.

KHN’s ‘What The Health?’: Trump Merges Health And Immigration

KFF Health News Original

President Donald Trump has ordered that legal immigrants obtain health insurance within 30 days of arriving or prove they can pay for any possible medical need ― another policy certain to be challenged in court. Meanwhile, health issues continue to play a major role in campaign 2020. This week, Paige Winfield Cunningham of The Washington Post, Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico and Julie Appleby of Kaiser Health News join KHN’s Julie Rovner to discuss these issues and more.

Cuarentena por paperas en Louisiana puede violar los derechos de inmigrantes detenidos

KFF Health News Original

Un brote de paperas y una cuarentena en el Centro de Procesamiento de Inmigración y Control de Aduanas de Pine Prairie, en Louisiana, impidió que los inmigrantes obtuvieran recursos legales, incluidos sus representantes legales.

Hurricane’s Health Toll: A Texas Doctor Taps Lessons From Katrina

KFF Health News Original

After weathering the catastrophe in New Orleans 12 years ago, Dr. Ruth Berggren moved to Texas, where she again finds herself in the center of a hurricane crisis. In a Q&A, she draws parallels between the harrowing events and pinpoints risks in Harvey’s aftermath.

Will Louisiana’s Medicaid Expansion Be A Harbinger For Georgia?

KFF Health News Original

Louisiana’s decision to accept the federal health law program to provide coverage to more low-income residents is being watched around the South, including in Georgia, where deep-seated opposition is showing some small signs of cracks.

Slipping Between Medicaid And Marketplace Coverage Can Leave Consumers Confused

KFF Health News Original

KHN’s consumer columnist answers questions about how people can handle moving between the government health plan for low-income residents and the private plans offered on the federal health law’s exchanges.

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.