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Descent Into Secrecy: Senate Health Talks Speak To Steady Retreat From Transparency

By Julie Rovner June 14, 2017

The Senate’s secret deliberation on the health bill overhaul is part of a long, slow slide away from transparency. And I’m a witness.

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People In Recovery Worry GOP Medicaid Cuts Would Put Treatment Out Of Reach

By Ben Allen, WITF June 14, 2017

In Pennsylvania alone, 124,000 people received drug or alcohol addiction treatment through Medicaid. Republicans in Congress want to cut Medicaid by as much as $800 billion over the next decade, leaving people in recovery wondering what will happen to their treatment.

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Out Of Work And Looking For Insurance: COBRA May Be The Best Bet For Now

By Michelle Andrews June 13, 2017

With lots of questions about the 2018 insurance market still in play, someone who is between jobs might want to stick with their job-based insurance at least until the outlines of the health law’s marketplaces are clear in the fall.

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As Insurance Options Shrink, Families Are ‘Holding Our Breath’

By Steven Findlay June 9, 2017

One of two insurers in this tiny state has announced it will not be back in the marketplaces next year, leaving customers concerned about the prices they will pay.

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Capitol Hill Dems, HHS Secretary Price Trade Jabs On HHS Budget

By Rachel Bluth June 8, 2017

Tom Price defends proposed spending reductions in Medicaid and other HHS programs while demurring on questions about cost-sharing subsidies for the 2018 Obamacare marketplace.

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Protected But Priced Out: Patients Worry About Health Law’s Future In Arizona

By Will Stone, KJZZ June 8, 2017

Corinne Bobbie has a love-hate relationship with the Affordable Care Act. As the GOP tries to repeal the law, the experiences and fears of voters like Bobbie could determine a politician’s fate.

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‘My Life Is Very Full’: People With Disabilities Worry About GOP Medicaid Cuts

By Elly Yu, WABE June 7, 2017

The Obamacare replacement bill passed by House Republicans would cut Medicaid by $834 billion over a decade. That has people with disabilities scared that services that allow them to live independently, such as job training and transportation, will disappear.

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GOP Medicaid Cuts Hit Rural America Hardest, Report Finds

By Phil Galewitz June 7, 2017

Medicaid covers more children and adults in rural counties and small towns than in urban areas and rural America would be affected most by changes in Medicaid.

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A Community Seeks Answers, Assurances About Health Care — In 10 Languages

By Ana B. Ibarra and Kellen Browning June 5, 2017

A forum for Asian immigrants in Oakland draws a crowd so large some attendees had to be seated in an overflow room. Many immigrants are eager for information relevant to them as changes to the health care system are debated in Washington.

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Senators’ Dueling Web Shoutouts Echo Nation’s Partisan Divide On Obamacare

By Rachel Bluth June 1, 2017

In the early stages of the Senate’s attempts to write a health care bill, a Republican and a Democrat each solicit constituents’ Obamacare experiences from opposite ends of the spectrum.

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California’s New Single-Payer Proposal Embraces Some Costly Old Ways

By Chad Terhune May 31, 2017

The legislation would revive the age-old practice of paying providers for every service they perform — a recipe for a busted budget, some experts say. Backers say the bill is a work in progress.

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GOP Health Bill Pleases Most Republicans, But Not Many Other Americans

By Julie Rovner May 31, 2017

While nearly half of Americans support Obamacare, fewer than a third are in favor of the Republican replacement legislation.

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A Busy Week For Health: Budget Cuts, CBO Scores And Mitch McConnell’s Cryptic Signal

May 26, 2017

KHN’s Mary Agnes Carey and Julie Rovner discuss some of the developments that shook up health news this week.

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‘Health Care’ = Fighting Words In Montana

By Diane Webber May 26, 2017

A question about the Obamacare repeal bill turned into a rumble in the Montana special election — portending tough times ahead for Republicans.

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Strategies To Defend Unpopular GOP Health Bill: Euphemisms, False Statements And Deleted Comments

By Charles Ornstein, ProPublica May 25, 2017

Since the House passed the American Health Care Act, Republican members of Congress have tried to swing public opinion to their side. ProPublica has been tracking what they’re saying.

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Citing CBO Report, Critics Decry GOP Bill’s Potential Fallout In California

By Anna Gorman May 25, 2017

“I feel like I am in a bad dream,” said state Sen. Ed Hernandez, who chairs California’s Senate Health Committee.

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Millions Of Ill People May Face ‘Extremely High Premiums’ Under House Bill, CBO Says

By Julie Rovner May 24, 2017

The report by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office evaluates last-minute changes made to the bill to help propel it to passage.

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Millones de personas enfermas enfrentarían primas altísimas, según nuevo informe

By Julie Rovner May 24, 2017

El reporte dado a conocer por la Oficina de Presupuesto del Congreso indica que bajo una ley republicana de salud habría 23 millones de personas más sin seguro, y que millones pagarían mucho más por la atención de salud.

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GOP’s Health Bill Could Undercut Some Coverage In Job-Based Insurance

By Michelle Andrews May 23, 2017

In states that take up the bill’s option to change the essential health benefits, the out-of-pocket spending limits and annual and lifetime caps on coverage in large group plans could fray.

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Health Debate Heats Up In Montana For This Week’s Special Election

By Eric Whitney, Montana Public Radio May 23, 2017

The race for Montana’s one and only seat in the House of Representatives will be decided Thursday, and health care is taking center stage in the race’s last week.

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About Repeal & Replace Watch

After months of work in Congress, “repeal and replace” efforts on the Affordable Care Act may be coming back from the dead — again. With analysis, explanation and data, Repeal & Replace Watch follows the new politics of health care.

Twitter: Follow @Repeal_Replace
Facebook: Join Group

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See All Stories

Do You Speak Repeal & Replace?

As Congress debates the GOP’s replacement plan, lawmakers toss around wonky health policy terms, like Medicaid block grants, essential health benefits and high-risk pools.

But what do they mean?

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Test Your Knowledge Here

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