Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

With Medicaid Impasse, Fla. Governor Orders State Agencies To Prepare For July 1 Shutdown

Morning Briefing

The state’s lawmakers have been unable to strike a budget because of concerns about federal funding of hospitals and Medicaid expansion. In Alaska, a House committee throws water on the governor’s plan to expand the health care program for low-income residents, Utah officials are working to try to find a compromise on the issue and Georgia is exploring some options.

Less Advertising, Outreach As Covered California Eyes Self-Sufficiency

Morning Briefing

The state exchange, run with federal dollars for now, released its 2015-2016 budget proposal. Elsewhere, in Hawaii, officials plan to use federal technology to run the insurance exchange there. And Iowa and Colorado exchanges are also in the news.

Contractor Tapped With Healthcare.gov Rescue Says Its Work Is Done

Morning Briefing

The Wall Street Journal reports that government contractor Optum says it has achieved its goal of making the federal health exchange a stable and reliable platform. Other news outlets examine findings from the International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans on the health law’s Cadillac tax, as well as Families USA on issues of affordability.

Fighting ‘Superbugs’ Could Require Multibillion-Dollar Investment

Morning Briefing

An economist from the United Kingdom says the global community will need as much as $37 billion over 10 years to fight the threat. In the U.S., hospitals look for ways to better clean scopes — often a source of hospital-acquired infections.

Investment Firms Direct Retirees On Health Expenses

Morning Briefing

Big brokerage firms like Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley are offering advice to wealthier retirees on health care expenses. Elsewhere, a billionaire sounds the baby-boomer health care-costs alarm, and PBS NewsHour looks at COBRA versus Medicare coverage.

A $38,000 Outpatient Surgical Bill Justified By Regional Hospital Price Variations

Morning Briefing

A former health-insurance worker was surprised and concerned that her Havasu, Ariz., hospital charged so much for an hour-long eye-lid procedure. But her health insurer agreed to pay nearly $30,000, saying the charges were “allowable.” Elsewhere, the Montana Supreme Court revived a case accusing hospitals of unfairly charging different rates for insured and uninsured patients.

House OKs Measure To Ban Abortions After 20 Weeks

Morning Briefing

The bill, which was a revised version of earlier legislation that GOP leaders pulled after objections from their own caucus, passed 242 to 184. It is expected to face a tough path in the Senate and has already triggered a veto threat from the White House.

GOP Senator Wants States To Be Able To Opt Out Of Obamacare If Subsidies Are Struck

Morning Briefing

Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, a freshman senator and a physician, recommends allowing states to opt out of the health law if the Supreme Court strikes down subsidies in federal exchange states. Meanwhile, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said the GOP will “rue the day” if the court strikes the subsidies.