Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

House Passes Budget With Big Medicare, Medicaid Changes

Morning Briefing

The plan would reduce spending by $5.1 trillion over 10 years and includes an overhaul of both Medicare and Medicaid as well as cuts to other government programs. It would also repeal the health law but stands little chance of passing in the Senate.

First Edition: April 11, 2014

Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including details about the resignation of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius as well as coverage of her likely successor, Sylvia Mathews Burwell.

Details — And Limits — Of Medicare Billing Data Emerge

Morning Briefing

News outlets begin to analyze the wealth of information now available as a result of Wednesday’s release by the Centers of Medicare & Medicaid Services of a trove of payment records. They also note the limits.

Analysis Of Medicare Pay Shows Variations In Drugs Used And Earnings By Specialists

Morning Briefing

The Washington Post examines how drugs administered by doctors is different in various regions of the country. Other outlets look at other issues, including how eye doctors are among the highest paid specialty.

Taking A Close-To-Home Look At The Medicare Billing Data

Morning Briefing

Other news outlets offer localized takes on the Medicare data, including the Miami Herald’s coverage of a physician who emerged as the federal program’s top-paid doctor, the Philadelphia Inquirer’s look at an ambulance business’ billing patterns and the Seattle Times’ examination of ophthalmologists.

N.H. Senate Hopeful Makes Anti-Health Law Motto Cornerstone Of Campaign

Morning Briefing

The former Massachusetts senator, running now for Senate in New Hampshire, says the health law forces people to “live free or log on,” a variation of New Hampshire’s “Live Free or Die” motto.

Oregon, Minnesota Exchanges Weigh Next Steps

Morning Briefing

Officials overseeing the troubled exchanges examine what went wrong this year and debate how to proceed. Meanwhile, a small business exchange in Georgia gets few enrollees and The Denver Post reports that more residents signed up for Medicaid than for private insurance.

First Edition: April 10, 2014

Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including a range of stories taking additional looks at the Medicare physician payment data released yesterday by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

CMS Releases Trove Of Medicare Physician Billing Data

Morning Briefing

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is making this information available for the first time in 35 years. Meanwhile, in their first run at the data, news outlets report that a small number of doctors account for a large share of Medicare costs.

Portrait Of Newly Insured Takes Shape

Morning Briefing

Early enrollees in the health law’s marketplaces were more likely to use expensive specialty drugs and less likely to use contraceptives, according to an analysis of two months of drug claims data by Express Scripts. A Rand analysis, meanwhile, argues that most of the newly insured signed up with an employer rather than buying it through the marketplaces.

Health Law: Attack Ad Fuel For Midterms

Morning Briefing

The Wall Street Journal reports on three ads that focus on health care with roots in the 2008 presidential election, while the Koch brothers have launched health law ads against Democratic senators they deem vulnerable. And many health law critics have accepted the law’s subsidies.