Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Obama Gives Latinos Full Court Press

Morning Briefing

The president appeared at a town-hall-style event Thursday, hosted by Spanish-language media outlets, to urge Latinos to sign up for insurance options made available by the health law before open enrollment ends March 31.

Research Roundup: Health Care And Prisoners; Hospitalized Patients’ Surrogates; Suicides In The Army

Morning Briefing

This week’s studies come from Health Affairs, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly, JAMA Internal Medicine, JAMA Psychiatry, the American Journal of Managed Care, The Commonwealth Fund, The Kaiser Family Foundation, Mathematica and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

First Edition: March 7, 2014

Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including stories about new studies that attempt to measure the health law’s headway in signing up uninsured Americans for health coverage.

Administration Unveils New Round Of Health Law Rule Changes

Morning Briefing

Among the wide-ranging set of changes, the one drawing the most attention is the Obama administration’s decision to allow some consumers to keep health coverage into 2017 that does not comply with the overhaul’s minimum standards. Other changes include an extension of next year’s enrollment period, more backup for plans in insurance exchanges dealing with high patient costs and more time for states deciding whether to run their own marketplaces.

Medicaid Expansion: With Arkansas ‘Private’ Plan Authorized For Another Year, Officials Now Focus On Possible Fixes

Morning Briefing

After surviving an effort earlier this week to defund it, supporters of the state’s private option are now working on alterations that will smooth its future. Meanwhile, the back-and-forth over whether to pursue the expansion continues in Virginia and Utah.

Feds To Probe Troubled State Exchanges

Morning Briefing

The Government Accountability Office, an investigative arm of Congress, will look at what went wrong with several state exchanges, including Oregon’s, which failed to deliver despite large infusions of federal money. Meanwhile, a state lawmaker has sued California for refusing to allow consumers with canceled health policies to keep them, and Florida has a high rate of uninsured Latinos.

House Votes To Delay Individual Mandate

Morning Briefing

The House took its 50th vote to change the health law, passing a bill that would delay the individual mandate to carry health insurance for one year. The measure will likely never be taken up in the Democrat-led Senate.

White House Says Risk Corridors Will Be Budget Neutral

Morning Briefing

In news on the implementation of the health overhaul, administration officials seek to rebut Republican charges that the risk corridors will be a “bailout” for the insurance industry. Meanwhile, Gary Cohen, who helped oversee many of the rules for rolling out the law, is leaving the government.

Arizona Sued Over Abortion Restrictions

Morning Briefing

Abortion providers filed suit Wednesday to block new state regulations that limit the use of the most common abortion drugs. Meanwhile, two more Texas abortion clinics are closed as a result of that state’s restrictions, bringing total closures to 12.

Arkansas House Votes To Fund Medicaid Expansion Private Option

Morning Briefing

The measure, which extended for one year this “private” approach to expanding health insurance coverage to low-income state residents, failed in four previous votes. Its opponents say the debate is not over — they are just “hitting the pause button.”