Latest KFF Health News Stories
Maryland’s Action May Offer Middle Ground In Abortion Clinic Debate
After a woman was hurt during an abortion, the state tightened its oversight. Americans continue to hold complex views on the subject, even as lawmakers on Capitol Hill gear up for a possible Senate fight on a bill banning abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy.
Community Health Centers Get $150 Million For Health Law Enrollment
Also, Walgreen and the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association announces a combined effort to help get information to consumers about getting insurance through the federal health law.
State Highlights: N.Y. Expects $20M Savings With Psychiatric Care Overhaul
A selection of health policy stories from New York, Michigan and California.
Longer Life For Americans, But Obesity Problem Persists
Americans are living longer than they did 20 years ago, but they still lag other countries on life expectancy and the obesity rate, a new study has found.
Analysis Finds Obamacare Opponents Outspent Supporters On Ads By 5-1
The study of television ads finds that critics have spent at least $385 million since the law was enacted in March 2010. Meanwhile, supporters are looking for innovative ways to attract young healthy people to join plans offered on the online marketplaces.
Several outlets look at physician practice issues.
UnitedHealth Sees Shift Toward Outcome-Based Incentives
The nation’s largest insurer predicts it will have $50 billion in accountable-care contracts with health care providers by 2017, up from $20 billion now.
Louisiana Blue Cross: Insurance Costs Will Drop For Many Under Health Law
The federal health law is having different effects in Louisiana, Florida, Ohio and Wisconsin.
Senate GOP Petitioning For ‘Permanent Delay’ Of Obamacare
Encouraged by the administration’s delay of the employer mandate provision by one year, Republicans were active on both sides of Capitol Hill Tuesday, renewing their calls for repeal.
Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations including reports from Capitol Hill about GOP efforts to repeal or delay the health law.
Tax Break Can Help With Health Coverage, But There’s A Catch
There are two kinds of financial help for lower-income people planning to enroll in the online health insurance marketplaces that will open this fall. One could put people at risk of having to pay some of the money back, while the other won’t.
Restaurant Owner Welcomes Delay On Law’s Insurance Requirement
New York Times profiles the challenges that one business owner faced with the health law’s pressure to cover his employees. Other outlets offer news on the law, including the problems the administration is facing in setting up the online marketplaces, concerns about scams targeting consumers and help for Medicare beneficiaries.
More Doctors Adopt Electronic Health Records
The nation’s top Health IT official is lauding the nation’s doctors for more widely adopting electronic health records in the past few years, but he and new studies say more work is needed to help the systems communicate with each other.
Medicare To Propose New Doctor Payment For Managing Multiple Chronic Conditions
Medicare is proposing paying doctors for managing Medicare patients with multiple chronic conditions starting in 2015. In the meantime, a Medicare plan to deny an Eli Lily diagnostic test to patients unless they are enrolled in a clinical trial is decried by some Alzheimer’s treatment advocates.
Office Nurses’ Role Evolves In Marketplace; Studies Look At Heart Procedures
The Wall Street Journal examines how companies, facing higher insurance costs, are using office nurses to “nudge employees about long-term, expensive conditions.” Meanwhile, heart studies probe where hospitals are building new angioplasty centers and how Medicare Advantage handles cardiac treatment.
House Republicans Promise New Efforts To Fight Health Law’s Individual Mandate
Speaker John Boehner vows to hold a vote this month to remove the requirement that Americans get insurance, and some in the GOP suggest they could attach the effort to bills raising the U.S. debt limit.
Texas House Lawmakers Give Initial Approval To Abortion Restrictions
Following a dramatic, last-minute Democratic filibuster late last week, Texas House lawmakers in a special session Tuesday tentatively approved controversial abortion restrictions after more contentious debate. Other states are debating the issue as well.
Catholic Hospital Group Satisfied With Contraceptive Compromise
The Catholic Health Association, which has sided with the administration before on the law, said the plan will allow employees to get birth control coverage without the hospitals paying for it.
State Highlights: Disabled At Risk At Calif. Facilities, Audit Finds; Ga. Maternal Mortality
A selection of health policy stories from California, Georgia, Oregon, Alabama, Florida and Kansas.
Viewpoints: USA Today Says ‘GOP Poisons’ Obamacare; McConnell Calls For Repeal
A variety of opinions, editorials and analyses from around the country.