Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Democrats Feeling Health Law Anxiety Over Troubled Start

Morning Briefing

Democrats are worried the health law’s problems could hurt them politically as Senate Democrats push Obama administration officials to ease their anxiety and fix implementation of the law.

Most Uninsured Signing Up On Health Website Are Going To Medicaid

Morning Briefing

The Washington Post reports that nine out of 10 new enrollees are in Medicaid. Meanwhile, White House documents turned over to investigators in the House show only six people enrolled on the day the troubled website launched.

Federal Appeals Court Reinstates Texas Abortion Law

Morning Briefing

A federal appeals court gave the OK for Texas to reinstate a controversial abortion law while its legal fate is being decided and reversed a decision issued earlier this week blocking the law, which now goes back into effect immediately. It requires doctors performing abortions to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals and limits medication-induced abortions.

Research Roundup: States Struggling With Medicaid Expansion “Complex Issues”

Morning Briefing

This week’s health policy research and briefs come from the Annals of Emergency Medicine, JAMA Internal Medicine, Health Affairs, the National Association of Medicaid Directors, British Medical Journal and the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

First Edition: November 1, 2013

Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including information from the inside about what happened on day one of the health law’s online insurance marketplace roll out, as well as details about how nervous some Democrats are getting about how the overhaul is shaping up.

Speaking In Massachusetts, Obama Cites Success Of State Health Reforms, Credits Romney

Morning Briefing

Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts and former GOP presidential nominee, rejected President Barack Obama’s efforts to draw parallels between the Massachusetts measure that Romney signed into law and Obama’s health overhaul.

eHealth CEO Says His Company Can Run Healthcare.gov While It’s Being Fixed

Morning Briefing

The health law’s policy ramifications make news as eHealth’s CEO offers to take over the troubled healthcare.gov, and other groups consider the coverage their workers — including some part-timers — receive. Also, business groups get new lawmaker allies in their fight to delay a health law tax on insurance.

Senate Democrat To Offer Bill Allowing Americans To Keep Their Insurance Plan — If They Like It

Morning Briefing

Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., will offer a bill to keep President Barack Obama’s promise that under the health care law Americans could keep the health insurance they had if they liked it. Elsewhere, lawmakers on Capitol Hill have until Thursday afternoon to sort out if they have to make their staffs get coverage on the D.C. health exchange.

State, Federal Health Insurance Marketplace Issues Expose Struggles, Few Successes

Morning Briefing

The very public struggles of these exchanges make news in California, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Texas, Connecticut and Minnesota. Some issues include a lack of workers to help people navigate the systems in California, prices in the new marketplaces and an absence of accurate doctor provider lists.

Concerns About Security Risks Raised Before Health Website Opened, Government Memo Shows

Morning Briefing

Reuters reports on the memo, which says a lack of testing put the site at “high risk.” But a government spokeswoman says steps were taken to fix those concerns. At the same time, CBS examines the system failures in tests before the launch.

Obama Softens Keep-Your-Insurance Promise After Political Hardship

Morning Briefing

News outlets dive into the hit President Barack Obama is taking over his oft-repeated line about the health law that if you like the health insurance you have, you can keep it — a sound bite that turned out to be untrue for thousands getting cancellation notices from their insurance companies. Obama walked back his promise Wednesday, saying those people can expect better coverage than that they previously had and blamed the cancellations on “bad apple” insurance companies.

Congressional Leaders Offer New Bill To Fix Medicare Doctor Pay

Morning Briefing

Two key congressional committee leaders — one from each party — are offering a new bill to fix the way Medicare pays doctors — by repealing the Sustainable Growth Rate. The bill would freeze current payment rates until 2023, but would create a new budget-neutral incentive pay program in 2017.