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Showing 81-100 of 100 results for "81/100"

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How Obamacare Went South In Mississippi

By Sarah Varney October 29, 2014 KFF Health News Original

In the country’s unhealthiest state, the failure of Obamacare is a group effort.

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Obamacare Giving Big Boost To Georgia’s Health IT Industry

By Jim Burress, WABE January 9, 2014 KFF Health News Original

In a state where politicians have said ‘no’ to the Affordable Care Act, the area around Atlanta has a growing number of health IT businesses. Some are benefiting from the law.

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State Snapshots Of Obamacare Enrollment Numbers

By KFF Health News Editors January 16, 2014 KFF Health News Original

Enrollment in the health law’s marketplaces surged in December, and the administration’s report on the numbers made headlines on Monday — but the national story isn’t the whole story. Health care is delivered in 50 different state markets, and each state is implementing the health law with varying degrees of success and failure, enthusiasm and […]

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What Consumers Really Want From An Obamacare Plan

By Robert Calandra, The Philadelphia Inquirer September 23, 2013 KFF Health News Original

When consultants ran simulations of the exchanges that open for enrollment Oct. 1, they found that price was a major consideration. But so were hospital networks — more so than retaining doctors.

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People Without Email Addresses Face Difficulty Enrolling In Exchanges

By Becca Aaronson, The Texas Tribune October 2, 2013 KFF Health News Original

One South Texas health center had 50 people show up to enroll Tuesday, many could prove what they make, but not a single one had an email address required to sign up online.

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Live Blog: Exchanges Launch, Government Shuts Down

By Stephanie Stapleton October 1, 2013 KFF Health News Original

It’s Oct. 1, which means that the online insurance marketplaces created by the Affordable Care Act are launching. But it also means that the start of the new federal fiscal year was marked by a government shutdown. KHN helps you make sense of the day’s developments on this live blog and with our coverage of […]

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California Law Likely Resulted In Lower Bills, Free Care For Uninsured

By Julie Appleby June 3, 2013 KFF Health News Original

A California law limiting how much hospitals can charge the uninsured likely resulted in lower bills for many patients – and free care for most of the state’s poorest uninsured residents, according to a study published today in the journal Health Affairs. While some hospitals around the country have  voluntarily agreed to reduce how much they […]

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Putting The ‘Care’ Into Long-Term Care Insurance

By Kristian Foden-Vencil, Oregon Public Broadcasting October 17, 2012 KFF Health News Original

States enact new rules to help consumers make claims.

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Long-Term Care A Big Time Worry in California, Study Finds

By Sarah Varney September 13, 2012 KFF Health News Original

It turns out Republicans and Democrats do have something they can agree on this election season – they’re worried about how to pay for long-term care when they or a family member can no longer live at home. A new poll released Wednesday by The SCAN Foundation and the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research […]

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Hospitals React To Readmission Penalties

By Diane Webber August 17, 2012 KFF Health News Original

This week, a KHN analysis of Medicare data showed that 2,211 hospitals will face penalties in October for having too many patients readmitted for care within 30 days of discharge. Hospital executives around the country have had something to say about those penalties and the new policy. Here’s a round-up of how the story played as it […]

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Table: Caring for Migrant Farmworkers

June 6, 2012 KFF Health News Original

Details about the 156 health centers that get federal funds to provide primary care to migrant and seasonal farmworkers regardless of immigration status.

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New Book Offers Checklists To Help Hospital Patients

By Michelle Andrews March 5, 2012 KFF Health News Original

Doctors and other care providers are increasing using checklists in their work, but one author has developed similar guides for consumers.

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Experts Question Medicare’s Effort To Rate Hospitals’ Patient Safety Records

By Jordan Rau February 13, 2012 KFF Health News Original

The new data identify many major teaching institutions as having high rates of serious complications. But officials say the measures are faulty.

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Disparities Cloud Health Improvements In Past Decade, Report Finds

By Christian Torres October 6, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Federal officials note that minorities and low-income Americans continue to have less access to health care even as the country makes improvements in life expectancy and lowering death rates related to several conditions.

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The Wealth Of Children’s Hospitals

September 25, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Details on revenues, spending and total assets of 39 children’s hospitals from around the country.

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Doctors In Small Practices Slow To Dump Paper Records

By Susan Jaffe, iWatch News July 7, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Despite carrots and sticks from the federal government, some physicians are leery about moving to electronic health records.

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Insurer Mounts Offensive And Defensive Strategies On Health Law

By Arlene Weintraub August 16, 2010 KFF Health News Original

Cigna Corp. has geared up with a high-powered team of executives to find new business under the health law while also preserving current benefits for customers and for the company.

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Gates Foundation Awards 81 Grants Each Worth $100,000 for Innovative Global Health Research

August 23, 2010 Morning Briefing

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation on Monday awarded 81 “innovative, unconventional” global health research projects grants of $100,000 each, AP/Google.com reports.

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Proposed Tax Rattles Orthopedic Device Industry

By Julie Appleby October 14, 2009 KFF Health News Original

People are worried in towns like Warsaw, Ind., considered the “orthopedic device manufacturing capital” of the world. The industry is fighting the $4 billion-a-year tax included in the Senate Finance Committee bill to help pay for health reform.

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“Partnership” Policies for Long-Term Care Hold Promise–and Pitfalls

By Michelle Andrews July 10, 2009 KFF Health News Original

To encourage people to buy long-term care insurance, more states are starting programs that allow people to keep some assets if they exhaust insurance benefits and need to go on Medicaid. Without such an arrangement, they would have to “spend down” assets to qualify for Medicaid. But, experts warn, the policies need strong inflation protections.

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