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Feds Say 7.5M Paid An Average Penalty Of $200 For Not Having Health Insurance

By Phil Galewitz July 21, 2015 KFF Health News Original

New data also break down billions in subsidy payments.

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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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Innovators Preach Health Care Change At TEDMED

By Ankita Rao April 17, 2013 KFF Health News Original

There was a buzz in The Hive yesterday. That’s what TEDMED, a health care and medical technology summit, calls the chic tent of 50 health care innovators who gave hands-on tours of their mobile apps and medical technology.  Some of the 1,800 conference attendees lined up Tuesday for a Smartphone Physical, or to add their ideas […]

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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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For Senior Care, Sometimes It Does Take A Village

By Howard Gleckman February 9, 2010 KFF Health News Original

Nearly three years ago, Harry Rosenberg and his wife, Barbara Filner, met with nine of their neighbors about starting an aging-in-place “village” in Bethesda, Maryland. The idea: If neighbors could help one another with basic services such as transportation and simple home maintenance and with friendly visits, people could stay in their homes longer as they aged.

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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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