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Showing 201-220 of 232 results for "Sarah Varney"

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Video: Weighing The Impact Of Health Issues On Campaign 2012

October 17, 2012 KFF Health News Original

KHN hosts a discussion on the Obama and Romney plans with former Democratic Sen. Tom Daschle and conservative health care analyst Avik Roy, followed by a reporters’ roundtable with KHN’s Mary Agnes Carey and Sarah Varney, Karen Tumulty of the Washington Post and Politico’s Jonathan Allen.

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Health Care Stakes Are High In California

By Sarah Varney November 5, 2012 KFF Health News Original

More than any other state, California has wagered heavily on the Affordable Care Act. If a Romney administration follows through with its vow to undo the health law, the state’s early expansion of Medicaid, its online insurance marketplace and other reforms will have an uncertain future.

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Voters’ Voices: Three Reagan Democrats Talk Medicare

By Sarah Varney October 21, 2012 KFF Health News Original

The Reagan Democrats of the 1980s are older and and many are on Medicare, a program that the GOP wants to alter dramatically. Do they still hold true to the Gipper’s smaller government ethos, even if it might mean big changes to the program for seniors and the disabled?

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Critical Decisions Await Patient, Family Members When Medicare Deadline Looms

By Sarah Varney October 8, 2012 KFF Health News Original

Every day, at least 10,000 people turn 65 and most become eligible for Medicare. That can raise lots of questions: for those still working, should they enroll or keep their company’s health plan? If they retire, how does that affect spouses and children?

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Huge Experiment Aims To Save On Care For Poorest, Sickest Patients

By Sarah Varney and Mary Agnes Carey December 5, 2012 KFF Health News Original

An effort in California to move Medicaid patients into managed care has national significance as federal officials roll out a similar but larger program for as many as 2 million people who qualify for both Medicaid and Medicare.

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Medicare Battle Heats Up California House Race

By Sarah Varney September 18, 2012 KFF Health News Original

A recent town hall shows how explosive the Medicare debate can get in the hottest races in the country.

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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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Where In The World Is Jerry Brown?

By Sarah Varney September 6, 2012 KFF Health News Original

California’s Jerry Brown, the governor of the most populous state in the union, a state that has aggressively pushed ahead with the Affordable Care Act even when it wasn’t the “in-thing,” is sitting out this year’s Democratic National Convention. Like millions of American kids who returned to school this week, Brown has too much work […]

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Medicare Fraud Squads Wield New Weapons

By Sarah Varney August 21, 2012 KFF Health News Original

The fraud squads who look for scams in the federal Medicare and Medicaid programs have some new weapons: tools and funding provided by the health law.

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Could Kaiser Permanente’s Low-Cost Health Care Be Even Cheaper?

By Sarah Varney, KQED June 25, 2012 KFF Health News Original

Critics say the price gap between Kaiser Permanente and other companies has narrowed for unclear reasons.

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Los Angeles Is Betting On One Crusading Doc To Turn Public Health System Around

By Sarah Varney, KQED April 24, 2012 KFF Health News Original

Los Angeles has some 2 million uninsured residents. It has long had one of the most disorganized public health systems, too. Now, Dr. Mitch Katz is looking to reshape the system and match patients with their own doctors.

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Health Care In The States – Archive 2012

March 8, 2012 Page

School Cafeterias Join Fight Against Childhood ObesityBy Eric Whitney, Colorado Public Radio, Dec. 28 Increasingly, the movement to reduce childhood obesity by improving what kids eat in school has changed the game. Feds Approve Minn. Exchange, Insurers Scramble To Develop Health Plans By Elizabeth Stawicki, Minneosta Public Radio, Dec. 21 Insurers say they have to […]

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In Conservative California, Confusion And Contempt For Health Law

By Sarah Varney, KQED March 24, 2012 KFF Health News Original

Residents of a largely conservative region in California where 1 out of every 3 people lack coverage share their attitudes toward the health law.

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Why Are Health Costs So High? The Robot Knows

By Sarah Varney March 19, 2012 KFF Health News Original

Americans have always loved the next big thing: the newest iPhone, the freshest hi-def television, and the latest and greatest … medical technology. But that quick embrace of new innovations has come at a cost: It’s driving up the prices hospitals charge insurance companies who in turn raise premiums for the rest of us. One […]

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Forget The Robots: Venture Capitalists Change Their Health Care Investments

By Sarah Varney March 9, 2012 KFF Health News Original

This story is part of a reporting partnership that includes KQED,   and Kaiser Health News. It wasn’t that long ago that money flowed steadily to entrepreneurs who dreamt up whiz-bang medical devices. Hospitals souped up their surgical suites with robots or high-tech radiation machines for cancer treatment. Cost wasn’t an issue: They just got passed along […]

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Health Care In The States

March 8, 2012 Page

Read more Health Care in the States stories from: 2012 Where You Live Determines How Much You Pay For Health InsuranceBy Julie Appleby and Jordan Rau, Sept. 29 In several states, consumers in high-cost areas will pay at least 50 percent more for the same type of coverage as those in lower-cost areas. Q&A With […]

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Case-by-Case, California Examines Adult Day Care

By Sarah Varney, KQED January 3, 2012 KFF Health News Original

Martha Norris, 62, depends on Napa Valley Adult Day Services in Napa, Calif. The program and others like it throughout the state have narrowly escaped elimination due to state budget cuts.

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The Public Option Did Not Die

By Sarah Varney, KQED January 12, 2012 KFF Health News Original

Unique in the nation for having public health insurance plans that are run by counties, California has public plans that stretch from San Francisco to the Mexican border and cover 2.5 million people.

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Millions Find Walgreens No Longer In Their Rx Networks

By Sarah Varney January 9, 2012 KFF Health News Original

This story is part of a reporting partnership that includes KQED, and Kaiser Health News. If you’re heading into a Walgreens to pick up a prescription, you may first want to check the back of your insurance card.  If it says Express Scripts, you can no longer fill your prescription at Walgreens or affiliates like […]

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How Lawsuits Can Stymie Some Automatic Cuts

By Sarah Varney, KQED December 15, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Advocates for the elderly and disabled have been able to thwart budget cuts in California by challenging them in federal court.

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