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  • Medicaid: True Or False?

    Medicaid is front and center in the debate on overhauling the U.S health system and expanding coverage to the uninsured. With 60 million enrollees, Medicaid dwarfs other insurance programs, including its cousin, Medicare, which covers 44 million elderly and disabled people. Here's a chance to test your knowledge of Medicaid.

  • ACOs: A Quick Primer

    The hot new concept in health care--Accountable Care Organizations-- would get a test run in pilot projects included in health overhaul legislation.

  • Insurance Agents Look Into The Future, See Uncertainty And “Opportunity”

    For the tens of thousands of individual insurance agents nationwide, proposed changes to the health care system could radically alter how they do business.
    In interviews, two agents talk about how they are bracing themselves for the post-reform environment. One thinks her fellow agents are too complacent, the other says "in every adversity, there is opportunity."

  • Opinion Column

    Boosting Home Care: An Uphill Battle

    Once a senior begins receiving long-term care services, she and her family often are in for two shocks. The first is that Medicare won't pay beyond perhaps a few months after a hospitalization. The second is that while Medicaid, the state-federal program for the poor, may help, chances are it will only do so for nursing home residents.

  • Comments By CBO Director Underscore Conservatives’ Health Bill Concerns

    A leader of the Blue Dog Coalition of conservative House Democrats said today that he and six others in the group will vote together to block health care legislation in committee unless changes are made to slow the rate of growth of federal health care spending and to ensure that rural hospitals are adequately reimbursed for treating new patients under the legislation.

  • Blue Dogs’ Health Demands Get Boost From CBO

    A leader of the Blue Dog Coalition of conservative House Democrats says he and six others in the group would vote together to block the health overhaul bill in the Energy and Commerce Committee unless changes were made to slow the rate of growth of federal health care spending, a concern raised by CBO Director Elmendorf yesterday.

  • Checking In With SEIU’s Dennis Rivera

    Dennis Rivera is spearheading the Service Employees International Union's political campaign to influence the health care debate. He discusses what the country's largest health care union, with 1.1 million members, is trying to accomplish.

  • Hospitals, After Agreeing to Cuts, Push Ahead With a Full Agenda

    Hospital officials today agreed to federal-payment cuts to help pay for a health care overhaul. They hope their concessions will build good will with the Obama administration and Democratic lawmakers. They're pressing for action on a host of other issues, including Medicaid reimbursements and funding for graduate medical education.

  • Opinion Column

    When the Government Runs Health Insurance

    Much of the health care reform debate centers on the Democratic push to create a government-run insurance option for working age Americans and their families. But shouldn't policymakers take a hard look at Medicare--the largest health insurance program in the country--before moving ahead to create something similar for everyone else?

  • Blue Dog Ross’s Conundrum: Should He Battle Health Bill That Could Benefit His Depressed Town?

    Rep. Mike Ross grew up in tiny Prescott, Ark., and knows well the problems of many residents who can't afford health care insurance and have trouble getting access to hospitals and doctors. Yet Ross, a leader of the Blue Dog Democrats, stands ready to try to block passage of a health care reform bill in the House that might help his constituents; he complains the bill doesn't adequately contain costs or help rural areas enough.

  • Opinion Column

    Reading the Fine Print on Health Reform: Encouraging News For Public Health

    Partisan health reform fights have focused on a handful of concerns: the proposed public health insurance plan, individual and employer mandates, financing measures to subsidize low-income Americans and to cover the uninsured. As a combatant in some of these fights, I'm not one to say the partisan conflict is misplaced.

  • The Players

    SEN. MITCH MCCONNELL, R-KY. SENATE MINORITY LEADER Date of Birth: Feb. 20, 1942. Education: B.A., University of Louisville; J.D., University of Kentucky. Career Path: McConnell was stricken with polio at the age of two but was able to avoid permanent disability. After completing his law degree, he worked on Capitol Hill and was deputy assistant […]