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Expensive Cities For Health Care; Mapping Medicaid

By Jessica Marcy July 28, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Every week, Kaiser Health News reporter Jessica Marcy selects interesting reading from around the Web. Bundle [a financial-analysis website]: The Most And Least Expensive Cities For Health Care It’s bewildering for anyone who has ever paid for a health procedure out of pocket when health insurance doesn’t cover the full cost (or when the person is uninsured […]

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Study: Small Doctors’ Practices Not ‘Home’ Yet

By Jordan Rau June 30, 2011 KFF Health News Original

A study released Thursday on the Health Affairs website documents how far small- and medium-sized physicians’ practices have to go to create patient-centered medical homes. Under this model of care,  primary care doctors manage all of a patient’s care and coordinate with the specialists. The Affordable Care Act encourages model homes as having potential to reduce […]

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The Questionable Lure Of Free Long-Term Care Placement Services (Guest Opinion)

By David Spiegel July 28, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Internet long-term care placement services are the cyberspace era’s quick fix solution for many Americans seeking non-nursing home institutional care for their aging parents or relatives. But their expertise in navigating this bewildering world of assisted living is, at best, a hit-or-miss proposition.

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To Friend Or Not: The Facebook Challenge For Doctors

By Shefali S. Kulkarni July 6, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Two years ago, Dr. Gabriel Bosslet received two friend requests from patients on his Facebook page. ”I was kind of taken aback by it. I wasn’t sure how to respond to it,” he said. The requests were a first for the doctor who serves as a faculty member in pulmonary and critical care medicine at […]

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Doctors Advocating Less Care; Addiction As A ‘Disease’

By Jessica Marcy August 19, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Every week, Kaiser Health News reporter Jessica Marcy selects interesting reading from around the Web. The Daily Beast: One Word Can Save Your Life: No! These physicians are not anti-medicine. They are not trying to save money on their copayments or deductibles. And they are not trying to rein in the nation’s soaring health-care costs, […]

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Conrad: Repealing Health Law Via Budget Rules Would Be Misuse

October 13, 2011 Morning Briefing

Also in the news, media outlets report on a range of issues related to the health law’s implementation, including accountable care organizations, essential benefits and an HHS warning about a fake website related to the measure’s pre-existing condition insurance plan.

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Hospitals Look For Disney Magic To Make Customers Happy

By Phil Galewitz July 21, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Medicare payments soon will partly reflect patient satisfaction, so hospitals are seeking advice from the entertainment kingdom.

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Growing Size And Wealth Of Children’s Hospitals Fueling Questions About Spending

By Gilbert M. Gaul September 25, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Many of the largest children’s hospitals have grown into big businesses with substantial assets and millionaire CEOs.

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A Medicare Compromise; Improving Mental Health Policies

By Jessica Marcy June 30, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Every week, Kaiser Health News reporter Jessica Marcy selects interesting reading from around the Web. Time: What If There Was A Reasonable Compromise On Medicare? Sen. Joe Lieberman has found an ally for the middle-of-the-road Medicare reform proposal he laid out a few weeks ago. On Tuesday, the independent Senator from Connecticut and conservative Republican […]

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CMS Unveils Updated Website To Help Consumers Compare Quality Data

August 8, 2011 Morning Briefing

Officials from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said Friday that site includes updated data to help consumers compare hospitals, physicians, nursing homes, home care or dialysis providers.

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Today’s Headlines – July 6, 2011

By Stephanie Stapleton July 6, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Good morning! Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including reports about how budget pressures and the deficit reduction negotiations are having an impact on Medicare and Medicaid. Kaiser Health News: A Dozen States Slice Medicaid Payments To Doctors, Hospitals Kaiser Health News staff writer Phil Galewitz, working in collaboration with USA Today, […]

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Penalties For Doctors Who Keep Patients Waiting

By Jessica Marcy July 14, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Every week, Kaiser Health News reporter Jessica Marcy selects interesting reading from around the Web. MedPage Today: Time Is Money And Some Doctors Are Paying The Price When she makes a doctor’s appointment, Cherie Kerr makes it clear that she better not be kept waiting long. She said she usually tries to schedule the first appointment […]

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‘Double’ Chest Scans Increase Costs And Exposure To Radiation

By Julie Appleby and Jordan Rau June 18, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Many hospitals are performing unusually large numbers of a type of CT scan experts say should be done sparingly.

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Deworm The World Updates Website

June 29, 2011 Morning Briefing

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Finding A Path Through The Health Insurance Market ‘Gobbledygook’

By Lisa W. Drew April 21, 2011 KFF Health News Original

In her search for a health plan, Lisa Drew discovered that her ZIP code was a black hole for individual coverage.

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Today’s Headlines – July 1, 2011

By KFF Health News Editors July 1, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Happy Friday! Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations include decisions by Medicare officials on covering two expensive drugs and states struggling with budget cuts. The New York Times: Medicare Will Continue To Cover 2 Expensive Cancer Drugs Medicare confirmed on Thursday that it would continue to pay for two expensive cancer drugs that had […]

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Tables: State-By-State Rankings Of Hospital Experiences

April 28, 2011 KFF Health News Original

As part of its effort to make hospitals focus more on patient satisfaction, Medicare is preparing to use patient satisfaction survey scores in deciding how much to pay hospitals. While the data are not yet used to determine Medicare reimbursement, the ratings are publicly available. Patients in different states give vastly different ratings of their […]

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MSF Website Lends Voice To TB Patients

July 1, 2011 Morning Briefing

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Managed Care Enters The Exam Room As Insurers Buy Doctor Groups

By Christopher Weaver July 1, 2011 KFF Health News Original

Large health insurers are trying to curb rising costs by gaining control over those who provide care: doctors.

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A Health Policy Reality Check (Guest Opinion)

By John E. McDonough June 12, 2011 KFF Health News Original

We occupy a strange time in U.S. health policy. Over the past two years, assumptions and beliefs that bridged the liberal-conservative health policy divide have been blown apart.

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