Cost and Quality

Latest KFF Health News Stories

FAQ On The Latest Study: Obamacare’s Impact On Insurance Claim Costs

KFF Health News Original

The Society of Actuaries is predicting that because of the health law, on average, insurers will have to pay 32 percent more for claims by 2017. What does that mean for consumers?

Temp Agencies See Opportunity In Health Law

KFF Health News Original

Some employers — worried about the cost of health coverage — are eyeing staffing agencies to fill jobs. But these arrangements could leave gaps in the health law’s expanded coverage.

Large Companies Are Increasingly Offering Workers Only High Deductible Health Plans

KFF Health News Original

Firms with 1,000 employees or more once offered a variety of coverage options, but a recent survey found nearly 15 percent today provide simply these plans and a savings account for medical expenses.

IOM Panel Raises Concerns About Lowering Medicare Pay For High Spending Areas

KFF Health News Original

The report suggests that cutting payments in areas that pay more per beneficiary, such as Manhattan and Florida, could hit hospitals and doctors who are not providing expensive care.

Health Law Covers Breast Pumps, But Not All Moms Get The Best

KFF Health News Original

Under the Affordable Care Act, insurance plans are required to give new mothers equipment and services to enable them to breast feed. What the law doesn’t say, however, is what kind of equipment has to be provided.

Small Businesses Pursue Health Law ‘Loophole’

KFF Health News Original

Self-insurance, once the purview of only large companies, is becoming popular with small employers, too. But it could be a threat to the Affordable Care Act, since self-insured companies are exempt from many of the health law’s requirements.

Access To Primary Care Is A Challenge For Some Texas Medicare Patients

KFF Health News Original

The annual congressional battles over the “doc fix” and the threat of lower reimbursements have left some Texas doctors insecure and unwilling to take on more Medicare patients.