Cost and Quality

Latest KFF Health News Stories

New Group To Set Priorities for Medical Effectiveness Research

KFF Health News Original

Congress is betting more than $3 billion over the next decade that “comparative effectiveness” research can transform medical care by helping determine the best approach to a particular illness.

The High Cost Of A Good Night’s Sleep

KFF Health News Original

Diagnosing sleep apnea, which has been shown to increase the risk of serious illnesses, is a big business. Critics worry, though, that sleep tests are overprescribed at great cost to the health system.

National Health Spending Grew Slowly In 2010

KFF Health News Original

But officials say that for the first time in years premiums for people in private insurance plans rose faster than what was spent on their care, according to KHN’s Marilyn Werber Serafini.

Kansas, Oklahoma Insurers Won’t Get A Break On Rebate Rule

KFF Health News Original

Kansas and Oklahoma are the seventh and eighth states to get the thumbs down from the federal government on their requests to phase in new regulations that could result in health insurance rebates to consumers.

Lawsuit Accuses Company Of Fraudulently Cycling Patients Through Nursing Homes, Hospice Care

KFF Health News Original

Whistleblowers allege that AseraCare improperly channeled people to gain maximum Medicare reimbursements. In a separate suit, federal attorneys say the company pressured employees to enroll patients in hospice who weren’t dying.

Case-by-Case, California Examines Adult Day Care

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.

Web Reporter Jessica Marcy Discusses What 2012 Will Hold For Health Care

KFF Health News Original

KHN reporters preview some of the big issues coming this year: KHN Web Reporter Jessica Marcy says she’ll be examining the different kinds of health care workers — growing in numbers — looking to give more people more care.

African American Women And The Obesity Epidemic

KFF Health News Original

Four in five African American women are overweight or obese, and they start adding extra pounds years before their white counterparts. Research suggests the problem may have a lot to do with when girls give up regular exercise.

HHS Gives States Flexibility On Health Law’s ‘Essential Benefits’

KFF Health News Original

States will be given wide latitude to decide what “essential benefits” insurers must offer in policies offered on new health exchanges come 2014, the Obama administration said Friday in a move that pushes off final federal rules on those benefits until sometime next year.