Cost and Quality

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Health On The Hill – October 18, 2010

KFF Health News Original

Some Democrats are talking about health care in their elections in a new way: send us to Washington to fix parts of the health care bill that you don’t like. Meanwhile, oral arguments in a Virginia court case challenging the law’s requirement that individuals purchase health care insurance are proceeding in court.

California Hospitals: Prices Rising Rapidly, But Quality Varies

KFF Health News Original

Prominent hospitals and networks, especially those in the San Francisco Bay Area, can keep raising prices beyond inflation because their sizes or reputations give them clout in negotiating rates with insurers, researchers say. Yet high prices don’t always equate with superior care.

Hospitals, Inc., A Kaiser Health News Series

KFF Health News Original

Hospitals play an enormous role in the health care system; they’re a crucial part of the public health safety net and an important community resource. But they are expensive. Hospital costs make up the largest portion of the health spending in this country.

Hospitals Lure Doctors Away From Private Practice

KFF Health News Original

One in six doctors works for a hospital, and the number is quickly growing. Both sides benefit: hospitals get a steady stream of patients and doctors say they can practice medicine without worrying about the hassles of running a private practice.

Health On The Hill – October 11, 2010

KFF Health News Original

The Department of Health and Human Services has granted approximately 30 waivers to employers, insurers and unions that will allow them to offer limited benefit, or “mini-med,” health insurance plans.

Are ‘Mini-Med’ Plan Waivers A Good Idea?

KFF Health News Original

Mark Rukavina of The Access Project and Neil Trautwein of the National Retail Federation discuss the Obama administration’s relaxation of the health law’s requirements for insurance plans for some employers.

Reminding Ourselves What Has Gone Right With The Health Law

KFF Health News Original

It will take years to make the law’s most important changes. But by the time they are in place, if all goes well, most Americans truly will be better off. The early stages are encouraging.

Health Care Providers, Insurers: Accountable Care Organizations Bring Legal Worries

KFF Health News Original

The Obama administration has touted ACOs as a key way that the new health law will help providers work more closely together to lower health costs and improve patient care. But doctors and hospitals are worried about inadvertently violating antitrust and anti-fraud laws. Insurers fear the new doctor-hospital entities could boost health care prices. Industry and government officials are meeting Tuesday to deal with the concerns.

Health On The Hill – October 4, 2010

KFF Health News Original

As the November elections near, more Democrats appear to be campaigning on the health care law, touting a package of consumer protections that went into effect for plan years starting after Sept. 23.

Health Insurance Prices, Restrictions Now On Federal Consumer Website

KFF Health News Original

Healthcare.gov, the website created by the new health law to be a one-stop consumer resource, today unveiled detailed cost and benefits information about health plans available in the individual insurance market.

The NAIC’s Effort To Find Balance In Its Medical Loss Ratio Regulation

KFF Health News Original

The development of this draft rule is not a contest with winners and losers, but an effort to create a framework to press insurers to spend less money on bureaucracy and more on health care in a way that benefits consumers and keeps insurance markets viable.

Health On The Hill – September 27, 2010

KFF Health News Original

Just weeks before the November elections, new polling shows that four out of 10 adults – no matter whether they supported the law – think the health care law did not do enough to change the health care system in America, and 53 percent of Americans are still confused about health reform.