Cost and Quality

Latest KFF Health News Stories

California Slaps Surcharge On ACA Plans As Trump Remains Coy On Subsidies

KFF Health News Original

Covered California authorized a 12.4 percent average surcharge on silver-tier plans, the second-least expensive option sold on the exchange. It brings the total average premium increase on those plans to nearly 25 percent next year.

Training New Doctors Right Where They’re Needed

KFF Health News Original

Eight teaching centers in California aim to train and retain doctors in medically underserved areas such as California’s Central Valley. They are among 57 such institutions across the country that may soon receive a boost in funding from Congress.

Patients, Health Insurers Challenge Iowa’s Privatized Medicaid

KFF Health News Original

Complaints are rising against for-profit insurance companies that manage Medicaid for about 600,000 Iowans. The privatization of Medicaid is a national trend affecting more than half of the 74 million Americans who get their health care through the state-federal program.

Entrenando a nuevos médicos justo en donde se los necesita

KFF Health News Original

En el Valle Central de California, no hay una escuela de medicina, y los nuevos médicos a menudo evitan el área en favor de los centros urbanos más ricos, donde pueden ganar más dinero.

Eyes Fixed On California As Governor Ponders Inking Drug Price Transparency Bill

KFF Health News Original

“If it gets signed by this governor, it’s going to send shock waves throughout the country,” one legislator says. Pharma has spent $16.8 million lobbying against this bill and other drug laws in California.

Flat-Fee Primary Care Helps Fill Niche For Texas’ Uninsured

KFF Health News Original

Doctors offering this care charge a monthly fee for services that can be handled in the office. But patient advocates warn it is not insurance and offers no coverage for hospital or specialist care.

Latest Scandal Too Much For HHS Secretary Tom Price. He’s Out.

KFF Health News Original

Tom Price resigned from running the Department of Health and Human Services after a series of news stories detailing how he tallied more than $400,000 in private plane travel paid for by taxpayers.