Cost and Quality

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Latest Morning Briefing Stories

Surprise! Here’s Another Bill For That ‘Paramedic Response’

KFF Health News Original

California cities increasingly are billing patients for paramedic services that they say were not covered by insurers. One 85-year-old woman took on city hall.

Study Finds No Harm In Allowing Surgeons-In-Training To Work Longer Shifts

KFF Health News Original

Researchers found little difference in patient outcomes or satisfaction after placing restraints on medical residents’ working conditions in the past decade. Officials have previously sought to prevent inexperienced doctors from making mistakes caused by fatigue.

Study: Doctors’ Texts Can Prod Patients To Take Drugs, But Questions Linger

KFF Health News Original

In an analysis published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine, researchers found that text message reminders help patients do better when it comes to taking their medicines. But questions about the specific ways to make the most of this strategy remain.

A Closer Look At The Senate’s Investigation Of Tainted Medical Scopes

KFF Health News Original

A Senate investigation recently found that 16 hospitals around the U.S. failed to file mandatory paperwork with the federal government after patients at their hospitals became infected or died from the use of tainted medical scopes. KHN’s Chad Terhune, who reported on the story for the Los Angeles Times, spoke with Madeline Brand on KCRW’s Press Play about the investigation and steps the scope maker is taking to stop the infections.

Even With ‘Skin In The Game,’ Health Care Shoppers Are Not More Savvy

KFF Health News Original

High-deductible health plans don’t necessarily trigger comparison shopping or informed health care choices by consumers, according to a survey published in Tuesday’s JAMA Internal Medicine.

Incentive Worth $550 Fails To Motivate Obese Workers To Lose Weight

KFF Health News Original

Obese employees at the University of Pennsylvania were promised an insurance premium discount valued at $550 if they lost 5 percent of their weight, but the incentive failed.

Heavy Use Of CT Scans Raises Concerns About Patients’ Exposure To Radiation

KFF Health News Original

CT scans, which are administered more than 85 million times a year, are an important diagnostic tool, but just one can be equivalent to 200 X-rays. Some doctors warn that health providers are not considering possible consequences when ordering the tests.

Gaps Remain Among States’ Medicaid Efforts To Help People Kick Smoking Habit

KFF Health News Original

Even though Medicaid enrollees are more likely to be smokers than the general public, a study published Tuesday in Health Affairs examined state data from 2010 to 2013 and found wide differences in funding of cessation efforts.

Cleveland Pressures Hospitals To Keep ERs Open To All Ambulances

KFF Health News Original

When you call an ambulance, you expect to go to the nearest hospital. But patients are often diverted to more distant emergency rooms. Cleveland wants hospitals to stop the practice.