Health Industry

Latest KFF Health News Stories

HHS Relaxes Some Rules For Doctors, Hospitals To Get Aid For Electronic Health Records

KFF Health News Original

The federal government is providing $27 billion over the next decade to reward doctors and hospitals for installing electronic health systems. But some hospital officials say the regulations are still too onerous.

In Texas, Rural Hospitals Ask For State Help

KFF Health News Original

Rural health advocates asked state lawmakers Wednesday to help pay for improvements to rural hospitals in up to 42 Texas counties. Without state help, they said, the rural hospitals have no hope of doing necessary renovations to catch up to federal and state hospital codes.

Consumers Can Now Compare Hospitals On Medical Scans

KFF Health News Original

The federal government recently handed consumers a new trove of data about how hospitals use their fancy medical scanners. The implicit message: Avoid hospitals that lean too heavily on devices that can expose you to radiation and other risks.

Transcript: Dr. Donald Berwick’s Speech To The British National Health Service

KFF Health News Original

President Obama’s appointment – during a congressional recess – of Dr. Donald Berwick to head the Center for Medicaid and Medicare Services is focusing new attention on Berwick’s record and beliefs, in particular a 2008 speech about Britain’s National Health Service. This is an edited transcript.

Latest Destination For Medical Tourism: The U.S.

KFF Health News Original

Forget sending workers overseas for lower cost medical care: A growing number of employers are encouraging workers to travel within the states to medical facilities they say have better quality and lower costs.

Text: The Obama Administration’s New ‘Patient’s Bill Of Rights’

KFF Health News Original

The White House today released a “Fact Sheet: The Affordable Care Act’s New Patient’s Bill of Rights,” the Obama administration’s summary of new regulations issued by the Department of Health and Human Services.

Heart Disease: Why Costs Rise as Prevention Improves

KFF Health News Original

The number of people hospitalized or killed by serious heart attacks each year is down sharply, new studies show. The overall rate of hospitalization for heart disease is down, too. Experts attribute improving heart health to the decline in smoking, more people getting treated for high blood pressure and high cholesterol, and the greater attention many people now give to eating healthier foods and getting exercise. Prevention clearly pays off for those who pay attention.

Cutting C-Sections Helped Babies

KFF Health News Original

Florida hospital administrators for years have said the state’s high rate of preterm births — and the infant health problems that result — are beyond their control. But that’s not true, as Tallahassee Memorial Hospital has proved.

A Look At Comparative Effectiveness Research

KFF Health News Original

Under the new health law, a nonprofit entity called the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute will be established to carry out a comparative effectiveness research agenda, starting in 2012. The law bars the government from using findings as the sole basis for decisions about what Medicare will cover.

Patient Survey: More Health Care Is Better, Despite What Experts Say

KFF Health News Original

A new survey finds that, when it comes to their own health care, most people say “more is better, newer is better, you get what you pay for.” That’s frustrating for experts who say these things are often not true.

What The New Health Law Means For You

KFF Health News Original

The law will extend health insurance to 32 million currently uninsured Americans by 2019, and will also have an impact on how nearly every American buys insurance and what insurance must cover.

Experts Worry: Could Government Loans To Doctors Raise Health Costs?

KFF Health News Original

More than $2.5 billion in government-backed loans to doctors, dentists and other health care providers is helping to stimulate the economy and help patients, but some health experts say the money could increase health costs.