Health Industry

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Younger, Disabled Medicare Beneficiaries Have Trouble Getting Supplementary Insurance

KFF Health News Original

Federal law does not guarantee beneficiaries under the age of 65 the right to buy Medigap coverage and even when they do qualify for a plan, it is often prohibitively expensive.

Fixing America’s Health Care Reimbursement System

KFF Health News Original

Addressing the current system by which physician payment is determined is a challenge that demands attention beyond the physician community. It will take the influence of businesses and patient advocates who bear the brunt of the nation’s skyrocketing health care costs.

Insurance Trade-Off: Reducing Premiums By Eliminating Expensive Doctors, Hospitals

KFF Health News Original

Some insurers are offering consumers a hefty break if they pay more out-of-pocket when they use certain high-cost providers in their network or are cutting the providers from the coverage.

Helping Patients Understand Their Medical Treatment

KFF Health News Original

Consumers are increasingly expected to manage their complex regimens but that is especially challenging for those who don’t have the ability to comprehend health information.

Regulators Penalize Some Maryland Hospitals For Complication Rates

KFF Health News Original

A Maryland program to curb hospital infection rates is showing signs of success, but nine hospitals still fell short last year and were penalized a total of $2.1 million.

When Care Is Split Between Medicare And Medicaid: KHN Interview With Melanie Bella

KFF Health News Original

Melanie Bella heads the new federal office that seeks to help people whose coverage is often fragmented because they qualify for both programs and to save the government money by streamlining that coverage.

States Pushing Managed Long-Term Care For Elderly And Disabled Medicaid Patients

KFF Health News Original

Some patient advocates, as well as the nursing home industry, object to using managed care for such vulnerable patients, but health plans say they can provide quality services while holding down costs.

How Group Health Is Holding Costs Down: A KHN Interview With CEO Scott Armstrong

KFF Health News Original

One of the lesser-known provisions of the new health law calls for federal loans to help fund health cooperatives. Scott Armstrong, the CEO of Group Health, says that co-ops can improve patient care and contain costs.

The Politics Of Scarcity

KFF Health News Original

The nation’s leaders must slog through the complexities and ideologies of the current political landscape in order to craft solutions that will shore up the American safety net and protect its weakest citizens.

Some Doctors Dispute Benefits Of Early Diagnosis

KFF Health News Original

Dartmouth researchers argue that ordering screenings for people with no symptoms too often leads to costly treatment for people who would likely never have gotten sick.

Should Infertility Treatment Be Considered Essential?

KFF Health News Original

Currently, policies provide only skimpy coverage for these services, which are often expensive. But this is an issue that regulators are wrestling with as they determine what conditions should be included in plans under the health law.

Quit The RUC

KFF Health News Original

Abandoning and replacing the American Medical Association’s Relative Value Scale Update Committee — a panel that offers recommendations to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services on physician reimbursement policy — would be an important first step toward re-stabilizing the nation’s primary care physician supply the U.S. health system.

Insurer and Hospital System: Why Can’t We Be Friends?

KFF Health News Original

In North Carolina’s Research Triangle, two forces so often at odds — a major health care system and the region’s dominant insurer — announced that they would work together in the interest of better, cheaper medicine.

Hospitals Try New Approaches To Curb Emergency Department Crowding

KFF Health News Original

Officials are shaking up procedures with some hospitals abandoning traditional ER beds and cubicles, shifting patients more quickly to medical units and taking over underused hospital space.

Primary Care A Compelling Mission For Harvard Medical School Student

KFF Health News Original

As part of an occasional series, First Person, Ishani Ganguli writes that medical school students like her have the opportunity to help the health care system by choosing to become primary care physicians.