Health Industry

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Digital Divide Threatens Health Care

KFF Health News Original

In a story from The Center For Public Integrity, experts worry low-income clinics cannot afford the electronic health records that others can and will fall behind as a result, potentially missing the Obama administration’s goal of going digital in the next five years.

Insurers Clash With Hospitals And Doctors Over ACO Rules

KFF Health News Original

Powerful interests that are supposed to create and run the health law’s new accountable care organizations are fighting over what the rules governing ACOs should say.

The Avastin Decision: A Rational Decision Or Rationing?

KFF Health News Original

Sometimes the noisiest voices in the health overhaul debate don’t make a good faith effort to acknowledge important scientific or policy-oriented nuances in their arguments. It’s happening again in the wake of a controversial regulatory ruling about a cancer drug.

Health Care Battles To Surge Anew In 2011: Jenny Gold

KFF Health News Original

KHN reporters preview some of the big issues coming this year: KHN reporter Jenny Gold says marketplace consolidations, especially with a great number of hospital mergers, could change the health care landscape.

Seniors May Not Rush In For Medicare Wellness Exams

KFF Health News Original

The new health law adds coverage for an annual checkup, but in the past beneficiaries have not shown great interest in the “wellness exams” offered when they first qualify for Medicare.

Insuring Your Health: Looking At The Changes 2011 Brings

KFF Health News Original

Michelle Andrews speaks with KFF’s Jackie Judd about changes in lifetime insurance limits, keeping children insured, the new high-risk pools, rising health costs and consumers’ misperceptions about the overhaul.

Study Fuels Debate Over Widespread HIV Testing And Its Cost

KFF Health News Original

The wider use of a cheap blood test could help cut the number of new HIV infections by more than 80,000 in the United States over 20 years, but the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force hasn’t come around to that view.

No Outrage, No Story In Dead Patients

KFF Health News Original

A good story involves drama and conflict. It’s a great story when a federal judge with Republican ties nixing the president’s achievement in ensuring access to care for all. But a couple of reports about hospitals avoidably killing tens of thousands of Americans once they have that access to care apparently has little, if any, drama at all.

Is There Any Hope For Medicaid Reform?

KFF Health News Original

Recent coverage of the proposals offered by President Obama’s debt commission managed to gloss over a huge factor adding to the nation’s deficit — Medicaid. But the problem wasn’t just in the coverage, but in the report, too. The final version ignored the massive expansion of the Medicaid program included in the new health care lawand didn’t push for structural reforms to the program.

Care At Stake As Congress Nears ‘Doc Fix’ Deal

KFF Health News Original

Lawmakers are close again to delaying a 25 percent cut in reimbursement to doctors who serve Medicare patients. It’s the fifth time this year Congress has faced down the cuts, which could have dire consequences for the program if enacted.

Compared To Other Countries, U.S. Patients Have More Access To Specialists, Less To Primary Care

KFF Health News Original

A new study finds that U.S. consumers report greater access to specialty health care but also have a tougher time seeing a doctor on the day they need help than consumers in many of other Western countries.

Hospice Or Hospital? Where You Die Depends On Where You Live

KFF Health News Original

An analysis of Medicare data finds many cancer patients are getting aggressive end-of-life care. The intensive approach might not be best for them and adds to the drain on Medicare’s budget.

AMA Head Readies New Medicare ‘Doc Fix’ Push

KFF Health News Original

No matter what the outcome of the midterm elections, the American Medical Association is hard at work on a new proposal to fix the Medicare physician payment system. The AMA wants to stave off cuts of up to 30 percent, slated to begin taking effect Dec. 1. AMA chief Cecil B. Wilson talks with Kaiser Health News to talk about the looming cuts, why it’s increasingly difficult for doctors to see Medicare patients in America and how the AMA will soon try to lobby lawmakers for a permanent fix to the system.

Mixed Signals On Medicare Pilot Savings Projects

KFF Health News Original

After five years, 10 Medicare pilot projects showed mixed results. Leading group physician practices were measured on quality, patient satisfaction, and cost savings. They all scored well on quality, but only half made the cut on savings.