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Latest Morning Briefing Stories

Health Bills In Congress Won’t Fix Doctor Shortage

KFF Health News Original

Even as Congress moves to expand health insurance coverage to millions of Americans, it’s doing little to ensure there will be enough primary care doctors to meet the expected surge in demand for treatment. One prediction: the shortage of family doctors will reach 40,000 by 2019, as medical schools send about half the needed number of graduates into primary care medicine.

Why Are Health Costs So High? The System Pushes Doctors To Give Unnecessary Care

KFF Health News Original

In the mid-1970s, an unconventional researcher named Jack Wennberg discovered an unusually high rate of hysterectomies in Lewiston, Maine. That was just one of a series of studies that led to a very surprising conclusion about health care: a large portion of the medical care Americans get is unnecessary.

‘Facility Fees’ Are Surprise Cost For Many Patients

KFF Health News Original

Facility fees, charged to patients who get treatment in hospital-owned outpatient clinics, are used defray to hospital overhead, pay salaries and meet stringent standards, hospital officials say. Critics say the fees are a way to increase the cost of care when patients can least afford it.

Grady’s Challenges Highlight Problems of Safety-Net Hospitals

KFF Health News Original

The cornerstone of Atlanta medical care strives to turn a corner, but fight over dialysis center underscores difficulties of meeting increasing demands in a poor economy.

Study: Young Docs Stumped By Health Care System, Too

KFF Health News Original

Fewer than half of all graduating medical students say they have a good sense of how to navigate health care systems or the economics of practicing medicine, according to a new study.

Medicare Makes Patients Happy, But Can It Last?

KFF Health News Original

As part of the series, “Are You Covered?” KHN and NPR profile Audrey Bernfield, 71, a two-time breast cancer survivor. When her cancer returned, her Medicare coverage enabled her to choose her own doctors, move closer to her family and get the best treatments for her situation. She says she prefers Medicare over a private insurer. Medicare Coverage Explained | Video Profile

Living In A ‘Medical Home’

KFF Health News Original

Several states are implementing “medical home” programs, which shifts the health care system from emphasizing acute care for emergencies, such as heart attacks and strokes, to one focusing more on treating – or preventing – chronic illnesses.

A Medical Mystery: Why Health Care Is So Expensive

KFF Health News Original

Policymakers are looking for ways to trim medical spending. In a single procedure, a cardiologist might throw away two heart stents that cost $2,000 apiece. That’s just part of providing proper care, the doctor says – it’s the economics of precision and technological advance. This story comes from our partner NPR News.

Could Lawsuit Curbs Pave Way For Health Care Deal?

KFF Health News Original

The GOP has long said that many of the ills of the nation’s health care system can be remedied with a cap on medical malpractice suits. Democrats say limits on pain and suffering awards are not the answer. Could a compromise save the president’s health care initiative? This story comes from our partner NPR News.

Dr. House’s Prescription: More Medicine Is Better

KFF Health News Original

Despite TV portrayals of best medicine, health reform proponents says patients could get good treatment — and cheaper care — if high tech tests were used more judiciously.

Doctors Disagree About Effectiveness, Cost Of Stents

KFF Health News Original

For policymakers to cut medical spending, they must persuade doctors that some procedures are unnecessary. A friendly debate between two cardiologists over using stents to unclog arteries shows how hard it may be to achieve that consensus. This story comes from our partner NPR News.

‘Don’t Choose Paper’: Sebelius, Blumenthal Provide Detail On Health IT Funds

KFF Health News Original

At a forum in Chicago, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and Vice President Joe Biden announced Thursday the release of $1.2 billion of stimulus money to help with the adoption of electronic medical records at a forum in Chicago.

Code Blue: Out-of-Network Charges Can Spur Financial Emergency

KFF Health News Original

When Gary Diego’s wife, Ellen, had bleeding in her brain, she ended up in an out-of-network emergency room. And he ended up with a huge bill. In a practice known as balance billing, insurers pay a portion of the out-of-network charges, and the rest is dumped on patients.

Transcript: President Obama’s Colorado Town Hall Meeting On Health Reform

KFF Health News Original

President Barack Obama spoke about health insurance, a pressed for a need to overhaul the health care system at town hall meeting in Grand Junction, Colorado on Saturday.