Latest Morning Briefing Stories

Obamacare Comes To Skid Row

KFF Health News Original

In Los Angeles, there’s a concerted effort to enroll the homeless into Medicaid, as the federal-state health insurance program opens for the first time to all poor adults.

For HIV Patients In Texas, Expanded Coverage Is Elusive

KFF Health News Original

Many people with HIV live below the poverty line and therefore won’t qualify for Obamacare subsidies to buy private insurance, or for Medicaid since Texas officials opted against expanding that program under the law.

Medicaid Expansion To Cover Many Former Prisoners

KFF Health News Original

The Department of Justice estimates former inmates and detainees will comprise about 35 percent of the people who will qualify for Medicaid coverage in the states expanding their programs.

Even Without Expansion, S.C. Will See 16% Jump In Medicaid Enrollment

KFF Health News Original

Officials say publicity for the Affordable Care Act and its requirement that most people get insurance will attract tens of thousands of people who are currently eligible for Medicaid but have not enrolled.

In Pa., A Big Gap In Health Insurance Coverage

KFF Health News Original

As many as 400,000 Pennsylvanians, most of them low-wage workers, will go without coverage next year because Pennsylvania officials have not opted to take federal money available under the health law to expand Medicaid.

Oregon Shines On Medicaid, As Texas Stalls On Sign-Ups

KFF Health News Original

In Oregon, the online health marketplace isn’t working for people looking to buy individual policies. But the state has been rapidly expanding Medicaid anyway. In Texas, insurance helpers may face state regulations that would make it even harder to assist people seeking coverage.

Costliest 1 Percent Of Patients Account For 21 Percent Of U.S. Health Spending

KFF Health News Original

Most of these patients have multiple chronic illnesses and all too often they wind up in emergency rooms because they have enormous difficulty navigating the increasingly fragmented, complicated and inflexible health-care system.