Medicare

Latest KFF Health News Stories

As Congress Moves To Cut Medicare Advantage Funding, Some Seniors Could Get Reprieve

KFF Health News Original

The Senate Finance Committee calls for cuts in private Medicare plans to help pay for health reform. Some senators on the panel, worried about the 10.5 million seniors in the plans

Advocates Urge Action Now To ‘Fix’ Medicare Doctor Payments

KFF Health News Original

Legislation to ‘fix’ Medicare’s formula for physician payments is stalled in the Senate with opposition mounting to the fact that the bill comes with a hefty cost, but no plan to pay its price tag.

Congress Wrestles With Yearly Medicare Fee Cuts

KFF Health News Original

Medicare payments to doctors are scheduled to be cut more than 20 percent on Jan. 1, which could lead many doctors to stop seeing Medicare patients altogether. To stop the cuts, Congress must find a way to offset the estimated $245 billion cost over 10 years. This story comes from our partner NPR News

Lawmakers to Fight for Rural Hospitals Despite Budget Concerns On Reform

KFF Health News Original

The finances of Hillsboro Medical Center in North Dakota improved after it got a “critical access” designation. Sens. Conrad, D-N.D., Wyden, D-Ore., Pryor, D-Ark., and Brownback, R-Kan., want to make it easier for other rural hospitals to get the designation as part of health reform.

Medicare Recipient Video: ‘I Hope Medicare Stays Healthy For A Long Time’

KFF Health News Original

Seventy-one year old Audrey Bernfield is one of the 45 million people on Medicare, the government health insurance program for the disabled and those over 65. Like most beneficiaries, she is very satisfied with her coverage.

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

The Evolution Of Medicare Advantage Plans

KFF Health News Original

The roots of Medicare Advantage plans go back to the late 1970s, when health planners believed they could improve care while saving money. Now, health care reformers say the plans are too costly.

Democrats Target Federal Subsidies for Medicare’s Private Plans

KFF Health News Original

Part of the effort to cut health spending aims at Medicare Advantage programs, which often offer benefits that go beyond traditional Medicare. But Obama says they are unfair and inefficient.

What The House Health Bill Says About End-Of-Life Care

KFF Health News Original

Section 1233 of the health overhaul bill approved by three House committees has been the subject of great debate. We present the language as written in the bill itself.

Doctors Providing End of Life Counseling See Benefit in Current Controversy

KFF Health News Original

Physicians, while disputing the charges of plans for euthanasia, say the debate on what is in the House health bill on end-of-life care could help focus attention on an underfunded service.

Medicare Advisers Raised Rates but Complained of Flawed System

KFF Health News Original

Elevating the commission, known as MedPAC, isn’t about greasing the path for unpopular payment reductions, an obvious way to save money. It’s about rethinking payment altogether. Even as MedPAC advised upping payments, commissioners quietly insisted for years that Congress should scrap its abstruse, fragmented rules for paying providers.

Sebelius: Protesters Trying To ‘Silence Debate’

KFF Health News Original

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said Friday in a conference call with members of the Service Employees Internation Union that some people protesting at town hall meetings around America are trying to silence the health care debate.