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Latest Morning Briefing Stories

Battle For Mental Health Parity Produces Mixed Results

KFF Health News Original

Some of the obvious problems, such as separate deductibles for mental health care, have been eliminated. But advocates are concerned about more subtle insurance processes, such as reviews of medical necessity, that could be hampering coverage.

Some Face A Big Bill From Medi-Cal — After They Die

KFF Health News Original

California is one of the few states that charge the estates of deceased Medicaid beneficiaries for the cost of their health coverage. A bill is moving through the state legislature to stop the practice.

FDA Heads Into Uncharted Territory Of ‘Biosimiliar’ Drugs

KFF Health News Original

Under a new process set out by the health law, the FDA approved the first so-called biosimilar drug for sale in the U.S. It’s a copy of the cancer medicine Neupogen that will be sold under the brand name Zarxio.

Digital Dilemma For Medicine: How To Share Records

KFF Health News Original

Most industries share complicated digital files to do business, but health care still leans hard on paper printouts and fax machines. Despite a $30 billion taxpayer investment in electronic health records since 2009, most of those systems are unable to talk to each other.

Tax Preparers Brace To Be Bearers Of Bad Health Law News

KFF Health News Original

With Affordable Care Act open enrollment ending Feb. 15, taxpayers could find themselves shut out of health insurance – and saddled with big fines – if they don’t do their taxes early this year.

Health Insurance Startup Collapses In Iowa

KFF Health News Original

Obamacare provided billions in seed money to help establish insurance companies called co-ops. One of the biggest has now gone under, and its state overseer is telling clients to switch carriers.

Rural Doctor Launches Startup To Ease Pain Of Dying Patients

KFF Health News Original

Getting basic health care to rural areas has always been difficult, and delivering specialized care is even harder. One doctor is raising money to get palliative care to patients in rural California.

Medicaid’s Western Push Hits Montana

KFF Health News Original

After sitting out the first full year of Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion, lawmakers in Montana have moved on to arguing — not about whether — but about how much federal cash to pull down.

When Home And Health Are Just Out Of Reach

KFF Health News Original

Health insurance doesn’t pay for housing, but sometimes that is what a patient needs most. A Medicaid experiment, called Money Follows The Person, helps some elderly and disabled people move out of institutions into their own homes.

Too Little, Too Late For Many New Yorkers Seeking Hospice

KFF Health News Original

Evidence shows hospice care can extend life and save money, but only if patients and doctors dare ask for the help. One New Yorker said hospice gave her back a normal life — at peace, pain subdued.

In New York, Video Chat Trumps Quarantine To Combat TB

KFF Health News Original

While Americans debate whether we should quarantine people who might have Ebola but clearly aren’t contagious, others wander among us who are infected with tuberculosis — another disease that’s highly communicable in some forms.

One Man Explains Why He Is Still Uninsured

KFF Health News Original

Leaburn Alexander works two jobs and has a monster commute. There’s no wiggle room in his budget to pay a health insurance premium – and no time even to meet with an enrollment counselor.

School District Pays For Health Care But Can’t Get Itemized Bill

KFF Health News Original

Like most big employers, the Miami-Dade County Public School system is self-insured, but finding out just how much they are expected to pay for many health care procedures for employees is proving difficult.