The Health Law

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Medical Liability Reform Should Be Real And Effective

KFF Health News Original

As Congress wrestles with medical liability reform, more than 40 years of experience with California’s cap on non-economic damages offers evidence that this approach is an effective way to achieve the goal of reducing health care costs while preserving sufficient deterrence in the legal system.

After The Deluge: Health Reform Without An Individual Mandate

KFF Health News Original

As challenges to the health law’s individual mandate wind their way through the courts, it is important to focus on the real question: what happens to the health law if this provision is ultimately struck down?

Judges Reviewing Health Law Say Penalty Is Not A Tax

KFF Health News Original

Congress took great pains to ensure that the penalty imposed on people who don’t get health insurance was not called a tax in the health law. This could make it tough for the Justice Department to argue that it is a tax.

State Worker Backlash Spreads Across The Country

KFF Health News Original

The public employee backlash against Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker’s plan to help balance the state’s budget by imposing higher health care and pension co-pays is spreading across the nation, as newly-elected conservative governors seek to roll back benefits granted during better economic times.

GOP Counts The Ways To Defund Health Law

KFF Health News Original

House Republicans have come up with more than half a dozen ways to throttle spending on overhaul. Democrats in the Senate can block them, and President Obama still wields the veto pen.

Health On The Hill: Republicans Take Steps To Defund Health Law Implementation, Planned Parenthood

KFF Health News Original

As part of legislation to keep the government funded through March 4, House Republicans passed a series of amendments aimed at defunding implementation of the health care law. Separately, the Obama administration rescinded part of a 2008 conscience clause regulation they said could impact patients’ access to medical care.

New Contraception Rules Spark ‘Conscience Clause’ Debate

KFF Health News Original

Religious exemptions that allow health care workers to decline certain services to patients if they have a religious exemption should not include contraception. That’s the bottom line of the administration’s new regulations on the “conscience clause.”

Health On The Hill Transcript: President Obama’s Health Budget Scrutinized

KFF Health News Original

Jackie Judd of the Kaiser Family Foundation is joined by Mary Agnes Carey of Kaiser Health News and David Nather of Politico to talk about the president’s 2012 proposed budget and a House bill that would repeal a provision of the health care overhaul that small businesses find particularly onerous.

Experts Seek To Simplify Medication Labels That Often Confuse Patients

KFF Health News Original

Many people do not take drugs as directed-skipping doses, taking the wrong number of pills or taking them at the wrong time of day. Poor adherence results in millions of dollars of medical expenses each year.

An Irresponsible Roll Of The Dice

KFF Health News Original

The president chose to submit a profoundly unserious budget. There’s no entitlement reform to close the long-term fiscal gap. There’s no tax reform. There are some minor cuts to marginal programs for show. But, overall, it’s very much a business-as-usual budget, with a few new and expensive long-term commitments thrown in for good measure. It’s like the president and his team woke up after the mid-term election with a bad case of political amnesia.

Obama’s Medicare ‘Doc Fix’ Under Fire

KFF Health News Original

In his 2012 budget, the president proposed a two-year, $54 billion solution to stop the scheduled cuts to doctors who treat Medicare patients. The plan draws on savings from a variety of sources, including states, drug makers

How Group Health Is Holding Costs Down: A KHN Interview With CEO Scott Armstrong

KFF Health News Original

One of the lesser-known provisions of the new health law calls for federal loans to help fund health cooperatives. Scott Armstrong, the CEO of Group Health, says that co-ops can improve patient care and contain costs.