The Health Law

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Medicare Yet To Save Money Through Heralded Medical Payment Model

KFF Health News Original

The government expected accountable care organizations to save Medicare millions by now, but the program is falling short of targets, records show. KHN also has performance data for all 353 ACOs in 2014.

Urgent Care

KFF Health News Original

This model of care is one of the ways created by the Affordable Care Act to reduce health care costs while improving quality of care. You can also watch the accompanying video that explains ACOs.

Getting The Word Out: Obamacare Is For Native Americans Too

KFF Health News Original

Many Native Americans rely entirely on free care from the financially strapped Indian Health Service. Advocates say signing up for coverage under the Affordable Care Act can broaden their choices.

Answering Your Questions On The ‘Cadillac Tax’

KFF Health News Original

The excise tax will be levied on health insurance plans costing more than $10,200 for an individual or $27,500 for a family. Any value over those thresholds will be taxed at 40 percent, and that’s likely to affect consumers’ benefits, share of health care costs or their coverage entirely.

Why Don’t We Have Mental Health Parity?

KFF Health News Original

The law says insurance companies must pay for mental health benefits the same as they do everything else. Addiction as much as diabetes. Depression as much as cancer. But around the country, consumers are taking their insurers to court saying the companies are refusing to pay up. The insurance providers say mental health is complicated, […]

Hospital Deductibles Are For Admitted Patients Only

KFF Health News Original

KHN consumer columnist Michelle Andrews also answers reader questions about how insurance-provider networks function and parents’ responsibility to provide coverage for children who are not yet 26.

Covered California Reports Modest Rate Increases, Regional Variation

KFF Health News Original

Premiums for the state’s 1.3 million people in the state’s Obamacare marketplace will rise an average 4 percent, with average increases as low as 1.8 percent in Los Angeles and as high as 13 percent in Santa Cruz.

Health Law Experiment Failed To Show Savings

KFF Health News Original

An ambitious demonstration to transform clinics into “medical homes” treating patients in the community instead of the hospital didn’t save money. Some blame the test, not the idea.