Latest Morning Briefing Stories

An Obamacare Payment Reform Success Story – One Health System, Two Procedures

KFF Health News Original

As part of an experiment run by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, doctors, nurses and managers at Baptist Health System in San Antonio joined forces to cut costs for hip and knee replacements, getting patients on their feet sooner, saving taxpayers money and increasing their own earnings.

Thousands May Have Been Shorted On Insurance Subsidies After Calculation Error

KFF Health News Original

Some families likely received lower subsidies than they were entitled to or were denied Medicaid coverage because of faulty calculations related to children who receive Social Security income.

Obamacare Processing Center In Missouri Paid 13,000 Hours Of Overtime

KFF Health News Original

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch filed Freedom of Information Act requests after whistleblowers alleged that workers at the Wentzville, Mo. center played games, read or worked very slowly because they had so little to do beginning in fall, 2013 after the facility opened. Serco Inc. said that it paid workers overtime in spring and summer of 2014 because of the large number of backlogged applications as a result of healthcare.gov’s computer problems.

What’s At Stake In The Supreme Court Obamacare Case

KFF Health News Original

Despite political opposition to the Affordable Care Act, more than 186,000 people in Louisiana signed up for health insurance through healthcare.gov. The vast majority of those received subsidies, which could be lost in the King v. Burwell case before the Supreme Court.

Medicaid Expands In Other States, But Not Florida

KFF Health News Original

Other states have overcome political opposition to Medicaid expansion and adopted plans to bring government-subsidized coverage to more of their low-income residents.

Relying On The Health Care Safety Net: Choosing Between Dinner And A Medical Test

KFF Health News Original

Without Medicaid expansion, South Florida’s low-income residents have found out the hard way that the healthcare safety net designed to catch people before they hit bottom is no substitute for insurance.

850,000 Floridians Stuck In Health Care Limbo — And No Solution In Sight

KFF Health News Original

With legislators seemingly deadlocked on Medicaid expansion in Florida, residents in the “coverage gap” are stitching together their medical care through personal ingenuity, half doses of medicines and low-cost clinics.

EEOC Proposal On Wellness Program Earns Business Praise, Consumer Concerns

KFF Health News Original

The announcement is an effort to give employers more guidance on how to implement the programs promoted by the federal health law without overstepping the Americans With Disabilities Act.

Federal Marketplace More Adept Than States At Enrolling Customers, Study Finds

KFF Health News Original

The research by Avelere Health shows that the exchange the federal government runs in three dozen states had a higher percentage of new and returning enrollees than the other marketplaces run by individual states.

Shifts In Earnings For Consumers Near Medicaid Line Can Threaten Coverage

KFF Health News Original

Marketplaces face challenges ensuring that low-income customers continue to get coverage if their incomes change to put them above or below the Medicaid eligibility line.

KHN Video: Tax Deadline Meets The Health Law

KFF Health News Original

As April 15 approaches, most of the consumers who didn’t get insurance coverage face penalties while others who used federal subsidies to buy their plans must reconcile their actual earnings with the estimates that they made last year.