Latest Morning Briefing Stories

Few Seniors Benefiting From Medicare Obesity Counseling

KFF Health News Original

A little known part of Obamacare pays primary care doctors to help overweight seniors drop pounds and improve their health. So why aren’t more seniors taking advantage of the free benefit?

Obama Administration Disallows Plans Without Hospital Coverage

KFF Health News Original

Large-employer plans without inpatient benefits were seen as a health law loophole that trapped workers in inadequate insurance. Now, the Obama administration has blocked them.

Tax Time Reprieve For Obamacare Procrastinators

KFF Health News Original

The Obama administration announced a special enrollment period from March 15 to April 30 for healthcare.gov consumers who discover they owe a penalty after filling out their tax returns.

Advocates Press For Uninsured To Get Special Enrollment Option After They See Tax Penalties

KFF Health News Original

Many people will find out about the penalties for not having insurance in 2014 only when they file their taxes, but by then it will be too late to enroll and avoid the same problem in 2015. Advocates want the government to offer them a special enrollment period.

Texas Has High Stakes in Lawsuit Over Health Law

KFF Health News Original

Nearly 1 million Texans who signed up for health insurance through healthcare.gov would be affected if the court invalidates subsidies in federal exchange states – and not just the ones getting subsidies.

UnitedHealthcare’s Efforts To Join California Marketplace Meet Resistance

KFF Health News Original

The request ran afoul of the official policy against allowing most insurers to join the statewide exchange for three years that didn’t choose to sell there when it opened in 2014. But officials last month also made some exceptions for insurers that want to operate in poorly served areas.

Despite Efforts, Latino ACA Enrollment Lags

KFF Health News Original

Still, since October 2013, 2.6 million Latinos gained insurance through the health law, according to HHS.  As of last June, the percentage of Latinos without health insurance dropped from 36 percent to 23 percent, but Latinos still face extra paperwork and language barriers.

Obamacare Enrollment Falling Short In Washington State

KFF Health News Original

While enrollment in the state’s Medicaid program has surged, the number of residents signing up for private plans is less than expected as the Feb. 15 deadline looms.

Despite Health Law Rules, Some Contraceptives May Require Co-Payments

KFF Health News Original

The health overhaul mandated that insurers cover all costs for FDA-approved methods of birth control, but advocates and consumers say some plans have placed certain generic birth control pills among classes of drugs that require cost sharing.

GOP Chairmen Offer Alternative To Health Law

KFF Health News Original

Sens. Orrin Hatch and Richard Burr join with Rep. Fred Upton to renew a proposal to repeal the health law but preserve some tax credits for insurance and cuts to some Medicare providers.

Medical Debt Still a Problem Under Health Law — Despite Protections

KFF Health News Original

The health law was supposed to keep people from going broke, but despite limits on how much people will have to pay in the face of a medical catastrophe, many are still struggling to pay their health care bills.

Why Florida Is No. 1 In Obamacare Enrollment Despite GOP Opposition

KFF Health News Original

More Floridians have signed up for private health exchange plans than in any other state thanks to online mapping tools, coordinated outreach efforts and insurers’ involvement — and in spite of Republican opposition.

Insurance Choices Dwindle In Rural California As Blue Shield Pulls Back

KFF Health News Original

Blue Shield of California stopped selling individual plans on the state health insurance exchange in about 250 zip codes, leaving nearly 30,000 residents with only one insurer to choose from on the exchange.

IRS Eases Repayment Rules For Excess Health Premium Subsidies

KFF Health News Original

Health insurance marketplace customers who received too much in tax credits in 2014 won’t face a late penalty if they don’t pay back the money by April 15, but they still face interest charges.