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Latest KFF Health News Stories

7 States, Governors Team To Tackle Hospital ‘Frequent Flyers’ Problem

KFF Health News Original

Seven states and the National Governors Association are teaming up to find ways to save money and better coordinate the care of Medicaid and uninsured patients who frequently use hospital emergency rooms and other costly health services. “There’s a handful of people who drive most of our spending,” said Dan Crippen, the executive director of […]

Can Humor Sell Health Insurance?

KFF Health News Original

When the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance exchanges open for business in the fall, it will be a new game. Customers will be able to comparison shop in the new online marketplaces, and health insurers will have to sell themselves to the general public in a way they haven��t before. The law’s requirement that almost […]

Republicans Ready To Try Obamacare Repeal – Again And Again

KFF Health News Original

The House will vote next week on measures to delay the 2010 health law’s individual and employer mandates, House Speaker John Boehner said Thursday. The votes would be the 38th and 39th time House Republicans have voted to repeal all or part of the law. Congressional Republicans saw a new opportunity to kill or weaken President Obama’s signature […]

Some States Are Pushing ‘Employee Choice’ For Small Business Insurance

KFF Health News Original

Small business workers in at least 15 states and the District of Columbia may have a menu of health insurance choices next year, something that didn’t seem likely a few months ago. Back in April, federal officials concerned about the potential for major glitches put off until 2015 a provision that would offer small businesses […]

Tax Break Can Help With Health Coverage, But There’s A Catch

KFF Health News Original

There are two kinds of financial help for people planning to enroll in the online health insurance marketplaces that will open this fall. One could put people at risk of having to pay some of the money back, while the other won’t. That’s one big difference between tax credits and subsidies, both of which are intended to […]

Community Health Centers – In Every State – Get Obamacare Outreach Funds

KFF Health News Original

The nation’s community health centers — which treat the poor and uninsured– apparently know a good deal when they see one. Nearly all 1,200 federally funded community health centers applied for and will be getting a piece of $150 million in federal health law money to enroll patients in new online health insurance marketplaces starting Oct.1. Federal health officials on […]

Study: Competition, Not Need, Drives Hospital Cardiac Care Investment

KFF Health News Original

U.S. hospitals spent up to $4 billion adding angioplasty services over a four year period, but the new services did little to improve access to timely medical care, says a study published Tuesday in the journal Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes. Between 2004 to 2008, some 251 hospitals added the invasive and often life-saving cardiac […]

Medicare Advantage Plans Cut Total Cardio Procedures, But Regional Variations Remain

KFF Health News Original

Call them bundled payments, medical homes, capitation or accountable care, new versions of managed care (think HMOs in the 1990s) are health care’s great cost control hope. Researchers publishing in the latest JAMA tested that idea by counting procedures in one of the biggest managed care programs of all: Medicare Advantage plans for seniors. One […]

Researchers Look At Why Poor Patients Prefer Hospital Care

KFF Health News Original

Long wait times, jammed schedules, confusing insurance plans – there’s no shortage of obstacles between a patient and her doctor. That is, if she has a doctor. But a Health Affairs study published Monday says the barriers for poor people looking to get care are even higher, and it’s leading them away from preventive doctor […]

Video: New AMA President On Implementing The Health Law

KFF Health News Original

http://www.c-spanvideo.org/videoLibrary/assets/swf/CSPANPlayer.swf?pid=313701-1 KHN’s Mary Agnes Carey and The Washington Post’s Sarah Kliff interviewed Dr. Ardis Hoven, the new American Medical Association president, for an episode of the C-SPAN program “Newsmakers” that aired Sunday. The three talked about implementation of the health care law, a shortage of primary care practitioners, as well as the AMA’s decision to […]

AMA To Do ‘Whatever We Can’ To Help Carry Out Health Law

KFF Health News Original

The American Medical Association will do “whatever we can in our power” to help implement the 2010 health care law, the group’s president said Tuesday. In an interview taped for C-SPAN’s Newsmakers, Ardis Dee Hoven, who became the AMA’s 168th president last month,  said the White House has not approached her or the AMA directly […]

Federal Rule Extends Subsidies For College Students

KFF Health News Original

Beginning in 2014, most people, including students, will have to have health insurance, whether or not they are claimed as a dependent on their parents’ tax returns. The federal health law says if they don’t, they or their parents will face penalties. While expansion of coverage under the health law has helped about 3 million young […]

Iowa, South Dakota Blues Skip Obamacare Exchange Next Year

KFF Health News Original

Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans, with a long history of selling medical insurance directly to consumers, are expected to provide much of the subsidized coverage sold through the health law’s online marketplaces, or exchanges. “We expect Blue Cross Blue Shield plans will have a strong, reliable presence in the new exchanges,” Alissa Fox, a senior […]

Study: Emergency Rooms Take Toll On Older Patients

KFF Health News Original

The majority of older patients who go to emergency departments in several nations around the world are likely to start out with complex conditions that deteriorate after their visits, according to a study published in the June 25 issue of Annals of Emergency Medicine. Researchers from the Centre for Research in Geriatric Medicine at the University […]

Q&A: What Hospital Readmissions Statistics Mean For Consumers

KFF Health News Original

This story comes from our partner The federal government began fining hospitals based on how many Medicare patients were readmitted within 30 days of discharge in October. They track three specific conditions: heart failure, congestive heart failure and pneumonia. The goal is to improve the quality of care for seniors by preventing return trips to […]

Mississippi Dems: We Were ‘Bamboozled’ On Medicaid

KFF Health News Original

With just two days to spare, and with plenty of political drama, Mississippi lawmakers approved a plan late Friday to renew Medicaid for another year. The joint federal-state program, which provides health insurance to some 700,000 poor Mississippians, was set to expire Sunday night. Democrats had pushed hard to expand coverage to 300,000 more people, […]

HHS Seeks To Address Religious Employers’ Concerns In Contraceptive Coverage Final Rule

KFF Health News Original

Updated at 3:45 p.m. The Obama administration issued final rules Friday governing contraception coverage in the sweeping 2010 health care law that officials said more clearly respond to concerns from religious groups that object to this requirement. But it’s unclear if the new rules will shield the administration from charges that requiring employers who oppose contraception […]

What The High Court’s Affirmative Action Decision Might Mean To Med Schools

KFF Health News Original

Wylie Lopez said he often has to prove himself. If classmates suggest that he got an internship placement because he’s Hispanic, the to-be second year medical school student said he has no problem showing them his grades, or MCAT scores. “It’s a fair argument,” said Lopez, who grew up in a rough, working-class neighborhood. “If […]

Those Left Out Of Medicaid Expansion Won’t Have To Buy Insurance

KFF Health News Original

Low-income Americans who live in states that have decided not to expand Medicaid eligibility will not face penalties if they fail to buy insurance next year. That’s according to a final rule on exemptions to the health law’s individual mandate – the law’s controversial requirement  that most Americans have health coverage or pay a penalty […]