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The University of Pennsylvania recruited young people to shop for coverage on healthcare.gov to learn what gave them trouble navigating the site.
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The University of Pennsylvania recruited young people to shop for coverage on healthcare.gov to learn what gave them trouble navigating the site.
The law, effective July 15, is viewed as an innovative compromise in Kentucky, but some people involved in national scope-of-practice debates are skeptical.
By paying primary care doctors to cut specialist and hospital revenue, CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield is helping to alter the medical spoils system.
LaVrene Norton's firm specializes in helping retirement communities and nursing homes train staff and design their residencies to fit the "household model."
Consumer group alleges the insurer put out inaccurate information about benefits and providers to gain market share.
In 2012, Medicare was rocked by allegations hospitals were systematically overcharging the government program by misusing electronic medical records. A study published Tuesday disputes that.
Chattanooga's success in achieving bargain-priced policies offers valuable lessons for other parts of the country as they seek to satisfy consumers with insurance networks that limit their choices of doctors and hospitals.
The health law seeks to reduce health care costs by spending more money on prevention and wellness efforts.
Advocates say the plans could expose consumers to unacceptably high out-of-pocket costs if they get sick.
The University of Utah improved quality and reduced costs by tracking each patient's care.
Patients in rural hospitals often have to wait days to see a psychiatrist. South Carolina is a leader in turning that around.
Dr. Al Sommer, the former dean of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health who helped produce a new report on climate change, says changes expected this century could lead to many deaths and a strain on hospitals.
Hospitals and drug makers are waging a pitched battle over the program -- known as 340B -- that requires drug manufacturers to give steep discounts to hospitals that treat a large percentage of poor patients.
Critics argue that some facilities using the program should not be eligible and that the money they receive from the sale of the discounted drugs is not always being plowed back into patient care.
The 1 percent cut in payments is the latest effort by the federal government to improve hospital care.
The most satisfied were those who received subsidies; the least satisfied had their previous plans canceled.
The aerospace giant is teaming with accountable care organizations to save themselves money by taking the "middle men" -- insurers -- out of their health care equation.
Many are encouraging the use of less-costly regimens and paying the same for drugs, whether they're given in hospital outpatient settings or doctors' offices.
KHN's consumer columnist answers inquiries from readers.
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