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Kaiser Health News

Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent news service and a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan healthcare policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

By Kaiser Health News | 09:05 am | August 09, 2016
According to an analysis published Monday in Health Affairs, more than a third of the nation's hospitals in 2013 did not offer patients similar language assistance. In areas with the greatest need, about 25 percent of facilities failed to provide such services.
By Kaiser Health News | 08:21 am | August 09, 2016
About one-third of patients over 70 years old and more than half of patients over 85 leave the hospital more disabled than when they arrived, research shows.
By Kaiser Health News | 09:12 am | August 08, 2016
Because physicians who treat addiction don't necessarily have experience with surgery or access to sterile spaces, some are having to learn a new skill and develop new systems.
By Kaiser Health News | 08:51 am | August 08, 2016
A California bill that would allow certified nurse-midwives to practice independently is pitting the state's doctors against its hospitals, even though both sides support the main goal of the legislation.
By Kaiser Health News | 08:42 am | August 04, 2016
Consumers face steep rate hikes next year. Some will be forced to make a difficult choice: pay a higher price to keep their plans -- and doctors -- or switch plans to save money but risk losing their doctors.
By Kaiser Health News | 08:37 am | August 03, 2016
Not only did the clinics see new patients, but the demand for services soared from existing ones who were newly insured.
By Kaiser Health News | 08:16 am | August 03, 2016
The federal government will punish more than half of the nation's hospitals -- a total of 2,597 -- for excess readmissions by withholding more than half a billion dollars in Medicare payments over the next year, records released Tuesday show.
By Kaiser Health News | 09:34 am | August 02, 2016
A report in 2012 by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse revealed that medical schools devoted little time to teaching addiction medicine -- only a few hours over four years. Since then, the number of Americans overdosing from prescribed opioids has surpassed 14,000 per year, quadrupling from 1999 to 2014.
By Kaiser Health News | 09:07 am | August 02, 2016
In the absence of generic alternatives to these pricey biologics, biosimilar drugs hold great promise for U.S. patients and their wallets.
By Kaiser Health News | 01:11 pm | August 01, 2016
Experts estimate that about half of all people turning 65 today will need daily help as they age, either at home or in nursing homes. Such long-term care will cost an average of about $91,000 for men and double that for women, because they live longer.