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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 | 11:28 pm | March 16, 2015
Officials say the percentage of people without coverage has dropped by about a third since 2012: from 20.3 percent to 13.2 percent in the first quarter of 2015.
By Kaiser Health News | 09:54 am | March 16, 2015
Unless Congress takes action by the end of this month, doctors who treat Medicare patients will see a 21 percent payment cut.
By Kaiser Health News | 09:57 am | March 13, 2015
The agencies say they will establish a 180-day waiting period before medical debt is added to someone's credit report.
By Kaiser Health News | 10:45 am | March 11, 2015
House Republicans refused to advance the bill and invoked a rule requiring a three-fifths majority of House members to vote for the bill to continue to the floor.
By Kaiser Health News | 09:58 am | March 11, 2015
Mental health clinics, psychologists and psychiatric hospitals were left out of the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Record Program, and it's cost them.
By Kaiser Health News | 09:43 am | March 09, 2015
Inaccuracies in the Medicare Advantage directories may trigger penalties of up to $25,000 a day per beneficiary or bans on new enrollment and marketing.
By Kaiser Health News | 09:39 am | March 04, 2015
Improving economy helps more low-income patients pay their balances in states that did not expand under Obamacare.
By Kaiser Health News | 03:07 pm | March 03, 2015
If the court rules against the Obama administration, those subsidies could be cut off for everyone in the three dozen states using healthcare.gov.
By Kaiser Health News | 10:21 am | March 03, 2015
Department of Health and Human Services shifted millions of dollars last year from those agencies to help pay the $1.4 billion cost of running the insurance marketplaces in 37 states, according to an HHS spending document.
By Kaiser Health News | 11:01 am | February 26, 2015
One analysis projects that unsubsidized premiums could increase by almost half -- an average annual increase of $1,600 for a 40-year-old.