Wednesday, April 30, 2014
MRI technique could provide accurate and early ADHD diagnosis - Medical News Today
The toll of trampoline fractures on children - Medical News Today
Altruism May Help Shield Teens From Depression: Study
Spanking May Be More Common Than Parents Admit
Deal vetoes private-probation, teacher benefits bills | Online Athens
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
No Link Found Between Playing Football in Hot Weather, Concussion Risk
Older Mothers at Higher Risk of Child With Autism, Study Suggests
Calling Young Girls 'Fat' May Increase Their Teen-Obesity Risk
'Breast Milk Banks' Gain in Popularity
Pediatricians Say Training Can Help Teens Avoid Knee Injuries : Shots - Health News : NPR
Deal’s signature all but kills Medicaid expansion | www.myajc.com
Illinois Medicaid Moves To Managed Care - Kaiser Health News
Monday, April 28, 2014
Pediatricians Should Plan for Anthrax Attack, U.S. Experts Say
Gastro Woes More Common in Kids With Autism: Review
Pennsylvania awaits ruling on Medicaid expansion - The Washington Post
Health Plans Scramble To Calculate 2015 Rates - Kaiser Health News
Congress returns to work to do the bare minimum | www.ajc.com
Gov. Deal signs election-friendly budget into law | www.ajc.com
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Measles on Upswing Despite Vaccines' Effectiveness: CDC
Legalizing Medical Marijuana Doesn't Raise Teen Pot Use, Study Says
Keep Prescription Drugs Secure From Teens: Expert
FDA Warns Against Bogus Autism Treatments
Gov. Deal signs 'medical amnesty' bill - 41 NBC News
Rural health care surging as a major issue | Georgia Health News
With Medical Debts Rising, Doctors Are More Aggressive About Payments - Kaiser Health News
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Bullying Rates Drop Among American Teens: Study
Kids' Genetic Risk for Obesity Rises With Age, Study Finds
1 in 13 U.S. Schoolkids Takes Psych Meds: Report
FDA Proposes E-Cigarette Regulations
Deal Signs Controversial Gun Bill | WABE 90.1 FM
Forecast Cut on Spending for Health - NYTimes.com
Southerners Don’t Like Obamacare. They Also Don’t Want to Repeal It. - NYTimes.com
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Audit Contractors Unlikely to Duplicate 2013 Medicare Recovery Haul Amid Dispute
Audit Contractors Unlikely to Duplicate 2013 Medicare Recovery Haul Amid Dispute
By Kerry Young, CQ HealthBeat Associate Editor
Recovery audit contractors successfully challenged about $3.7 billion in questionable Medicare payments in fiscal 2013, a success rate they’re unlikely to duplicate any time soon due to constraints Congress imposed on the industry.
The fiscal 2013 results marked a gain of about 60 percent, compared to the $2.3 billion recovered for Medicare in the previous year, according to an April Department of Health and Human Services inspector general’s report.
“At the end of fiscal year 2013, the Recovery Audit Contractor program was returning over $1 billion per quarter to the Medicare Trust Fund,” said Rebecca Reeves, a spokeswoman for the American Coalition for Healthcare Claims Integrity, which represents these auditing firms, in a statement. “The recent constraints place on the RAC program will dramatically reduce this pace.”
Hospitals, the main target of the contractors, have since succeeded in getting Congress to at least temporarily rein in these firms. A “doc fix” bill (PL 113-93) largely sidelined the contractors through March 2015. Intended primarily to stop a mandated cut in doctors’ pay, the measure also would delay some enforcement of a controversial two-midnight rule on hospital stays used to assess whether Medicare admissions were legitimate.
Hospitals have been fighting the policy, saying they could absorb significant losses if auditors successfully challenge decisions to admit patients for stays lasting less than two days (See CQ HealthBeat, Feb. 7, 2014 ). The American Hospital Association last week said that it filed two related lawsuits against HHS challenging the two-midnight rule. The actions contend that provisions in the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ final inpatient prospective payment rule for 2014 “burden hospitals with unlawful arbitrary standards and documentation requirements and deprive hospitals of proper Medicare reimbursement for caring for patients.”
Seeking to address disputes between the contractors and the hospitals on what constitutes an appropriate inpatient stay, CMS last year put forward a new test for deciding this question. To be considered an inpatient stay, the admitting physician must expect that the patient will need care in the hospital for a period spanning at least two midnights.
The hospital trade group contends that CMS’s own data show that many conditions, including heart attacks, concussions and even “comas without complications” and surgeries such as appendectomies and mastectomies routinely involve short stays that don’t span two midnights. The hospital group said that the two-midnight standard “defies common sense.”
“The word ‘inpatient’ simply doesn’t mean ‘a person who stays in the hospital until Day 3,’ and CMS is not at liberty to change the meaning of words to save money,” the association said in its legal filing.
Hospitals have much to lose. Medicare generally pays them more if a patient is considered admitted and thus qualifies for the federal health program’s Part A payments. Part B is in general intended for payment for outpatient care.
“(T)ypically, years later— a RAC will overrule the physician’s decision to admit the patient on the ground that, in the RAC’s opinion, the patient could have been treated in the outpatient setting, and as a result, CMS will take back the entire Part A payment amount,” the hospital association said in its legal brief, which was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.
While Congress may not address the rule or other health policy in the months ahead, lawmakers have shown interest in the issue. Rep. Sam Graves, R-Mo., has at least 111 Republican and 93 Democratic backers for a bill (HR 1250) that would add new requirements on the contractors. The bill, first introduced in March 2013, has been attracting support at a steady pace since, gaining eight new cosponsors last month. The measure also would also provide the hospitals with potential aid, such as a provision requiring that a physician review each claim denial of a claim for medical necessity made by an employee of the contractor who is not a physician.
But the recovery audit contractors do have support from groups such as Citizens Against Government Waste, which has blasted Graves ’ bill.
“Perhaps unsurprisingly, the success of recovery auditors in particular has raised hackles among providers, particularly hospitals, whose claims constituted the vast majority (88 percent) of the overpayments identified by the RACs. Even though the hospitals were not entitled to the money in the first place, they have called RACs `bounty hunters,’ complaining that their contingency fee compensation model pushes them to be exceedingly aggressive in challenging claims,” the group said in its statement about the Graves bill.
Regions announced for GA foster care pilot program | www.wsbtv.com
‘Medical homes’ appeal to many doctors, patients | Georgia Health News
For Teen Drivers, Unruly Passengers May Be Greater Threat Than Phones
Autism Risk Higher For Mothers Over 30 Years Of Age - Health News - redOrbit
Two Drugs Work Equally Well for Epileptic Seizures in Kids: Study
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
CHIP Advocates Cast Wary Eye on the Calendar
CHIP Advocates Cast Wary Eye on the Calendar
By John Reichard, CQ HealthBeat Editor
Champions of the Children’s Health Insurance Program are starting to worry about its future with federal funding set to expire in 18 months and new coverage alternatives available under the health law.
A central question is whether advocates can convince Congress the program covering 8.5 million children is worth keeping even though states now have the option of expanding their Medicaid programs to help cover that population. Lawmakers also authorized hundreds of billions of dollars in subsidies to buy coverage on insurance exchanges.
Even if the programs supporters succeed, it’s not clear for how long. And if Congress waits until the last minute to act, leaving CHIP’s funding outlook uncertain, advocates may have to talk state legislators out of capping CHIP enrollment and taking other steps to control costs.
Right now, it looks like Congress may extend CHIP funding through fiscal 2017, if not longer. But whether it will fund the program as generously as it does now is unclear. So is the timing of congressional action.
CHIP’s fate was foremost on the mind of Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va. when he questioned HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius at a Senate Finance Committee hearing April 10.
“We’re funded, you know, through this year and part of next and then it just stops,” he said. A 2009 law (PL 111-3) reauthorized CHIP through fiscal 2013, and the health law (PL 111-148, PL 111-152) tacked on another two years of funding through Sept. 30, 2015.
Rockefeller said he wanted to understand whether President Barack Obama and HHS officials want to maintain the program “for a period of years and years, because right now, it just strikes — it’s strange that he hasn’t mentioned it.”
Sebelius attempted a soothing response that fell short because she gave no assurances.
“We’re going to see more children gaining benefits than ever before,” she said, in part because of a simplified CHIP and Medicaid application process. Rockefeller agreed but said he’d be happy if Obama in one of his press conferences “just mentioned it.”
“ It’s just odd to me knowing him and his commitments, that he just simply hasn’t mentioned it at all,” the senator said.
The panel Congress created under the health law to advise it on CHIP and Medicaid said at a meeting the next day it isn’t committed to having a standalone coverage program like CHIP continue indefinitely. It cited what it called “new affordability options” through the health law as the reason.
But children’s advocacy groups like First Focus say coverage sold on insurance exchanges isn’t as generous as that offered by CHIP. And the advisory panel whose formal title is the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, or MACPAC, echoed that concern. An analysis by its staff said if CHIP funding runs out after fiscal 2015, the number of uninsured children could increase significantly. Cost-sharing also could rise for many families.
It’s “unclear whether or not exchange plans are ready to serve as an appropriate alternative,” the analysis stated.
The panel voted April 11 to recommend to Congress that it extend CHIP funding through fiscal 2017. That transitional step would allow issues relating to the affordability and adequacy of children’s coverage in the absence of CHIP to be addressed, the panel said.
A Senate GOP aide said the recommendation “definitely has legs” on Capitol Hill depending on how the Congressional Budget Office scores its cost. MACPAC has asked CBO to score both a two-year and a four-year extension, and the score could be released at any time, the aide said.
Obama administration officials are “sitting on their hands right now and waiting to decide what they want to do here.”
Both Republicans and Democrats face quandaries on a program extension. Republicans may not want to continue current levels of federal funding but risk political fallout if they move to take coverage away from children at a time when they’re trying to regain control of the Senate and win the White House in 2016.
Meanwhile, Democrats who endorse extending CHIP could be seen as tacitly admitting that the health law isn’t working the way it’s supposed to. “Everybody has an incentive to do this early not late,” the aide said concerning an extension.
But Congress often dawdles until the last minute. Both Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and the panel’s top Republican Orrin G. Hatch of Utah “may keep their cards close to the vest” on the issue. But the aide predicted Rockefeller will introduce legislation this year — his last before retiring — to prod lawmakers.
By John Reichard, CQ HealthBeat Editor
Champions of the Children’s Health Insurance Program are starting to worry about its future with federal funding set to expire in 18 months and new coverage alternatives available under the health law.
A central question is whether advocates can convince Congress the program covering 8.5 million children is worth keeping even though states now have the option of expanding their Medicaid programs to help cover that population. Lawmakers also authorized hundreds of billions of dollars in subsidies to buy coverage on insurance exchanges.
Even if the programs supporters succeed, it’s not clear for how long. And if Congress waits until the last minute to act, leaving CHIP’s funding outlook uncertain, advocates may have to talk state legislators out of capping CHIP enrollment and taking other steps to control costs.
Right now, it looks like Congress may extend CHIP funding through fiscal 2017, if not longer. But whether it will fund the program as generously as it does now is unclear. So is the timing of congressional action.
CHIP’s fate was foremost on the mind of Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va. when he questioned HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius at a Senate Finance Committee hearing April 10.
“We’re funded, you know, through this year and part of next and then it just stops,” he said. A 2009 law (PL 111-3) reauthorized CHIP through fiscal 2013, and the health law (PL 111-148, PL 111-152) tacked on another two years of funding through Sept. 30, 2015.
Rockefeller said he wanted to understand whether President Barack Obama and HHS officials want to maintain the program “for a period of years and years, because right now, it just strikes — it’s strange that he hasn’t mentioned it.”
Sebelius attempted a soothing response that fell short because she gave no assurances.
“We’re going to see more children gaining benefits than ever before,” she said, in part because of a simplified CHIP and Medicaid application process. Rockefeller agreed but said he’d be happy if Obama in one of his press conferences “just mentioned it.”
“ It’s just odd to me knowing him and his commitments, that he just simply hasn’t mentioned it at all,” the senator said.
The panel Congress created under the health law to advise it on CHIP and Medicaid said at a meeting the next day it isn’t committed to having a standalone coverage program like CHIP continue indefinitely. It cited what it called “new affordability options” through the health law as the reason.
But children’s advocacy groups like First Focus say coverage sold on insurance exchanges isn’t as generous as that offered by CHIP. And the advisory panel whose formal title is the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, or MACPAC, echoed that concern. An analysis by its staff said if CHIP funding runs out after fiscal 2015, the number of uninsured children could increase significantly. Cost-sharing also could rise for many families.
It’s “unclear whether or not exchange plans are ready to serve as an appropriate alternative,” the analysis stated.
The panel voted April 11 to recommend to Congress that it extend CHIP funding through fiscal 2017. That transitional step would allow issues relating to the affordability and adequacy of children’s coverage in the absence of CHIP to be addressed, the panel said.
A Senate GOP aide said the recommendation “definitely has legs” on Capitol Hill depending on how the Congressional Budget Office scores its cost. MACPAC has asked CBO to score both a two-year and a four-year extension, and the score could be released at any time, the aide said.
Obama administration officials are “sitting on their hands right now and waiting to decide what they want to do here.”
Both Republicans and Democrats face quandaries on a program extension. Republicans may not want to continue current levels of federal funding but risk political fallout if they move to take coverage away from children at a time when they’re trying to regain control of the Senate and win the White House in 2016.
Meanwhile, Democrats who endorse extending CHIP could be seen as tacitly admitting that the health law isn’t working the way it’s supposed to. “Everybody has an incentive to do this early not late,” the aide said concerning an extension.
But Congress often dawdles until the last minute. Both Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and the panel’s top Republican Orrin G. Hatch of Utah “may keep their cards close to the vest” on the issue. But the aide predicted Rockefeller will introduce legislation this year — his last before retiring — to prod lawmakers.
Medicare chief Jonathan Blum leaving Obama administration | Modern Healthcare
Respiratory syncytial virus infection prevented in mice - Medical News Today
Maternal obesity, gestational diabetes may increase risk of offspring developing kidney disease - Medical News Today
Sleep Patterns Inadequate For Many Low and Middle Income Students
Is Bigger Better? Idaho Hospital Battle A Microcosm Of Debate Over Industry Consolidation - Kaiser Health News
Monday, April 21, 2014
Bowel Illnesses Sometimes Coincide in Kids
Homes Now 'Reservoirs' for Superbug MRSA
No Connection Between Induced Labor, Autism: Obgyns
Language Problems Common for Kids With ADHD, Study Finds
Too Much Codeine Still Prescribed to U.S. Kids: Study
Mental And Physical Toll Of Bullying Persists For Decades : Shots - Health News : NPR
How Are Insurers Responding To New Health Law Enrollees? – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Waiting For Medicaid To Kick In - Kaiser Health News
Fussy Infants and Toddlers Tend to Watch More Media, Starting a Lifelong Habit
If Kids Think Someone's Watching, They're More Likely to Wash Their Hands
White House: 8 Million People Signed Up for Health Insurance
Governor Nathan Deal Set To Sign Bill Expanding Gun Rights In Georgia
2 insurers picked for university health plan | Georgia Health News
Health Law Bellwether, UnitedHealth Posts Lower Profit - NYTimes.com
Thursday, April 17, 2014
Small Childbirth Change Might Help Prevent Iron Deficiency in Babies: Study
Low Birth Weight, Lack of Breast-Feeding Tied to Inflammation Risk in Adulthood
Most Medical Devices Approved for Kids Only Tested on Adults: Study
Tonsillectomy May Spur Weight Gain in Kids, But Won't Cause Obesity: Study
Off Season May Not Be Long Enough to Recover From Football 'Hits'
ATLANTA: Deal signs medical school scholarship legislation | Health | Macon.com
Hospitals Get Into Doctor Rating Business – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Nonoperative management of acute appendicitis in children - Medical News Today
Camp with a special focus gives comfort and fun to grieving children | Georgia Health News
Key Brain 'Networks' May Differ in Autism, Study Suggests
Local mom continues fight for her daughter to have medical marijuana | Rockdale Citizen
Georgia exchange applications hit 220,000 | Georgia Health News
Poll: Uninsured drops in key states - Lucy McCalmont - POLITICO.com
FAQ On ACOs: Accountable Care Organizations, Explained - Kaiser Health News
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
'Poor labeling and lack of education' to blame for energy drink misperceptions - Medical News Today
Longer TV hours linked to reduced sleep in young kids - Medical News Today
Family Dog Can Help Kids With Autism
FTC seeks more time on Phoebe decision | Georgia Health News
Standalone rural ERs face a serious hurdle | Georgia Health News
State seeking more choice in 2015 health plan | Georgia Health News
Little-Known Legal Challenge That Could Torpedo Obamacare - ABC News
Monday, April 14, 2014
Diabetes During Pregnancy can be Tough on Baby | dailyRx
Vegetables in Childhood May Benefit Breast Health
Crankier Babies May Get More TV Time
Study Ties Antidepressant Use in Pregnancy to Autism Risk in Boys
Child Welfare Council Reacts To Deal's Privatization Plans | WABE 90.1 FM
Patients Often Win If They Appeal A Denied Health Claim - Kaiser Health News
'Obamacare' under attack as conservatives eye 2016 | www.ajc.com
Sunday, April 13, 2014
Teens' Indoor Tanning May Be Linked to Unhealthy Dieting
Study Outlines Emotional Impact of Domestic Violence on Kids
State Lawmaker Says Medical Marijuana Legislation Still Needed | WABE 90.1 FM
Drop in federal funds squeezes public health | Georgia Health News
MIAMI: Medicaid enrollment rises 8 percent in Florida - Florida Wires - MiamiHerald.com
New 'face,' but some old problems for 'Obamacare' | www.ajc.com
Medicaid expansion: dollar waster or moral imperative? | www.myajc.com
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Girls Suffer Worse Concussions, Study Suggests
Price tag for childhood obesity: $19,000 per kid
The Importance of Healthy Pregnancy Weight | dailyRx
E-cigs' liquid nicotine causing poisonings - CNN.com
Fewer uninsured kids but still many in Ga. | The Augusta Chronicle
Southwest Georgia Health District investigates whooping cough clusters | Albany Herald
What we don’t know on medical marijuana (a lot) | Georgia Health News
Doctors' Billing System Stays Stuck In the ’70s For Now - Kaiser Health News
House passes Ryan budget with big cuts | www.ajc.com
House passes Ryan budget with big cuts | www.ajc.com
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Federal Autism Panel Raises Concerns Over DSM Changes - Disability Scoop
Cortisol levels associated with crash and near-crash rates for teen drivers - Medical News Today
Arsenic in Well Water Tied to Less Brain Power in U.S. Study
Just One Season of Hits in High School Football May Alter Brain: Study
Protesters rally in front of governor's mansion over Medicaid... | www.wsbtv.com
Monday, April 7, 2014
Anti-vaccine movement is giving diseases a 2nd life
Distinguishing between pediatric injuries associated with abuse and those caused by accidents - Medical News Today
Kids' Concussions Defined by Where They Live, Study Finds
Childhood Obesity Adds Nearly $20K to Lifetime Medical Costs: Study
More U.S. Children Severely Obese, Study Says
A Pill For Grass Allergies May Replace Shots For Some : Shots - Health News : NPR
seMissourian.com: State News: Medicaid asset limit change sought (04/07/14)
Left behind by Obamacare, and the state | www.myajc.com
Sunday, April 6, 2014
New structural insights into the mechanics of rotavirus RNA synthesis - Medical News Today
Medicaid expansion: A tale of two Southern states | Georgia Health News
Medicaid Enrollment Increased By 3 Million From October To February – Capsules - The KHN Blog
White House pushes Medicaid expansion | Jamie Dupree's Washington Insider | www.ajc.com
State Medicaid stance negates inmate medical savings | www.myajc.com
Friday, April 4, 2014
Potentially harmful chemicals emitted by crib mattresses - Medical News Today
Key part of hospital provider fee still unresolved | Georgia Health News
Spotting Cause of Newborn Brain Injury Could Aid Prevention, Report Says
White Boys Most Prone to Color Blindness, Study Finds
Ga. agency looks to expedite food stamp delivery | www.wsbtv.com
Is anyone happy about the SGR fix and ICD-10 delay? - FierceHealthcare
Report: 5.4 Million Newly Insured Under Obamacare - NBC News.com
State Exchange Executives Face Tough Questions From House Subcommittee - Kaiser Health News
Emory and Grady Join Georgia's First Statewide Electronic Health Information Exchange
Emory and Grady Join Georgia 's First Statewide Electronic Health Information Exchange
Secure network improves patient-centered care and health outcomes
PR Newswire
"Traditionally, patient health information has been difficult to share across care settings," said Denise Hines, executive director of GaHIN. "By connecting Emory and Grady to GaHIN, they can now provide its care delivery teams with comprehensive and up-to-date information on which to base care decisions."
Created as a public-private partnership under the leadership of the Department of Community Health (DCH), Health IT Division, GaHIN's ConnectedCare technology gives its members the ability to access a more complete view of their patients' health information directly from their electronic health record (EHR) systems. This minimizes manual and often time-consuming processes. Patients also benefit as GaHIN helps to gather information from multiple sources and provide this information to the caregiver at the time of service. This improves care coordination, which can help reduce adverse events, complications, hospital readmissions and duplicative testing.
"This collaborative effort between the public and private sectors is a significant step for Georgia ," said Kelly Gonzalez, chief, DCH Division of Health IT. "Our goal is to educate, engage and connect more providers to GaHIN as we work to lead the nation in health information technology."
Providers at Emory and Grady can improve both direct care delivery and coordination by having ever-present access to clinical information, such as Medicaid health and pharmacy information and immunization updates and reporting from the Georgia Registry of Immunization Transactions and Services (GRITS), managed by the Department of Public Health.
"Health information exchange is THE critical technology path to care coordination across all domains of care," said Dee Cantrell, CIO, Emory Healthcare. "We are quite excited and pleased to be the first health system in Georgia to connect with the Georgia Health Information Network!"
Deborah Cancilla, SVP, CIO of Grady Health system stated, "Being on the leading edge of technological advances that improve patient care is a key component of Grady's transformation, as we continue to improve operational efficiencies and enhance the patient experience." She continued, "Understanding the industry trend towards empowering the patient and making their health information more readily available is another important reason for Grady's GaHIN membership."
With GaHIN, providers will be able to take advantage of existing and future services including lab routing, admission, discharge and transfer alerts, as well as future inter-operability through a nationwide Health Information Exchange.
About Georgia Health Information Network
The Georgia Health Information Network (GaHIN) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the use and exchange of electronic health information to foster a healthier Georgia , improve patient-centered healthcare, increase efficiency and promote the health status of the entire state population. GaHIN's purpose is to close the patient information gap across all care settings by electronically connecting disparate systems and data sources to support improved quality of care, better health outcomes and reductions in cost. www.gahin.org.
About The Georgia Department of Community Health
Through effective planning, purchasing and oversight, the Georgia Department of Community Health (DCH) provides access to affordable, quality health care to millions of Georgians, including some of the state's uninsured and most vulnerable populations.
DCH is responsible for Medicaid and PeachCare for Kids,® the State Health Benefit Plan, Healthcare Facility Regulation and Health Information Technology inGeorgia .
DCH is responsible for Medicaid and PeachCare for Kids,® the State Health Benefit Plan, Healthcare Facility Regulation and Health Information Technology in
Clyde L. Reese III, Esq., serves as Commissioner for the Georgia Department of Community Health.
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
House approves pediatric hospital residency program funds - FierceHealthcare
Teens More Likely to Drive Under the Influence After Riding with an Impaired Driver
Soda Sales Drop to Lowest Point Since 1995 | TIME.com
Child Welfare Reform team selected | Georgia Health News
Break urged for medical marijuana families | Georgia Health News
Healthcare Reform Update: States seek contested Medicaid alternatives, cuts | Modern Healthcare
5 Questions About Obamacare’s 7 Million Enrollees - Five Things - WSJ
Popular Kids May Be Targets for Bullying: Study
Georgia ranks low in national index on opportunity for all children | Local & State | Macon.com
FTC may revive Phoebe fight, seeks state guidance | Georgia Health News
Michigan's expanded Medicaid for 470,000 recipients kicks off today | Detroit Free Press | freep.com
Michigan's expanded Medicaid for 470,000 recipients kicks off today | Detroit Free Press | freep.com
For 17th time in 11 years, Congress delays Medicare reimbursement cuts as Senate passes ‘doc fix’
As Insurance Enrollment Exceeds 7M, Obama Says Health Law ‘Here To Stay’ – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Burnt Out Primary Care Docs Are Voting With Their Feet - Kaiser Health News
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