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Latest California Healthline Stories

FTC, Calif. AG Put Pressure on M&A — and Confuse Providers

Compete — or consolidate? Lawmakers can’t seem to decide which approach they want hospitals and doctors to follow, and the mixed messages are causing confusion.

The Calif. Pilot That Could Prove ACOs Work

After several years of anticipation, early-stage accountable care organizations are beginning to report initial results. Leaders of a Sacramento-based pilot say they have demonstrated clear savings — and the model is replicable.

Why the ObamaCare ‘Dirty Deals’ Don’t Tarnish the Law

Opponents of the Affordable Care Act are now trumpeting secret White House emails as their latest evidence that the reform law is broken. One author of the law begs to differ.

Advocates Hope ACA Will Knit Children’s Patchwork

Hoping the Affordable Care Act will knit together a patchwork of protections, advocates for children’s health coverage await the Supreme Court’s ruling with an uncomfortable mixture of worry and optimism.

Health IT: The Common Ground in Health Care Reform?

Arguments inside and outside the Supreme Court building last month reaffirmed the nation’s sharp divide over the federal health reform law. But one aspect of the law is likely to continue drawing support from both sides of the aisle: health information technology.

New Year, New Deals? Breaking Down Health Plan, Doctor Alliances

Is California driving the next health care earthquake? A striking batch of insurers and physician groups are teaming up — and shaking up the industry — with the Golden State at the epicenter.

Dueling Polls Offer Alternative Reform Opinions

Two polls released last week offered conflicting views of public opinion on health care reform. Coming in the same week the Supreme Court announced it would hear reform arguments, the polls also raise a couple of questions: How much influence does public opinion have on the Supreme Court? And vice versa?

Our Sidneys: The Six Key Studies That Shook Up the Summer

With a nod to David Brooks’ annual awards in the New York Times, “Road to Reform” highlights our own Sidney Awards, named for Kaiser Permanente’s co-founder. Here are six major health policy studies that changed the course of conversation this summer.

FTC Emerges as Another Obstacle to Health Reform Law

The Affordable Care Act pushes new efforts at health care provider integration, like accountable care organizations, that may lead to more market concentration. The Federal Trade Commission is stepping up efforts to stop provider consolidation. Which approach will win out?

Bundled Payments and the Scars of Capitation

Health care organizations are grappling with a new CMS plan to realign payment along episodes of care. California’s experience with capitation and other payment models will give state providers a unique vantage point on the initiative.