The Health Law

Latest California Healthline Stories

A Tale of Two Campaigns: Repeal vs. Reinforce

Republican efforts to do away with health reform have coalesced around a strategy to defund the law. Meanwhile, Democrats will mount a spirited defense of the overhaul timed to its six-month anniversary and the rollout of new provisions.

Parts of Health Care Reform Begin in California This Week

The national health care reform law was signed by President Obama six months ago, and a few provisions of that law go into effect in California and the rest of the nation this week, beginning Sept. 23.

In California, many of the laws recently passed in the Legislature are similar or even identical to federal reform — maternity care mandates, coverage for dependents till age 26, coverage of pre-existing conditions, for instance — so a question arises:

Why do we even need all of those matching state laws?

Exchanging Challenges in Health Plan Marketplace

While California is poised to emerge as a health reform leader with a new health insurance exchange, the state — like many — still faces numerous challenges over the exchange’s operation.

End of Session Winners Wait on Governors Desk

The governor is expected to sign legislation into law that would create the state Health Benefits Exchange legislation. He has till the end of September to make up his mind about the exchange and other health care-related issues.

This is some of what’s pending:

• Seven other bills related to the pending federal health care law and coverage issues are before the governor (in addition to the two exchange bills, SB 900 and AB 1602).

Employer System a Shaky Base for Health Reform

The health care overhaul built on the nation’s unique employer-based health insurance system, instead of revamping the model. However, a number of recent shocks to the system are creating new challenges for consumers and raising concerns ahead of coverage expansions in 2014.

Politics of Economy May Affect Health Care Policy

Financial concerns from Sacramento to Washington, D.C., are overshadowing the health reform overhaul and could shape implementation efforts moving forward.

Exchange ‘Could Look Like a Large Business’

The two bills that would establish the statewide Health Insurance Benefits Exchange have not been without controversy.

In an Assembly floor vote Friday, several Republican members rose in opposition to the bill — which, in these last hurried days of bill-passing before the Aug. 31 recess, is an extremely rare event.

“I don’t believe we need the state government running a benefits exchange,” Jim Silva (R-Huntington Beach) said. “Besides, this is something we don’t need to take action on till 2014 … and I think there are much better ways than a new exchange.”

Primary Docs Centerpiece of Reform, but Where Are They?

Health care reform may help alleviate shortage of primary care physicians, but it will take major shifts in medical training and procedures, experts say.

Some Fear IPAB Will Be Error of Commission

Proponents of the Independent Payment Advisory Board — which is slated to launch in 2014 — hail IPAB as a transformative effort to ensure needed cost controls, but critics warn that the board will weaken Medicare and harm patient care. Both sides note that IPAB may undergo a makeover before its ultimate debut.

How To Make Evidence-Based Medicine Work

No one seems to understand just what evidence-based medicine is, and right now that is its biggest problem.

That was the consensus at Thursday’s conference in the Capitol Building — “Right Care, Right Time, Right Place” — put on by the New America Foundation and sponsored by the Assembly and Senate health committees.

“Clearly, over time, physicians need to learn to embrace evidence-based medicine. But more importantly, consumers need to embrace it, and understand it.” That’s according to Richard Baker, chair of the Council of Scientific Affairs for the California Medical Association and dean of the College of Medicine for Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science in Los Angeles.