Health Care Reform – The New York Times

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Two Times reporters, Reed Abelson and Margot Sanger-Katz, talk about the Affordable Care Acts recent setbacks and future.

By REED ABELSON and MARGOT SANGER-KATZ

Some call his proposals an incoherent mishmash that could hurt millions of newly insured people, but such criticism appears only to bolster his outsider status.

By ROBERT PEAR and MAGGIE HABERMAN

Donald J. Trump has offered conflicting positions on universal health care coverage, Medicaid and the Affordable Care Acts individual mandate.

By MICHAEL LESTER

Employer-based insurance has held firm for the last five years, and federal officials predict it will continue to remain strong.

By REED ABELSON

The court seems to be trying to find a way out of a case it should never have taken in the first place.

By JESSE WEGMAN

Unlike what happens in Vegas, whats written in your medical record often stays with you forever.

By DHRUV KHULLAR, M.D.

A new report seems to imply that the Obamacare markets are more troubled than expected, at least until you take a closer look.

By MARGOT SANGER-KATZ

An estimated 65 million people will get Form 1095-C this year, but it is not necessary to file it with your tax return. The 1095-A, however, is crucial to filing a return.

Everyone wants a major breakthrough, but small-scale research efforts often make the biggest difference in the health of Americans.

By AARON E. CARROLL

To the Obama administration, the new data is seen as evidence that there has been pent-up demand for the policy signed into law by the president.

By ROBERT PEAR

Less than a week after oral arguments, the court called for supplemental briefs in an unusually elaborate order that seemed to envision new federal regulations.

By ADAM LIPTAK

Dr. Patrick H. Conway, chief medical officer at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, keeps one foot on the front lines as he works to improve the health system.

By ROBERT PEAR

The explanation may be that for all its controversy and imperfections, the sweeping law has taken hold.

By ALBERT R. HUNT | BLOOMBERG VIEW

The Congressional Budget Office says the overall cost of insurance coverage will be higher than was predicted last year, but much lower than was expected in 2010.

By ROBERT PEAR

For four Supreme Court justices, a substantial burden on religious freedom may be whatever a religious objector says it is.

By JESSE WEGMAN

Millions of Americans move back and forth between Medicaid and the insurance marketplace, inconveniencing patients and costing taxpayers.

By DHRUV KHULLAR

The court will hear arguments on Wednesday in a case about religious liberty and access to contraception. Here is a look at the parties and issues involved.

By ADAM LIPTAK

The Supreme Courts four more liberal members seemed ready to let religious institutions shift the cost of coverage to insurers. A fifth vote appeared unlikely.

By ADAM LIPTAK

A plan in which healthy eating habits and exercise are promoted as ways to prevent type 2 or adult onset diabetes.

By ROBERT PEAR

A proliferation of residential centers has some experts questioning their marketing and wondering if quality is at times sacrificed for profit.

By ERICA GOODE

Two Times reporters, Reed Abelson and Margot Sanger-Katz, talk about the Affordable Care Acts recent setbacks and future.

By REED ABELSON and MARGOT SANGER-KATZ

Some call his proposals an incoherent mishmash that could hurt millions of newly insured people, but such criticism appears only to bolster his outsider status.

By ROBERT PEAR and MAGGIE HABERMAN

Donald J. Trump has offered conflicting positions on universal health care coverage, Medicaid and the Affordable Care Acts individual mandate.

By MICHAEL LESTER

Employer-based insurance has held firm for the last five years, and federal officials predict it will continue to remain strong.

By REED ABELSON

The court seems to be trying to find a way out of a case it should never have taken in the first place.

By JESSE WEGMAN

Unlike what happens in Vegas, whats written in your medical record often stays with you forever.

By DHRUV KHULLAR, M.D.

A new report seems to imply that the Obamacare markets are more troubled than expected, at least until you take a closer look.

By MARGOT SANGER-KATZ

An estimated 65 million people will get Form 1095-C this year, but it is not necessary to file it with your tax return. The 1095-A, however, is crucial to filing a return.

Everyone wants a major breakthrough, but small-scale research efforts often make the biggest difference in the health of Americans.

By AARON E. CARROLL

To the Obama administration, the new data is seen as evidence that there has been pent-up demand for the policy signed into law by the president.

By ROBERT PEAR

Less than a week after oral arguments, the court called for supplemental briefs in an unusually elaborate order that seemed to envision new federal regulations.

By ADAM LIPTAK

Dr. Patrick H. Conway, chief medical officer at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, keeps one foot on the front lines as he works to improve the health system.

By ROBERT PEAR

The explanation may be that for all its controversy and imperfections, the sweeping law has taken hold.

By ALBERT R. HUNT | BLOOMBERG VIEW

The Congressional Budget Office says the overall cost of insurance coverage will be higher than was predicted last year, but much lower than was expected in 2010.

By ROBERT PEAR

For four Supreme Court justices, a substantial burden on religious freedom may be whatever a religious objector says it is.

By JESSE WEGMAN

Millions of Americans move back and forth between Medicaid and the insurance marketplace, inconveniencing patients and costing taxpayers.

By DHRUV KHULLAR

The court will hear arguments on Wednesday in a case about religious liberty and access to contraception. Here is a look at the parties and issues involved.

By ADAM LIPTAK

The Supreme Courts four more liberal members seemed ready to let religious institutions shift the cost of coverage to insurers. A fifth vote appeared unlikely.

By ADAM LIPTAK

A plan in which healthy eating habits and exercise are promoted as ways to prevent type 2 or adult onset diabetes.

By ROBERT PEAR

A proliferation of residential centers has some experts questioning their marketing and wondering if quality is at times sacrificed for profit.

By ERICA GOODE

Read the rest here:

Health Care Reform - The New York Times

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