Special Coverage: Health Care Reform

House Passes Health Care Bill
How will the legislation affect you?
Proposed changes in the final billResources from the New York Times
What happens, and when?A timeline of major provisions from the Washington Post
From KQED Public Radio
The California Report | Tuesday, Dec 06, 2011, 8:50 AM
Community Health Clinics Step Up Marketing
Free and low-cost community health clinics are often the place of last resort for Californians without health coverage. So they've never really had to compete for customers. But with the federal health care law bringing coverage for more people, the clinics are working hard to market themselves online.
The California Report | Friday, Nov 18, 2011, 4:30 PM

California's Public Plan For Health Insurance
Keeping your health coverage during a recession is tough. No job means no insurance. But part of implementing the Affordable Care Act calls for the creation of state exchanges for health insurance plans that are portable and not tied to work. In California, that exchange will look a lot like the public insurance plan that died in Congress last year.
The California Report | Wednesday, Aug 17, 2011, 8:50 AM

Oakland Clinic Provides Medical Care to Ex-Offenders
Most people who leave state prisons do so with no consistent place to get medical care. Instead, former inmates rely on scarce county-funded clinics or fall back on county-funded emergency rooms, straining California's already stretched medical safety net. Some relief has entered the system in the form of early funding from the federal government's health care overhaul.
KQED Perspectives on Health Care Reform
Perspectives | Friday, Apr 08, 2011, 7:35 AM

Say What?
Debbie Duncan was hard of hearing, until the health reform act came to the rescue.
Perspectives | Tuesday, Mar 29, 2011, 7:35 AM

One Year Later
Dr. Ricky Choi looks at what health care reform has delivered one year after enactment.
Perspectives | Thursday, Dec 16, 2010, 7:35 AM

The ABCs of Health Care
Dr. Logan Faust's world is full of government-inspired acronyms, and that's a good thing.
Patient and Provider Perspectives
February 10, 2012
Majority Of Respondents Don't Trust Washington
A new Pew Research Center survey finds that nearly 80 percent of respondents say they can't trust Washington, and have little faith that the federal bureaucracy can solve the nation's ills. Director Andrew Kohut tells Steve Inskeep that only 22 percent said they can trust the federal government "almost always or most of the time."
Atlanta Man Sees Hope In Health Care Plan
Many Americans are trying to figure out how and if the new health care law will affect them. Among them is a 63-year-old man Atlanta man who lost his job and his insurance. For months he has been trying to figure out how to get free or low-cost care. Now the overhaul may put him squarely in line for a subsidy and an affordable plan in an exchange.
Powerful Catholic Quietly Shaping Abortion, Health Bill Debate
As the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops' point man on abortion, Richard Doerflinger has emerged as a major player in the health care debate, one likely to play a pivotal role in the outcome.
IRS Faces Tough New Duties Under Health Overhaul
The tax agency would be responsible for checking whether individuals get required insurance, distributing billions of dollars in subsidies and collecting new taxes and penalties.
House Health Bill Would Help Pacific Island Migrants
Legislation would restore Medicaid rights to citizens of the Marshall Islands and two other nations who have the unique ability to travel and work freely in the United States.
Health Care Innovations
February 10, 2012
House Passes Historic Health Care Bill
Capping a year of legislative activity and ending decades of Democratic frustration, the House approves a pair of bills that would extend health care coverage to more than 30 million Americans. One bill goes to Obama's desk, the other heads for a final showdown in the Senate.
Powerful Catholic Quietly Shaping Abortion, Health Bill Debate
As the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops' point man on abortion, Richard Doerflinger has emerged as a major player in the health care debate, one likely to play a pivotal role in the outcome.
IRS Faces Tough New Duties Under Health Overhaul
The tax agency would be responsible for checking whether individuals get required insurance, distributing billions of dollars in subsidies and collecting new taxes and penalties.
Dems Move To Regulate How Insurers Spend Money
The new Senate health bill released by Majority Leader Reid imposes tougher requirements on insurers to spend most premium revenues on medical care, instead of administrative costs, salaries and profits.
COBRA Help For Laid-Off May Come Before Christmas
The COBRA subsidy extension now pending in Congress could be considered in the Senate this weekend.





