News in Brief Repealing the Affordable Care Act Could Be Detrimental to Community Health Centers New research shows the ACA was good for community health centers and their patients. Dwyer Gunn
News in Brief What An Obamacare Repeal Would Mean for Addiction Treatment Six months after the Santa Barbara Neighborhood Clinics began routinely asking all of their patients about drug use,… Francie Diep
News in Brief As More People Sign Up for Health Insurance, America’s Health-Care Costs Go Up Prescription drug costs also grew. By Francie Diep (Photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images) Health-care spending in the United States… Pacific Standard Staff
News in Brief New Evidence That Obamacare Helped Millions of Kids Get Health Insurance A new analysis finds the rate of uninsured kids in America fell by almost half since the Affordable Care Act was passed. Francie Diep
News in Brief The Obama Administration Announces Double Digit Premium Hikes on Health Care Things are not looking up for the Obama administration and Affordable Care Act participants. Steffanee Wang
News in Brief An Obamacare Exit in Minnesota Will Raise Premiums by at Least 50 Percent The Affordable Care Act needs to be fixed. We looked at what solutions are on the table today.… Pacific Standard Staff
News in Brief No, Obamacare Isn’t About to Fail But it’s been a rough summer for the Affordable Care Act’s individual health insurance exchanges. Dwyer Gunn
News in Brief Does Anyone Really Know How to Reduce Health-Care Spending? An organization you’ve probably never heard of is working on it. By Dwyer Gunn (Photo: Mario Villafuerte/Getty Images)… Pacific Standard Staff
News in Brief The Persisting Racial Gap in Mental Health Care Treatment A new paper finds that minorities still aren’t getting the mental-health treatment they need. By Dwyer Gunn (Photo:… Pacific Standard Staff
News in Brief The ACA’s Medicaid Expansions Benefited More Than Just the Insured Denying health insurance to people just means that, when those unavoidable hospital visits do occur, uninsured patients and the communities those patients live in will suffer. Dwyer Gunn