A report released Thursday recommends the state of Oklahoma — not the federal government — manage health care services for veterans the Department of
The problem is not the care. It’s the insurance company structure.
For most families, employers still pay the bulk of the cost, but you can do a lot to lower your out-of-pocket expenses.
How to cut costs on medical visits, prescriptions, insurance and more.
There's a major effort under way to make sure patients know how much they'll pay—before they make treatment decisions.
Monopoly products and services go up in price, while competitive ones go down.
Nurses are natural problem solvers. That's why MakerNurse encourages nurses to continue devising their own solutions, then give them the tools to create them.
The industry needs to choose one keystone habit to focus on.
Gundersen Health System and Mayo Clinic Health System provide quality medical care to patients.
In a survey of physicians, overhauling electronic health record systems led the list of recommendations for decreasing dissatisfaction and burnout.
It’s open enrollment time and that means signing up for health care coverage. Get some of the facts you may need to know -- from signing up, to what you’ll b...
The once arcane concept of interoperability among information technology systems has become a mainstream issue, rising from the back rooms of IT departments up to C-suites and the boardroom.
Millennials have differences and strengths that their older counterparts don’t. Find out why their unique skills offer promise for health care's future.
Elder-law expert Bernard A. Krooks talks about how to make health care decisions for another person.
Health care economics seeks to understand the different factors which converge to influence supply, demand, and pricing within the health care industry.
The Affordable Care Act’s remaining provisions will take effect against a backdrop of shifting patterns in US health care costs and coverage. Read the full rep…
When you get sick, you shouldn’t have to decide between medical care and rent. Medical costs are already unreasonable for 25 percent of Americans, and are getting worse every year. Pricey insurance and unexpected medical bills are a potential ticket to bankruptcy, and you have little power to protect yourself.