Health Inc. : Shots - Health News As spending on care rises, the business of health keeps getting more important. We feature news on and analysis of drugmakers, health insurers, hospitals, doctors and others in the business of providing health care.

Health Inc.

Monday

Thursday

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, pressed executives from Bristol Myers Squibb, Merck and Johnson & Johnson about the prices they charge for drugs in the U.S. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images hide caption

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Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Senators ask CEOs why their drugs cost so much more in the U.S.

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Thursday

Chantal Panozzo and her husband, who live in the Chicago suburbs, expected their first routine colonoscopies would be free — fully covered by insurance as preventive care under federal law. Taylor Glascock/KFF Health News hide caption

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Taylor Glascock/KFF Health News

The colonoscopies were free but the 'surgical trays' came with $600 price tags

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Tuesday

Cook County board president Toni Preckwinkle (center) announces the county's debt relief program, along with executives from several local hospitals and Allison Sesso, President & CEO of RIP Medical Debt (far left). Cook County, Ill. hide caption

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Cook County, Ill.

A growing wave of local governments are erasing billions in medical debts

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Friday

McAlester Regional Health Center's administrative offices in McAlester, Oklahoma. Mitchell Black for KFF Health News hide caption

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Mitchell Black for KFF Health News

Wednesday

Drug price hikes appear to be moderate this year, with some drug prices falling. Elise Amendola/AP hide caption

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Elise Amendola/AP

What to know about January's annual drug price hikes

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Friday

The Food And Drug Administration has given its OK to Florida's plan to import some prescription drugs from Canada. Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images hide caption

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Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images

FDA approves Florida's plan to import cheaper drugs from Canada

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Thursday

The former Akorn pharmaceutical plant in Decatur, Ill., that made a wide range of generic drugs used in hospitals is being reopened under new ownership. Emilija Manevska/Getty Images hide caption

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Emilija Manevska/Getty Images

How rock-bottom prices drive shortages of generic drugs used in hospitals

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Wednesday

Monday

Anne Sansevero discusses a client with one of her nurses, Beau Romero. Sansevero has seven employees in her growing private care management business in New York City. Ashley Milne-Tyte/for NPR hide caption

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Ashley Milne-Tyte/for NPR

These pros help keep ailing, aging loved ones safe — but it's a costly service

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Wednesday

Saturday

Design strategist Anna Engstrom created this sketch of a futuristic hospital that appears in Artists Remaking Medicine. She writes that she envisions "a more colorful health care future." Anna Engstrom/Procedure Press hide caption

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Anna Engstrom/Procedure Press

Thursday

Kayce Atencio, who has been shadowed by medical debt for most of his adult life, had been unable to rent an apartment because of poor credit due to medical debt, he said. Recent reporting changes by credit rating agencies have removed many debts from consumer credit reports and lifted scores for millions, a new study finds. Rachel Woolf for KFF Health News hide caption

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Rachel Woolf for KFF Health News

Monday

Angels for Change founder Laura Bray took on the problem of drug shortages when the hospital ran out of the drug that her then-9-year-old daughter needed to treat her leukemia. Laura Bray hide caption

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Laura Bray

The hospital ran out of her child's cancer drug. Now she's fighting to end shortages

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Monday

Open enrollment for Medicare begins Sunday and ads like this billboard inside California's John Wayne Airport are popping up. Marketing of Medicare plans is subject to new, stricter federal regulations this year. Leslie Walker/Tradeoffs hide caption

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Leslie Walker/Tradeoffs