
Sarah Kliff
Former Senior Correspondent
Latest articles by Sarah Kliff


When Massachusetts patients switched to narrow network plans, their premiums fell by one-third.


“Today medicine is just another profession, and doctors have become like everybody else: insecure, discontented and anxious about the future.”


Each year, 1.7 percent of American women between 15 and 44 have an abortion.


Most victims were raped by somebody they already knew.


That could be early evidence that a key premise of Obamacare is working: more insurers are competing on the marketplaces, and that could be driving health insurance prices down.


A major ruling against Obamacare is getting a second look.


The federal government thinks we’re entering a new era of slower-than-normal health care spending — even after Obamacare expands coverage to millions of Americans.


The pharmacy chain will lose $2 billion in annual revenue — but its making a bet on the long-term future of health care.


Massachusetts is running the country’s most aggressive experiment in controlling health care costs — and the first year results suggest it could be working.


The Obama administration will bend Medicaid to intice Republican governors into Obamacare’s expansion — but they’re not going to break it.