The New York Times reports that "the health care proposals from the House and the Senate are broadly similar but differ on some major issues." It reports on five issues - the public plan, employer contribution, abortion, illegal immigrants and financing - and puts differences in bold type (11/19).
The Associated Press takes a look at several key provisions in both bills including: who's covered, cost, financing, individual requirements, employer requirements, subsidies, benefits packages, insurance industry restrictions, public plan, choice, drugs, Medicaid changes, long-term care and antitrust amendments (Werner and Alonso-Zaldivar, 11/18).
Meanwhile, NPR provides a comparison chart that includes a "likelihood scale," evaluating how likely certain provisions are to end up in a final bill, "based on how similar the House and Senate bills have been so far" (Masterson and Carey, 11/19).